Software:Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Butōden

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Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Butōden
Ultimate Butoden Boxart.jpg
Cover art
Developer(s)Game Republic
Publisher(s)Namco Bandai Games[lower-alpha 1]
SeriesDragon Ball
Platform(s)Nintendo DS
Release
  • JP: February 3, 2011
Genre(s)Fighting
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Butōden[lower-alpha 2] is a fighting video game for the Nintendo DS based on the Dragon Ball franchise. It was released in Japan on February 3, 2011.

It is the fifth installment in the Butōden sub-series; the first to be released since 1995's Dragon Ball Z: Shin Butōden; and the first to be based on the Dragon Ball Kai anime series, itself a revised cut of the 1989 Dragon Ball Z anime that the previous installments were based on.

The game would be followed by Dragon Ball Z in 2015.

Gameplay

Ultimate Butōden differentiates itself from other games in the Butōden sub-series in featuring special moves that can be performed via either button input combinations or touching the Nintendo DS's touch screen. Its story mode covers events from the beginning of the Saiyan arc to the end of the Majin Buu arc alongside "What-if" scenarios, despite the latter arc not being yet adapted to the Kai series at the time of its release until was eventually adapted in April 2014 and finished its run in June 2015.[1]

Development

News of the game first broke when it was announced that distributor Namco Bandai had applied for patents in Japan for two titles, Ultimate Butouden and Zenkai Battle Royale.[2] The full announcement was featured in the following issue of Weekly Shōnen Jump, stating that the game would be released for the Nintendo DS in Japan on February 3 of the following year. Official screenshots suggested that the game would have 3D graphics, and a story mode that would cover events up until the Cell Saga.[3] In the December issue of V Jump featured more screenshots of the gameplay and touch screen menu, showing that players can execute signature attacks by tapping the stylus.[4]

Reception

The game sold 31,108 copies within its first week of release in Japan.[5] In the second week it managed to sell 10,341 copies.[6]

References

Notes

  1. Released under the Bandai brand name.
  2. Japanese: ドラゴンボール改 アルティメット武闘伝 Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Kai Arutimetto Butōden, "Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Fighting Legend"

External links