37 I Hope They Don't Forget Characters Like These.27 Is the English Demo out in PSN yet? Also.26 Episode of Bardock in Ultimate Tenkaichi?.17 Where Is Radiz,Cell Jr,Goten,Kid Trunks & Frieza's Third From Because They Are Not In The Game Yet.15 Dragon Ball Z Ultimate Tenkaichi Interview.13 Story Battle Great Ape Vegeta gameplay and Broly vs.
And finally NEW SERIES OF DBZ PLEASEEEE!!!!!!!!!! But seriously please new game, new modes, and keep the create a saiyan. I like the hero mode tho except the cutscenes that made me break my CD i never been so angry at you guys who created ulitimate tenkachi honestly you guys deserved 1-2 stars but people were hoping you would make a better games so they decided to give ya 3 to keep your dream alive. Mostly because it shows story lines and after they are done with that we got a new hero mode to play after we are done. Also bring in a new series of dragonball z which could make your games 100x better. I think a better idea for the new game your making should invovle stuff from your past games like the naruto games are doing, not dump cutscenes where you can't tell when the person is going to press a certain butoon to do a combo, you guys must take it back and go back to the simplier times of the dragonball z game but keep the create a saiyan mode because most people bought the game for that and maybe a difficulty mode for heroes mode because children don't want to stress out from the game.
mode, with players squaring off against A.I. Tenkaichi's Dueling mode is a standard Vs. The World Tournament mode allows up to eight players to fight each other in a standard ring-out, single elimination tournament, and The Evolution Z mode allows players to manage their various "Z Item" power-ups. opponents in a quest to win the top ranking. Then there's the Ultimate Battle mode, where hardcore gamers can fight through 100 different A.I. First there's the Battle Gate mode, which is the game's main story mode. DBZ: Budokai Tenkaichi has plenty of game variations to keep gamers busy. Each of the story mode's 150 battles creates a fully immersive adventure which retells the epic history of Goku and his quest for the mythical Dragon Balls. When playing through Tenkaichi's story mode, the plot advancement seamlessly re-creates some of the most popular encounters from the anime using cutscenes created with in-game graphics. The game's use of cel shading is phenomenal, creating an experience faithful to the years and years of DBZ source material. Graphically, Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi is easily the best-looking DBZ game to date. Tenkaichi even encourages players to indulge in their destructive tendencies by hiding various power-ups throughout the stages. Mountains can be blasted apart, buildings can be torn to pieces, and pristine landscapes can generally be torn asunder. Making things more interesting is the fact that almost all of the stages are fully destructible. Players will duke it out on the ground, in the air, and under the water in a series of stages ripped right from the DBZ anime. The cast isn't the only thing that's gotten larger in Tenkaichi, the battlegrounds themselves have just about doubled in size.
Add to that the forty plus forms that are available to some of the fighters, and you end up with a library of more than NINETY different fighters. There are more than twenty characters to choose from right off the bat, and over thirty more waiting to be unlocked over the course of the game.
The first thing I noticed in Tenkaichi was the HUGE cast of fighters tossed into the mix this time around. Recently, I had the chance to get some hands-on time with the latest and most ambitious entry in the popular franchise, Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi. As a result, the Budokai series has been one of Atari's best selling titles, while at the same time being picked apart by its core audience. Anime fans generally tend to be extremely protective of their favorite series, and fans of Dragon Ball Z are some of the most hardcore of the anime crowd.