Best Dragon Ball Games – Dragon Ball Z Games which you need to try

The Dragon Ball franchise has released hundreds and hundreds of video games on nearly every digital video game platform right from the Super Nintendo Entertainment System, and Microsoft Windows to Xbox, and Play Stations.

Best Dragon Ball Games – Dragon Ball Z Games which you need to try

Here we cover the Top 15 Dragon Ball Z Games which you need to try

  1. Dragon Ball: Fusions 

Dragon Ball: Fusions 
Dragon Ball: Fusions

Dragon Ball: Fusions is a wild computer game that nobody expected to like. As a Dragon Ball RPG, it is, as of now, an uncommon monster game in the DBZ Universe. It is an insane RPG game that serves complete fan service, loaded with references all through the universe.

Dragon Ball Fusions allow the players to create their own character, build teams with others, and collect Dragon Ball characters to fuse and create new ones to use during battles. It allows players to take a photograph of their friends or themselves and fuse them. It fills in as a remarkable RPG experience, offering fans such stuff they have never observed.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Xenoverse 2

Dragon Ball Z: Xenoverse 2
Dragon Ball Z: Xenoverse 2

As history is being altered and attacked by evil intruders, players will become Time Travellers in order to protect and save the Past and the Future of the world.

The main hub of the Dragon World, Conton City, is 7x bigger than Toki Toki City from the previous installment of the game.

300 players can be online on one server at the same time, and all players can undertake quests, shop, enter fights, and more in Conton City.

  1. Super Dragon Ball Heroes: World Mission

Super Dragon Ball Heroes: World Mission
Super Dragon Ball Heroes: World Mission

Super Dragon Ball Heroes: World Mission takes place in a universe where Dragon Ball subsist as an anime that created a popular card game.

Once the real and virtual worlds begin to collide, the protagonist of the game needs to collect cards of their favorite Z fighters to battle a wild abundance of villains. The story is quite cheesy, the turn-based gameplay has depth but is also very repetitive, and there are hundreds and thousands of cards to collect.

  1. Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure

Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure
Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure

The old-school series of Dragon Ball is often neglected for the more over-the-top action because the game has a softer and comedic tone of Dragon Ball.

This is why a lot of fans have made a huge mistake overlooking Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure. A very Gameboy Advance beat-them-up game where you play from the start to the final fight of the series with King Piccolo. Through a combination of platforming stages, fighting stages, and flying stages, the game shows incredible variety even before considering that you can play through this game using multiple characters.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Buu’s Fury

Dragon Ball Z: Buu's Fury
Dragon Ball Z: Buu’s Fury

The Dragon Ball Z: Buu’s Fury is an action RPG released in America on September 14, 2004. It is a sequel to Atari’s best-selling Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku II.

The stat points gained from leveling up could be used to increase the Strength, Endurance, and Power of the character. Food-items gained from a Z-Mart or enemies can be used, and items bought or found can be equipped.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyans

Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyans
Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyans

Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyans, which is made for the DS, isn’t the first adventure game that tells the story of the Saiyans or even the very first RPG to tell the famous Saiyan Saga.

If that doesn’t sound like a lot of thrill, it starts in the Dragon Ball era and adds a lot of stories to pad things out. However, what it offers is an interesting, complex JRPG gameplay system. For fans who are tired of DBZ fighters, this game is a must-play.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: The Legend

Dragon Ball Z: The Legend
Dragon Ball Z: The Legend

Looking back to the mid-’90s, Dragon Ball Z: The Legend is the franchise’s only worthy PlayStation 1 title. The Dragon Ball Z: Legend runs through the entirety of Dragon Ball Z’s main arc story and features a respectful roster of more than 30 fighters.

The gameplay is mainly a team battle, as both sides try to swing the momentum of the battle in their favor. While still technically being a fighter, The Legend inputs a part of strategy into proceedings because there is no point in winning the fight if the rest of the team is on the receiving end of a demolition.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Legendary Super Warriors

Dragon Ball Z: Legendary Super Warriors
Dragon Ball Z: Legendary Super Warriors

The Game Boy Color may not have the power of a PlayStation 2 or a GameCube, but the system’s limitations meant developers had to think outside the box when creating this game “Legendary Super Warriors.”

The end result of this game is a highly respectable fighting game that has turn-based mechanics with a card system. Characters are leveled up by assigning attack, defense, and support cards; however, each fighter is limited to a few upgrades per playthrough. Legendary Super Warriors brags a robust campaign and a lot of replayability, even if the unique gameplay may not be suitable for everyone.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Infinite World

Dragon Ball Z: Infinite World
Dragon Ball Z: Infinite World

As the PlayStation 2 neared its end in 2008, one last Dragon Ball Z game was released to add to the already existing fantastic lineup the PS2 was renowned for. This game is basically like a Budokai 4, including most good elements from Budokai 3 and improving some major flaws.

No inclusion of the “Dragon Rush” feature from Budokai is seen as a huge plus. While the game is not as popular as its predecessors, this game is loved by many many fans and still stands as one of the most underplayed and underrated games in the franchise.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden 2

Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden 2
Dragon Ball Z: Super Butoden 2

To many of the modern players, it may seem borderline profanity to place some ancient, not to mention, 2D fighting game above the titles of Budokai Tenkaichi or Xenoverse. On the other hand, people who might’ve been on the old school side might recognize the elf or sprites as being universal on forum signatures since the early 2000s.

But very few have actually played this incredible and amazing SNES (Super Nintendo Entertainment System) fighting game. Among SNES fighters, this game was and still is quite superb. It features stages that are so massive with so many different environments that the game needed a split-screen.

While it features far fewer characters than the latest and modern Dragon Ball Z games, none of them ever feels like model swaps. It also features a very unique story that leads to some strange plot holes involving Bojack.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension

Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension
Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension

Dragon Ball Z: Hyper Dimension is one of the most important and influential Dragon Ball fighting game of all time. It covers all of Dragon Ball Z’s main Sagas, Hyper Dimension has only ten fighters, which are playable. All that said, all these characters play adversely enough to require each of them to be individually mastered.

Along with an extensive range of special or situational moves, the combat is highly responsive and dynamic. Even after these years, Hyper Dimension remains a fantastic game on the list.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku 2 & Buu’s Fury

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku 2 & Buu's Fury
Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku 2 & Buu’s Fury

Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku has a better chance of being on a list of the worst Dragon Ball games. But the sequels securing such a high spot in this list is honestly quite remarkable.

The story is mainly zeroing in on the Cell and Majin Buu Sagas, respectively, Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku 2 and Buu’s Fury spotlight the prime material’s sense of adventure that is often left belittled by the majority of its adaptations.

Action RPGs with multiple playable characters, unlockable attacks, side quests, and temporary transformations, The Legacy of Goku series is a must-play not only for fans of the franchise but also for anyone searching for a fun handheld experience.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot

Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot
Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot

Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot attempts to do what has already been done numberless times, having the player punch and ki-blast their way through the too loveable story of Dragon Ball, but this time with the addition of some key RPG elements in the gameplay and polishing the 3D battle system.

Kakarot is a fantastic single-player game to experience that really appeals to Dragon Ball Z die-hard fans, and one of the only negatives is the lack of content for players who haven’t grown up with this anime title. The RPG elements are very fun to play and intuitive, but get extremely repetitive and dumb pretty quickly. But, looking over the minor flaws, this is a must-play for any truly aspiring Saiyan warrior.

  1. Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3

Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3

For a long time, Dragon Ball Z: Budokai 3 was the best fighting game in the Dragon Ball Z series.

It featured a great balance of characters, fast-paced action, gameplay mechanics, story mode, and the complete fun of any Dragon Ball Z game around.

Budokai 3 features nearly all characters from the Dragon Ball Z franchise’s whole timeline. It also offered fans a way to compete against one another in the pre-online days of video games.

  1. Dragon Ball FighterZ

Dragon Ball FighterZ
Dragon Ball FighterZ

Tell me one thing, how many Dragon Ball Z fighting games do you know which are competitively playable?

When Dragon Ball FighterZ was first announced, fans went completely wild. It had been a very long time since the last intense gameplay accurate fighting game for the Dragon Ball Z series came out. This game is an incredibly intense fighting game focused on balanced gameplay, technical fighting-focused combat, and a massive cast of characters from all over the Dragon Ball saga.

FighterZ allowed Dragon Ball Z game to finally be accepted into the competitive scene, something that none of the previous releases of the series ever came close to accomplishing. Because of the single-player campaign in the game overstaying its welcome, FighterZ mostly stands out as a multiplayer title.

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About the author

Alex Jones

Alex Jones is a tech-savvy editor at World-Wire, renowned for his expertise in writing detailed technical articles and user-friendly how-to guides. With a background in Information Technology, he excels in demystifying complex tech topics. His work is highly valued for its accuracy and practicality, earning him awards like "Innovator in Tech Journalism" in 2023. Alex's role at World-Wire is pivotal in making technology accessible to a broad audience.

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