Dragon Ball Z: Buyū Retsuden

Dragon Ball Z: Buyū Retsuden
Dragon Ball Z: L'Appel du Destin

Japanese box art
Developer(s) Bandai
Publisher(s) Bandai, Ecofilmes (Portugal)
Series Dragon Ball
Platform(s) Sega Mega Drive
Release date(s)
  • JP April 1, 1994
  • EU January 1, 1994
Genre(s) Fighting
Mode(s) Up to 2 players simultaneously
Distribution 2-megabit cartridge

Dragon Ball Z: Buyū Retsuden (ドラゴンボールZ 武勇列伝 Doragon Bōru Zetto Buyū Retsuden, Dragon Ball Z: Intense Martial Transmission), released as Dragon Ball Z: L'Appel du Destin (Dragon Ball Z: The Call of Destiny) in France and Spain and as Dragon Ball Z in Portugal, is a fighting game released for the Sega Genesis/Mega Drive based on the Dragon Ball franchise. Due to the great popularity of the Dragon Ball Z anime in these European countries, it was released in Europe on January 1, 1994[1] and Japan on April 1, 1994.[2] The French/Spanish version was renamed Dragon Ball Z: L'Appel du Destin and has the game translated to French language and the instruction booklet in French and Spanish languages. The game was also distributed in Portugal in 1996 where it is simply called Dragon Ball Z. The distributor, Ecofilmes, would take Japanese copies of the game, replace the cover and the manual (but keep the cart), and sell the game as is, promising a free converter cart as the Japanese cartridges cannot fit into European Mega Drives. When the French version came out, they switched to using that version instead.

Development

The SNES dominated the Japanese market, and therefore, most manga/anime games were released for this platform.[3] But that did not happen in Europe, where in some territories Sega Genesis sales were even higher than the SNES. Due to the popularization of the Dragon Ball franchise in countries like France and Spain, the original Super Butoden series for the SNES were well-received so Bandai decided the development of a Dragon Ball game for the Sega Genesis.[3] The time of development was even higher than the Super Butoden series with an outstanding result.[3]

Gameplay

A screenshot of the game featuring Goku and Gohan in the Room of Spirit and Time

The gameplay is quite similar to the Super Butoden games for the SNES. It features the split-screen that allows the player to stay so far from the opponents and performs an energy ki blast although is not necessary to stay away from the opponent to perform it. When the ki blast is performed far away, the opponent has very little time to defend from the ki blast. The game is a typical fighting game. "A" punches, "B" kicks, "Up" jumps, and various combination moves can be done by holding the various controller buttons together. The "C" button is used to switch between staying on land and flying in the sky. A unique feature in this game is that both characters will always be on-screen simultaneously — leading to the game doing vertical split-screen with scrolling, rotating split screen, and various other neat tricks the Mega Drive was not known for doing (accomplished using various tricks with VDP layer management). This feature is in fact required by some of the strongest moves (which require both players to be far away from each other).

The playable characters are Goku, Gohan, Krillin, Piccolo, Vegeta, Captain Ginyu, Recoome, Frieza, Future Trunks, Android 18, and Cell.

Reception

Reception
Aggregate scores
AggregatorScore
GameRankings80 %[4]
MobyGames73/100[5]
Review scores
PublicationScore
Sega Pro62[6]
Jeuxvideo.com10/20[7]
Player One80/100[8]
Consoles+85/100[9]
Joypad83/100[10]
Mega77/100[11]
Mean Machines Sega81/100[12]
Hobby Consolas89/100[13]
SegaFan.com8.3/10[14]
Sega-16.com8/10[15]
SEGA-Mag (Objectif-SEGA)7/10[16]

The games was generally well received. The graphics are remarkable for a Sega Genesis game.[3]

References

  1. "Dragon Ball Z". VGChartz. Retrieved 3 September 2014.
  2. Sega. "Sega of Japan Hardware Archive: Mega Drive: Third-Party Master List". Table, under 1994: "ドラゴンボールZ 武勇列伝". Retrieved 7 May 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 "Dragon Ball games on Meristation" (in Spanish).
  4. "Dragon Ball Z: Buyuu Retsuden". GameRankings. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  5. "Dragon Ball Z: L'Appel Du Destin". MobyGames. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  6. "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Sega Pro (35): 60/61.
  7. "Dragon Ball Z : L'Appel Du Destin". Jeuxvideo.com (in French). 9 December 2010. Retrieved 28 December 2011.
  8. "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Player One (43): 32/33.
  9. "Dragon Ball Z L'Appel Du Destin review". Consoles+ (in French) (32): 90–93. May 1994.
  10. "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Joypad (31): 44/45.
  11. "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Mega (22): 44/45.
  12. "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Mean Machines Sega (21): 52–54.
  13. "Dragon Ball Z L'Appel Du Destin review". Hobby Consolas (in Spanish). June 1994.
  14. "Dragon Ball Z L'Appel Du Destin review". SegaFan.com (in Spanish). 23 April 2002.
  15. dead link] "Dragon Ball Z Buyū Retsuden review". Sega-16.com. 14 December 2006.
  16. "Dragon Ball Z L'Appel Du Destin review". SEGA-Mag (Objectif-SEGA) (in French). 25 October 2009.