Compare Dragon Ball FighterZ: FighterZ Edition prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Arc System Works. Published by BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment. Released on 1/26/2018. Available on PC, Xbox. Genres: Action. Metacritic score: 85/100.

Arc System Works brings Dragon Ball's chaos to a 3v3 anime fighter with visuals so close to the show you'll do a double-take. This edition packs the base game plus the FighterZ Pass with 8 additional characters.

Dragon Ball FighterZ is a 3-on-3 tag fighter built by Arc System Works, the studio behind Guilty Gear and BlazBlue, so the mechanical pedigree here is serious even if the license screams "gift shop." You pick a team of three fighters, swap between them mid-combo, and race to knock out the opponent's entire squad. The combat is accessible on the surface - auto-combos let newcomers mash their way through flashy super moves without reading a manual - but genuine depth waits underneath in assist timing, vanish counters, dragon rush mix-ups, and the Super Dash pressure game. It rewards the time you put into it without punishing you for putting in none. The visual presentation is the headline feature and it genuinely earns the attention. Arc System Works rendered the characters in a cel-shaded style that reproduces the anime's linework almost exactly. Cut to a Kamehameha super and it looks like a broadcast clip. The stages are destructible and layered, and the UI never clutters the spectacle. If you have ever watched the show and felt the urge to actually control one of those fights, the game delivers that feeling better than anything else in the genre. The FighterZ Edition bundles the FighterZ Pass alongside the base game, which adds 8 characters beyond the launch roster. The base roster already covers the major Dragon Ball arcs well - Goku and Vegeta appear in multiple forms, Android 16, 17, and 18 are all distinct fighters, and Cell and Frieza play exactly as bruising as you want them to. The DLC pass extends into more niche fan territory, pulling in characters like Bardock and Broly. Roster breadth is solid for a Dragon Ball fan; if you come in as a pure fighting game player with no attachment to the IP, the character variety in terms of playstyle is decent but not exceptional - several fighters share movement and pressure patterns. The single-player story mode is long, voice-acted, and structured around a mysterious cloning event that pulls every major character into one narrative. It is serviceable, occasionally fun, and mostly an excuse to see the cast interact. Arcade and training modes cover the basics. Where the game lives, though, is online. Ranked and casual lobbies use a ring-match format inside chibi avatar lobbies, which felt novel at launch. The PC player base has thinned since 2018, so finding matches at specific rank tiers can take patience depending on the time of day, though dedicated players are still around. Split-screen local play is supported if you want couch competition. The rough edges are real. The auto-combo system that helps beginners also means the gap between "pressing buttons" and "playing optimally" is steep enough that casual players may hit a wall fast in online modes. The story mode overstays its welcome by several chapters. And if you want the complete roster beyond the FighterZ Pass, additional DLC character packs exist separately, which means even this edition is not quite everything. For Dragon Ball fans who want a fighter that respects both the source material and the genre, this is still the best answer available. For fighting game players curious about the IP, the mechanical core is genuinely good enough to hold interest on its own terms. Alex, Scout Team

Dragon Ball FighterZ: FighterZ Edition
Action

Dragon Ball FighterZ: FighterZ Edition

Jan 26, 2018Arc System WorksBANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Arc System Works brings Dragon Ball's chaos to a 3v3 anime fighter with visuals so close to the show you'll do a double-take. This edition packs the base game plus the FighterZ Pass with 8 additional characters.

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About Dragon Ball FighterZ: FighterZ Edition

Dragon Ball FighterZ is a 3-on-3 tag fighter built by Arc System Works, the studio behind Guilty Gear and BlazBlue, so the mechanical pedigree here is serious even if the license screams "gift shop." You pick a team of three fighters, swap between them mid-combo, and race to knock out the opponent's entire squad. The combat is accessible on the surface - auto-combos let newcomers mash their way through flashy super moves without reading a manual - but genuine depth waits underneath in assist timing, vanish counters, dragon rush mix-ups, and the Super Dash pressure game. It rewards the time you put into it without punishing you for putting in none. The visual presentation is the headline feature and it genuinely earns the attention. Arc System Works rendered the characters in a cel-shaded style that reproduces the anime's linework almost exactly. Cut to a Kamehameha super and it looks like a broadcast clip. The stages are destructible and layered, and the UI never clutters the spectacle. If you have ever watched the show and felt the urge to actually control one of those fights, the game delivers that feeling better than anything else in the genre. The FighterZ Edition bundles the FighterZ Pass alongside the base game, which adds 8 characters beyond the launch roster. The base roster already covers the major Dragon Ball arcs well - Goku and Vegeta appear in multiple forms, Android 16, 17, and 18 are all distinct fighters, and Cell and Frieza play exactly as bruising as you want them to. The DLC pass extends into more niche fan territory, pulling in characters like Bardock and Broly. Roster breadth is solid for a Dragon Ball fan; if you come in as a pure fighting game player with no attachment to the IP, the character variety in terms of playstyle is decent but not exceptional - several fighters share movement and pressure patterns. The single-player story mode is long, voice-acted, and structured around a mysterious cloning event that pulls every major character into one narrative. It is serviceable, occasionally fun, and mostly an excuse to see the cast interact. Arcade and training modes cover the basics. Where the game lives, though, is online. Ranked and casual lobbies use a ring-match format inside chibi avatar lobbies, which felt novel at launch. The PC player base has thinned since 2018, so finding matches at specific rank tiers can take patience depending on the time of day, though dedicated players are still around. Split-screen local play is supported if you want couch competition. The rough edges are real. The auto-combo system that helps beginners also means the gap between "pressing buttons" and "playing optimally" is steep enough that casual players may hit a wall fast in online modes. The story mode overstays its welcome by several chapters. And if you want the complete roster beyond the FighterZ Pass, additional DLC character packs exist separately, which means even this edition is not quite everything. For Dragon Ball fans who want a fighter that respects both the source material and the genre, this is still the best answer available. For fighting game players curious about the IP, the mechanical core is genuinely good enough to hold interest on its own terms. Alex, Scout Team

Tags

steamAnime Fighter3v3 Tag CombatLocal VersusAuto-ComboCel-ShadedDLC BundleCouch Co-op

System Requirements

System requirements for Dragon Ball FighterZ: FighterZ Edition aren't listed yet. Check the store page for the latest specs.

Reviews & Ratings

Metacritic
85

Game Info

Developer
Arc System Works
Publisher
BANDAI NAMCO Entertainment
Release Date
Jan 26, 2018

Features

Single-playerMulti-playerPvPOnline PvPShared/Split Screen PvPShared/Split ScreenSteam AchievementsFull controller support+7 more

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