DRAGON BALL Z BUDOKAI 2 REVIEW SERIES
Although Budokai 2 represents for the series a bit what Devil May Cry 2 was for the homonymous ssaga, or the classic black sheep of the family, it would have been interesting to see a revival especially for the high number of characters "what if ”Playable in this chapter (such as the fusion between Yamcha and Tenshinhan or Majin Buu after having absorbed Freeza or Cell) or special costumes introduced (among all we must certainly remember Creeza, the son of Freeza taken from the comic manga Nekomajin). One thing must be said immediately: to call Dragon Ball Z: Budokai HD Collection a real "collection" would be wrong, as the second chapter is not present, officially because this represents a sort of breaking point within the series and therefore to Namco Bandai it seemed more appropriate to insert only the first and third chapter, which in fact is the real "sequel ”By Dragon Ball Z: Budokai. VERSION TESTED: PlayStation 3 When we say "there is no two without three" Was Namco Bandai limited only to following what now seems a fashion, launching old glories on the market, or did it do the "homework" well, launching on the market restored titles adapted to the current generation? After these last appearances in the previous generation, however, the series has no longer found space today, at least until the announcement of this Dragon Ball Z: Budokai HD Collection, which contains the first and third installments of the main Budokai series.
DRAGON BALL Z BUDOKAI 2 REVIEW MOVIE
Moving on to a fairly controversial second chapter and a third chapter often referred to as one of the best video games inspired by the Dragon Ball franchise, the series then came to Playstation Portable in 2006 with two spin offs: Shin Budokai (whose story mode is based on the movie “The Diabolical Warrior of the Underworld”) and Shin Budokai 2, set in Trunks' alternate future. Eleven years have now passed since the release of the first Dragon Ball Z: Budokai on Playstation 2 (landed in 2003 also on Nintendo GameCube), a title that enjoyed general critical success and inaugurated the Budokai series of fighting games linked to the opera.