A Japanese series, it only makes sense most of Dragon Ball’s video games would come from ౠJapan. At the same time, Dragon Ball’s appeal is universal. Whether you’re in Japan, the United States, Europe, ꦰor Latin America, Dragon Ball is a franchise that anyone from any cul🦂tu⭕re can find something to appreciate about.

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It’s also a franchise with a good chunk of games not madeꦡ in Japan. Not a lot, mind you, and most were rather predictably developed in the United States, but it’s interesting to note which Dragon Ball games didn’t actually come from Japan. Honestly, the results aren’t tha✱t surprising.

8 The Legacy Of Goku

The Legacy of Goku released at the right place and at the right time, earning it some nice sales. Unfortunately, fans were met with one of the worst games on the Game Boy Advance. A mess of an action RPG t𒈔hat was short, grindy, and just no fun at all. Worse yet, it mangles the Saiyan and Freeza arc’s stories.

The Legacy of Goku would somehow see a ⛦surprisingly improved sequel down the🔯 line, but this first game is a mess from start to finish. It’s one of the least Dragon Ball games around, and it’s honestly a shock The Legacy of Goku was able to spin-off into its own sub-series.

7 Collectible Card Game

Dragon Ball Z had a card game for a while. It still does, but it’s not quite the same as it was. It’s actౠually good now. Jokes aside, the original Dragon Ball Z card game is a fond memory for many of us who got into the series d🐎uring its Toonami days. In manyꦫ respects, Dragon Ball Z cards were just as noteworthy as Pokemon cards. (For the six of us who collected them.)

Collectible Card Game was an attempt at bringing the physical card g🀅ame into the gaming medium, and it’s horrible. It’s even worse than Legacy of Goku. This should’ve been Dragon Ball’s Reshef of Destruction, but it’s an ugly, messy game you won’t want to play for ⭕more than a few minutes.

6 The Legacy Of Goku II

Credit where credit is due, The Legacy of Goku II might very well be the best sequel on the Ga♕me Boy Advance if only because of the jump in quality between Legacy of Goku I and itself. This is a game that learns every single lesson worth learning from its predecessor and manages to reapply all its concepts into something not only more competenꦗt but legitimately good.

Good level design, good game💜play, good boss fights– The Legacy of Goku II has it all. Better yet, it focuses on a unique section of the series where Goku isn’t in the spotlight all that often. And unlike the first game, this results in Gohan, Piccolo, Vegeta, and Trunks servi⛦ng as the story’s leads 90% of the time.

5 Taiketsu

Taiketsu is infamously one of the worst Dragon Ball Z video games there is. A 2D Tekken-esque fighting game, Taiketsu is one of the ugliest, wo🦩rst playing games on the Game Boy Advance. Not just a bad fighting game, but a bad Dragon Ball game too, with the series’ identity noticeaཧbly qu🐈ite absent.

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Taiketsu also marketed itself as the first Dragon Ball game 🥀to feature Broly, which was just a blatant lie considering Super Butoden 2 exists (and is a much, MUCH better game). Taiketsu is quite possibly the single worst game on this list, and playing it f𒅌or a single round will tell you why.

4 Buu’s Fury

A sequel to The Legacy of Goku II and the final entry in The Legacy of Goku trilogy (kind of, but we’ll follow up on that,) Buu’s Fury is the most RPG oriented of the three games. It has equipment, some proper side quests, and even stat customization. It makes for a very easy game, but a rather dynamic on𓆉e.

Plus, it’s one of the only games in the series to focus on the Buu arc and really give it th𒆙e time to breathe. The level design, unfortunately, isn’t as good as The Legacy of Goku II’s, but Buu’s Fury is still an excelleℱnt sequ▨el and a really nice adaptation of the end of DBZ.

3 Transformation

Dragon Ball GT: Transformation is technically a sequel to Buu’s Fury. It is not an action RPG, it does not even resemble the previous t🍷hree games, and♔ its overall quality is more in-line with the original The Legacy of Goku than anything else. It’s𝔍 honestly a really sad end to what was an otherwise surprisingly good sub-series.

As if to add insult to injury, Transformation ends on a cli♔ffhanger that was never resolved, leaving The Legacy of Goku adaptation stuck in a very awkward limbo. Consi✱dering how ಞgood The Legacy of Goku II and Buu’s Fury were, yඣou ℱreally have to wonder why the devs decided to make Transformation a slow beat em up.

2 Sagas

Anyone who was around leading up to Sagas’ release understands h💮ow bad of a game it is. It was being marketed as the Dragon Ball game. The game that would actually capture the feel꧑ and tꦏone of the anime, translating it masterfully to the video game medium. Instead, what we got was pure garbage.

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Stinking to high heaven, Sagas is a migraine waiting to happen. It has terrible level design, health sponge bosses, an abysmal combat system, and truly ear grating music. It is one of the worst video games ever made, and a sin against the franchise on the same lev♔el as Dragon Ball Evolution.

1 Online

Developed in South Korea, Dragon Ball Online was actually something of an “ꦫofficial” continuation of sorts before Dragon Ball Super adopted that 🦹role. With a timeline penned by Akira Toriyama, Dragon Ball Online ch🅺ronicled a w🎐orld of history that occurred after the end of the original manga. Most of it, very cool.

Tragically, Dragon Ball Online didn’t really have the legs to last, and much of its lore was repurposed between b🔥oth Xenoverse and Heroes. Dragon Ball has been doing its own thing since Battle of Gods, and it seems highly unlikely Toriyama will revisit𒁏 any concepts from Online. It wasn’t a b🉐ad game, though. A bit light as far as most MMOs go, but the Dragon Ball fan service makes it worth it.

NEXT: Dragon Ba💜ll: 10 Best Games That Adapt The Anime’s Story