🎄 Guaranteed Christmas! Order by 12/16 for Standard Delivery in Europe. 🎁

Dragon Ball Kai Ultimate Butōden [portable] -

The roster, while covering all major characters (from Goku and Vegeta to Freeza, Cell, and Buu), is disappointingly small by franchise standards. Notable absences like Android 18, Mr. Satan, and Gotenks are glaring, and there are no secret unlockable characters beyond a handful of forms. Once the 6-8 hour story mode is complete, the only real replayability comes from a bare-bones Vs. CPU mode and local multiplayer, which, while fun, suffers from the same touchscreen latency issues. Dragon Ball Kai: Ultimate Butōden is a classic example of a "cult classic" fighting game. It is deeply flawed but undeniably original. In an industry where licensed games often play it safe by copying established formulas, Game Republic took a genuine risk. For the patient player willing to learn its unique touch-based language, the game offers a deeply satisfying and tactile fighting experience that feels closer to the feeling of a martial arts battle than many of its button-based contemporaries.

Ultimately, Ultimate Butōden is best appreciated as a historical artifact—a glimpse of a "what if" path where fighting games embraced the touchscreen as a primary input device. It is not essential for casual fans, but for the dedicated Dragon Ball enthusiast or the fighting game connoisseur curious about forgotten mechanics, it is a fascinating, punchy, and wonderfully weird chapter in the franchise’s long gaming history. It dared to ask: "What if throwing a Spirit Bomb required a gesture of power?" And for that ambition alone, it deserves respect. dragon ball kai ultimate butōden

Where the game attempts to innovate is in its RPG-lite "Potential" system. By earning points in battle, players can permanently upgrade their characters’ stats (attack, defense, Ki, etc.). This allows for a degree of customization, letting you turn a fragile speedster like Krillin into a tank or focus Goku entirely on Ki blast damage. However, the progression is linear and eventually trivializes the main story difficulty. The roster, while covering all major characters (from