Compare Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition prices across trusted key stores and find the best deal. Developed by Dimps Corporation. Published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. Released on 10/13/2022. Available on PC, Nintendo Switch. Genres: Action, Adventure, Casual.

Dead by Daylight with a Dragon Ball skin sounds great on paper. In practice, clunky controls, a punishing gacha system, and a shrinking player pool make this one hard to recommend at full price.

I want to like Dragon Ball: The Breakers more than I actually do, because the core concept is genuinely smart: seven powerless civilians scrambling to survive while one player controls an evolving villain like Cell, Frieza, or Buu. It is the closest gaming has come to actually feeling like you are a random bystander in a Dragon Ball Z arc, and that novelty carries a few hours of genuine fun. Survivors gather keys across a sprawling map to power up a Super Time Machine for their escape, while the Raider hunts them down and grows progressively stronger between phases. When it clicks with a coordinated group, the tension is real. A heartbeat audio cue kicks in when the Raider is close, desperate sprinting replaces your normal walk, and the whole match briefly captures that panicked, outmatched energy the franchise is built on. The problem is getting to those good moments requires wading through a lot of rough. The movement and camera have been widely criticized for feeling floaty and unmoored, more like a vintage MMO than a tight action game where every dodge matters. Combat for both sides is shallow: survivors lean on a pistol and scavenged power-ups, while Raiders spam ki blasts and hope the auto lock-on connects. Survivors can temporarily transform into Dragon Ball characters using transphere items, which is a fun wrinkle, but actually acquiring useful transpheres ties directly into a gacha system that reviewers across the board flagged as aggressive. Microtransactions, a battle pass, and gacha mechanics all stack on top of a game that already costs money at launch, and the best cosmetics sit behind premium currency that trickles in slowly unless you spend real cash. The Raider role is undeniably the most satisfying seat in the match. Blowing up buildings, absorbing survivors, and watching your villain evolve through multiple power stages fulfills a specific Dragon Ball fantasy that no other game offers. The catch is that you cannot simply queue into Raider whenever you want. The priority point system means most players spend several matches as survivors before earning a Raider slot, and queue times compound the frustration. Player counts have declined significantly since launch, and depending on your region, finding a full lobby can take longer than the match itself. The Special Edition bundles in additional TP Token currency for the in-game shop, which softens the monetization sting slightly if you plan to spend time with the cosmetic side of the game. Assets are visibly recycled from Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2, which keeps the visuals functional but not impressive. There is a seasonal content structure that has added Raiders and episodic story chapters over time, so the game is not frozen at launch state, but the community has thinned out considerably, and the experience is noticeably worse without a pre-made group to queue with. If you have four to six Dragon Ball fans ready to coordinate in voice chat, The Breakers can still deliver a chaotic, memorable evening. Solo queue into a depleted player pool against veterans who have mastered the raider role is a different, much grimmer story. The concept deserved better execution, and right now the gap between what this game wants to be and what it actually is remains wide. Alex, Scout Team

Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition

Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition

Oct 13, 2022Dimps CorporationBandai Namco Entertainment
GamerScout Says

Dead by Daylight with a Dragon Ball skin sounds great on paper. In practice, clunky controls, a punishing gacha system, and a shrinking player pool make this one hard to recommend at full price.

PCNintendo Switch
Best Price Available
€0.00
at N/A

GamerScout Verdict

Worth a shot for dedicated Dragon Ball fans with a full friends list, but solo players will hit a wall of queue times and gacha friction fast.

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About Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition

I want to like Dragon Ball: The Breakers more than I actually do, because the core concept is genuinely smart: seven powerless civilians scrambling to survive while one player controls an evolving villain like Cell, Frieza, or Buu. It is the closest gaming has come to actually feeling like you are a random bystander in a Dragon Ball Z arc, and that novelty carries a few hours of genuine fun. Survivors gather keys across a sprawling map to power up a Super Time Machine for their escape, while the Raider hunts them down and grows progressively stronger between phases. When it clicks with a coordinated group, the tension is real. A heartbeat audio cue kicks in when the Raider is close, desperate sprinting replaces your normal walk, and the whole match briefly captures that panicked, outmatched energy the franchise is built on. The problem is getting to those good moments requires wading through a lot of rough. The movement and camera have been widely criticized for feeling floaty and unmoored, more like a vintage MMO than a tight action game where every dodge matters. Combat for both sides is shallow: survivors lean on a pistol and scavenged power-ups, while Raiders spam ki blasts and hope the auto lock-on connects. Survivors can temporarily transform into Dragon Ball characters using transphere items, which is a fun wrinkle, but actually acquiring useful transpheres ties directly into a gacha system that reviewers across the board flagged as aggressive. Microtransactions, a battle pass, and gacha mechanics all stack on top of a game that already costs money at launch, and the best cosmetics sit behind premium currency that trickles in slowly unless you spend real cash. The Raider role is undeniably the most satisfying seat in the match. Blowing up buildings, absorbing survivors, and watching your villain evolve through multiple power stages fulfills a specific Dragon Ball fantasy that no other game offers. The catch is that you cannot simply queue into Raider whenever you want. The priority point system means most players spend several matches as survivors before earning a Raider slot, and queue times compound the frustration. Player counts have declined significantly since launch, and depending on your region, finding a full lobby can take longer than the match itself. The Special Edition bundles in additional TP Token currency for the in-game shop, which softens the monetization sting slightly if you plan to spend time with the cosmetic side of the game. Assets are visibly recycled from Dragon Ball Xenoverse 2, which keeps the visuals functional but not impressive. There is a seasonal content structure that has added Raiders and episodic story chapters over time, so the game is not frozen at launch state, but the community has thinned out considerably, and the experience is noticeably worse without a pre-made group to queue with. If you have four to six Dragon Ball fans ready to coordinate in voice chat, The Breakers can still deliver a chaotic, memorable evening. Solo queue into a depleted player pool against veterans who have mastered the raider role is a different, much grimmer story. The concept deserved better execution, and right now the gap between what this game wants to be and what it actually is remains wide.

Alex
Alex · Scout Team

Catch-all

Tags

auto-admittedAsymmetric Multiplayer1v7Gacha MechanicsRole QueueAnime LicenseSurvivor Horror-AdjacentFriends Required

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Processor
Intel Core i5-7600 or AMD Ryzen 3 3100
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 770 or Radeon RX 470
DirectX
Version 9.0 Ne…

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 64-bit
Processor
Intel Core i7-8700 or AMD Ryzen 5 3600
Memory
8 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 780 or Radeon RX 570
DirectX
Version 11…

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
50%(6,514)

Game Info

Developer
Dimps Corporation
Publisher
Bandai Namco Entertainment
Release Date
Oct 13, 2022

Features

MultiplayerPvPOnline PvPCo-opOnline Co OpSteam AchievementsSteam Trading CardsIn App Purchases+2 more

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How much does Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition cost?

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What platforms is Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition available on?

Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition is available on PC, Nintendo Switch.

When was Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition released?

Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition was released on 13 October 2022.

Who developed Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition?

Dragon Ball: The Breakers Special Edition was developed by Dimps Corporation and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment.