Top products from r/dbz

We found 632 product mentions on r/dbz. We ranked the 362 resulting products by number of redditors who mentioned them. Here are the top 20.

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Top comments that mention products on r/dbz:

u/PhantomLordG · 1 pointr/dbz

Your submission has been removed for the following reason:

>This topic is addressed in our Wiki.

If a streaming website is not listed below, it is almost certainly illegal. If there is an unlisted website which you believe is legal, please contact the moderators before discussing or linking it on the subreddit. Piracy is forbidden on r/dbz.

Dragon Ball Super Sub Simulcast


Official Streams

  • Daisuki. Available in North America; also covers most of Europe and several other territories; see the complete list here. Available to free users in certain regions.

  • AnimeLab. Australia and New Zealand, subscription and free users. (Fewer ads than Crunchyroll for free users.)

  • FunimationNow. North America, subscription and free users. Funimation's videos usually go up later than they do on other services.

  • Crunchyroll. Free and premium users in the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand; premium only in Latin America and South Africa. This service is NOT recommended; their servers cannot handle DBS traffic and free users get the episodes 2 hours late.

  • VRV: US-only bundle service for Crunchyroll and Funimation. New episodes appear around the same time as they do on Crunchyroll. NOTE: This service serves as a substitute for a Crunchyroll premium membership, but it does not substitute for Funimation's premium service. The only Dragon Ball series offered is Super (subtitled).

    New episodes come online around 10:30am JST, 1:30am GMT, 8:30pm EST. Episodes sometimes show up earlier for premium users and later for free users; sometimes they are late for everyone because of production issues.

    Dragon Ball Super Dub Broadcast


    Adult Swim: Saturday, 8pm EST
    Toonami: Saturday, 11:30pm EST

  • Livestream

  • Recent Episodes

    Adult Swim has the streaming rights for Super and Kai; they will not be available on FunimationNow until further notice. If you do not have cable, you can use SlingTV or Playstation Vue; their basic packages include Cartoon Network. Adult Swim and Toonami are programming blocks of Cartoon Network.

    Dragon Ball Z Kai "The Final Chapters"


    Toonami: Sunday at 12am EST

  • Livestream

  • Recent Episodes

    Home video

  • Part 1 (episodes 99-121): April 25, Blu-Ray and DVD.
  • Part 2 (episodes 122-144): May 23, Blu-Ray and DVD.
  • Part 3 (episodes 145-167): June 20, Blu-Ray and DVD.

    Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and GT


    Official Streams

  • FUNimation (North America):
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball GT

  • AnimeLab (Australia and New Zealand):
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z

  • Hulu:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball GT

  • Yahoo View:
    Dragon Ball

    Home Video

  • FUNimation:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball Z Kai · Dragon Ball GT · Dragon Ball Super

  • Amazon:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball Z Kai · Dragon Ball GT · Dragon Ball Super

    >This topic is addressed in our FAQ. See the link for more details about the different dub versions and soundtracks.

    There are many different ways to purchase the anime. While all releases of Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball GT are in their native 4:3 fullscreen aspect ratio, most English releases of Dragon Ball Z were cropped to 16:9 widescreen.

  • For Dragon Ball, your best option is the Blue Brick DVD sets. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball Z, your best option is the most recent Blu-ray set [16:9 Cropped]
  • For Dragon Ball Kai, your best option is most recent Blu-ray/DVD set. If you prefer Kenji Yamamoto's musical score, you want "Parts 1-4" of the Part set. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball GT, your best option is the Green Brick DVD set. [4:3 Native]

    Other releases include:

  • The Dragon Ball Z Orange Brick DVD set [16:9 Cropped], which are criticized for their aggressive filtering, over-contrasted colors, automated center crop, and excessive detail loss during scenes with shaky picture.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Dragon Box set [4:3 Native], the now-out-of-print collector's edition which is considered by many to be the best DVD set of the series. Unfortunately, they run around $700 for a complete set on eBay, and don't include the American broadcast soundtrack.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Blu-ray Level Sets [4:3 Native], the now-cancelled Blu-ray set which was praised for its faithful colors, grain preservation and original 4:3 aspect ratio.
  • The Dragon Ball Z "Rock The Dragon" set [4:3 Native], which contains all 53 episodes of the original Ocean Group dub.

    If you prefer a stream, you can watch the series on several online services including FUNimation. Streams are available subbed or dubbed, but both versions will feature the original Japanese soundtrack.



    If you have any questions, see our extended rules. If you believe this removal was made in error, please respond to this comment or appeal to the moderating team.
u/Terez27 · 1 pointr/dbz

Your submission has been removed for the following reason:

>This topic is addressed in our FAQ.

  • Dragon Ball tells the story of Goku through the end of his childhood and spans 153 episodes. It is the foundational story of Goku and his friends, and skipping it is not recommended. If you want to skip filler episodes, you can use this guide.
  • Then, watch EITHER Dragon Ball Z OR Dragon Ball Z Kai.
  • Dragon Ball Z spans 291 episodes. The Japanese voice actors were in their prime when recording Z, and the Funimation home release with subtitles by Steve Simmons is highly recommended. The Funimation dub, on the other hand, is notorious for its inexperienced voice actors and egregiously creative translations. If you want to skip filler episodes, use this guide.
  • Dragon Ball Z Kai spans 167 episodes in the international version and 159 episodes in the Japanese version. It is a remastered version of Z with the majority of the filler removed. The Funimation dub offers a now-veteran cast and considerably more accurate translations. If you have no nostalgia for the original Z dub, this is the recommended route.
  • Dragon Ball Super comes next, according to in-story chronology. It begins about 4 years after the final battle of Dragon Ball Z, or about 6 years before the 10-year time skip at the end of Z (episodes 289-291). The first two arcs of Super are retellings of the final two Dragon Ball Z films (14 and 15), so you have a handful of choices on how to continue the story:
  • The more complete route (recommended): Watch the JSAT special and Battle of Gods. From there, read Jaco the Galactic Patrolman, and watch Resurrection 'F'. When finished, move on to Dragon Ball Super.
  • The anime-only route: Skip straight to Dragon Ball Super, understanding that it adapts Battle of Gods and Resurrection 'F' into story arcs, with some details changed. For a list of changes, see here and here, scrolling down to "Main Differences From the Theatrical Film".
  • The combination Super/Movies route: Watch episodes 1 and 2 of Dragon Ball Super. Watch Battle of Gods. Watch Episodes 15-18 of Dragon Ball Super. Watch Resurrection 'F'. See this post, then continue with Episode 28 of Super.
  • The quickest route (for the lazy/impatient): Watch Battle of Gods and Resurrection 'F'. See this post, then continue with Episode 28 of Super.
  • Dragon Ball GT spans 64 episodes and begins 5 years after the 10-year time skip at the end of Dragon Ball Z, i.e. well after the time setting of Super. It follows those events, but it is the only series not based on a story by Akira Toriyama, and its continuity has been overwritten by Dragon Ball Super.
  • The rest of the movies/specials are separate from the main storyline, and are entirely optional. If you'd like to watch all of the movies and specials in the order released, use this list.

    >This topic is addressed in our Wiki.

    If a streaming website is not listed below, it is almost certainly illegal. If there is an unlisted website which you believe is legal, please contact the moderators before discussing or linking it on the subreddit. Piracy is forbidden on r/dbz.

    Dragon Ball Super Sub Simulcast


    Official Streams

  • Daisuki. Available in North America; also covers most of Europe and several other territories; see the complete list here. Available to free users in certain regions.

  • AnimeLab. Australia and New Zealand, subscription and free users. (Fewer ads than Crunchyroll for free users.)

  • FunimationNow. North America, subscription and free users. Funimation's videos usually go up later than they do on other services.

  • Crunchyroll. Free and premium users in the US, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and these European countries; premium only in Latin America and South Africa. This service is NOT recommended; their servers cannot handle DBS traffic and free users get the episodes 2 hours late.

  • VRV: US-only bundle service for Crunchyroll and Funimation. New episodes appear around the same time as they do on Crunchyroll. NOTE: This service serves as a substitute for a Crunchyroll premium membership, but it does not substitute for Funimation's premium service. The only Dragon Ball series offered is Super (subtitled).

    New episodes come online around 10:30am JST, 1:30am GMT, 8:30pm EST. Episodes sometimes show up earlier for premium users and later for free users; sometimes they are late for everyone because of production issues.

    Dragon Ball Super Dub Broadcast


    Adult Swim: Saturday, 8pm EST
    Toonami: Saturday, 11:30pm EST

  • Livestream

  • Recent Episodes

    Adult Swim has the streaming rights for Super and Kai; they will not be available on FunimationNow until further notice. If you do not have cable, you can use SlingTV or Playstation Vue; their basic packages include Cartoon Network. Adult Swim and Toonami are programming blocks of Cartoon Network.

    Dragon Ball Z Kai "The Final Chapters"


    Toonami: Sunday at 12am EST

  • Livestream

  • Recent Episodes

    Home video

  • Part 1 (episodes 99-121): April 25, Blu-Ray and DVD.
  • Part 2 (episodes 122-144): May 23, Blu-Ray and DVD.
  • Part 3 (episodes 145-167): June 20, Blu-Ray and DVD.

    Dragon Ball, Dragon Ball Z, and GT


    Official Streams

  • FUNimation (North America):
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball GT

  • AnimeLab (Australia and New Zealand):
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z

  • Hulu:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball GT

  • Yahoo View:
    Dragon Ball

    Home Video

  • FUNimation:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball Z Kai · Dragon Ball GT · Dragon Ball Super

  • Amazon:
    Dragon Ball · Dragon Ball Z · Dragon Ball Z Kai · Dragon Ball GT · Dragon Ball Super



    If you have any questions, see our extended rules. If you believe this removal was made in error, you can appeal to the moderating team.
u/FatNagger69 · 7 pointsr/dbz

Someone recently asked if Dragon Ball would ever make it to Bluray. To quote /u/VegettoEX:

>Asked often, but no real updates. For an actual HD release, someone would need to pony up and scan film masters. Right now, that would have to be Toei; FUNimation's current masters are digibeta tapes at best.
I mean, they could do an upscaled release to Blu-ray, but that'd be a lot more trouble than it's worth with their current materials, and if they crop anything else... (insert fist-shaking here)
I would honestly expect to see something from Toei on Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball GT in HD before I would expect to see it from FUNimation.

----

That being said, our FAQ in the sidebar has a list of your options when it comes to purchasing the series.

>##Q: What is the best way to purchase the anime?
A: There are many different ways to purchase the anime. While all releases of Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball GT are in their native 4:3 fullscreen aspect ratio, most English releases of Dragon Ball Z were cropped to 16:9 widescreen.

>* For Dragon Ball, your best option is the Blue Brick DVD sets. [4:3 Native]

  • For Dragon Ball Z, your best option is the most recent Bluray set. [16:9 Cropped]
  • For Dragon Ball Z Kai, your best option is most recent Bluray/DVD set. If you prefer Kenji Yamamoto's musical score, you want "Parts 1-4" of the Part set. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball GT, your best option is the Green Brick DVD set. [4:3 Native]

    >Other releases include:

    >* The Dragon Ball Z Orange Brick DVD set [16:9 Cropped], which are criticized for their aggressive filtering, over-contrasted colors, automated center crop, and excessive detail loss during scenes with shaky picture.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Dragon Box set [4:3 Native], the now-out-of-print collector's edition which is considered by many to be the best DVD set of the series. Unfortunately, they run around $700 for a complete set on eBay, and don't include the American broadcast score.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Bluray Level Sets [4:3 Native], the now-cancelled Bluray set which was praised for its faithful colors, grain preservation and original 4:3 aspect ratio.
  • The Dragon Ball Z "Rock The Dragon" set [4:3 Native], which contains all 53 episodes of the original Ocean Group dub.
u/FatNigger69 · 2 pointsr/dbz

The closest to the "originals" would be the Dragon Box set, but that's going to run you a ton of money on eBay. Here is a list of choices for you.

  • For Dragon Ball, your best option is the Blue Brick DVD sets. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball Z, your best option is the most recent Bluray set. [16:9 Cropped]
  • For Dragon Ball Z Kai, your best option is most recent Bluray/DVD set. If you prefer Kenji Yamamoto's musical score, you want "Parts 1-4" of the Part set. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball GT, your best option is the Green Brick DVD set. [4:3 Native]

    Other releases include:

  • The Dragon Ball Z Orange Brick DVD set [16:9 Cropped], which are criticized for their aggressive filtering, over-contrasted colors, automated center crop, and excessive detail loss during scenes with shaky picture.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Dragon Box set [4:3 Native], the now-out-of-print collector's edition which is considered by many to be the best DVD set of the series. Unfortunately, they run around $700 for a complete set on eBay.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Bluray Level Sets [4:3 Native], the now-cancelled Bluray set which was praised for its faithful colors, grain preservation and original 4:3 aspect ratio.
  • The Dragon Ball Z "Rock The Dragon" set [4:3 Native], which contains all 53 episodes of the original Ocean Group dub.

    As for whether Kai is good or not, I prefer it to the original. The pacing is great, and the English dub is much better in terms of acting and script accuracy, though there's some censorship in the first few episodes, and the redrawn scenes look off.
u/TyroKith · 5 pointsr/dbz

There's only one way that I know of to buy pre-Z Dragon Ball uncut and in its entirety. You'll want to pick yourself up the Blue Bricks. The quality isn't terrible compared to the Orange Bricks. Don't forget about the movies.

For Z, you'll definitely want to avoid the Orange Bricks. The only good thing about this release is that it finally made Dragon Ball Z easy to buy without collecting endless DVDs. But the picture is botched up beyond being saved, and it's cropped to widescreen. Ideally you'd want to purchase the Dragon Boxes, but they're out-of-print and cost a pretty penny. Maybe check eBay if you're interested. You're probably going to want to go with the latest Blu-Ray releases. They're still cropped like the Orange Bricks, but they're a superior overall product even if they still aren't up to par with what we should be getting. Pick up the movies and Battle of Gods too.

GT is pretty simple. Buy the Green Brick. Like the pre-Z Blue Brick, the "remastering" didn't destroy the integrity of the product. It also comes with the one GT TV special. Yay!

And if you're interested in what order you should watch all this, check out our guide.

u/adrianmalacoda · 1 pointr/dbz

Your submission has been removed for the following reason:

>This topic is addressed in our Wiki.

If a streaming website is not listed below, it is almost certainly illegal. If there is an unlisted website which you believe is legal, please contact the moderators before discussing or linking it on the subreddit. Piracy is forbidden on r/dbz.

Dragon Ball Super Sub Simulcast


Official Streams

u/pspiq5 · 2 pointsr/dbz

Your submission has been removed for the following reason:

>This topic is addressed in our Wiki.

If a streaming website is not listed below, it is almost certainly illegal. If there is an unlisted website which you believe is legal, please contact the moderators before discussing or linking it on the subreddit. Piracy is forbidden on r/dbz.

Dragon Ball Super Sub Simulcast


Official Streams

u/Nickolaus · 1 pointr/dbz

Manga Entertainment's release of the 'digitally remastered' sets, known as the Orange Bricks, both contain the Bruce Faulconer score and Shunsuke Kikuchi score. Audio is English+Kikuchi score, Japanese+Kikuchi score, and English+Faulconer score. Bare in mind this isn't the best release of Dragon Ball Z you can buy on the market. Quite honestly, I would invest the money into the blu-ray sets.

What is the best way to purchase the anime?

---
There are many different ways to purchase the anime. While all releases of Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball GT are in their native 4:3 fullscreen aspect ratio, most English releases of Dragon Ball Z were cropped to 16:9 widescreen.

  • For Dragon Ball, your best option is the Blue Brick DVD sets. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball Z, your best option is the most recent Blu-ray set [16:9 Cropped]
  • For Dragon Ball Kai, your best option is most recent Blu-ray/DVD set. If you prefer Kenji Yamamoto's musical score, you want "Parts 1-4" of the Part set. [4:3 Native]
  • For Dragon Ball GT, your best option is the Green Brick DVD set. [4:3 Native]

    Other releases include:

  • The Dragon Ball Z Orange Brick DVD set [16:9 Cropped], which are criticized for their aggressive filtering, over-contrasted colors, automated center crop, and excessive detail loss during scenes with shaky picture.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Dragon Box set [4:3 Native], the now-out-of-print collector's edition which is considered by many to be the best DVD set of the series. Unfortunately, they run around $700 for a complete set on eBay, and don't include the American broadcast soundtrack.
  • The Dragon Ball Z Blu-ray Level Sets [4:3 Native], the now-cancelled Blu-ray set which was praised for its faithful colors, grain preservation and original 4:3 aspect ratio.
  • The Dragon Ball Z "Rock The Dragon" set [4:3 Native], which contains all 53 episodes of the original Ocean Group dub.