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| DragonBall GT / Movies Your source for the non-canon events of the movies and GT as told by Toei. |
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#1 (permalink) |
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(20) Super Saiyan 2
Join Date: Jan 2008
Location: Argentina
Posts: 1,490
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Dr. Raichi is the first Tsufuu who started rebelling against the Saiyans (not Baby as most people believe). He made a ghost machine that allowed him to send Turles, Cooler, Frieza, and Slug against the Z Warriors.
Dr. Raichi make the monster Hatchhyack (Pure hatred) Last edited by LegendarySSJ7; 01-28-2008 at 06:49 AM. |
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#3 (permalink) |
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Commander Madness
Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Seeing how long I can make this entry, simply for lol reasons. Maybe I can make it stretch to the o-
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It does exist, but it's a fan movie isn't it? It was sanctioned by Toriyama IIRC.
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#12 (permalink) |
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Moderator
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Ok, first and foremost, this is not a lost movie because there are no lost movies. Years ago, a game for the Nintendo Famicom system was made called Gaiden: Saiya-jin Zetsu Metsu Keikaku, which involved a tsufuruu-jin named Dr. Raichii launching attacks on Earth using machines that release the deadly Destron Gas. After destroying those machines, Gokuu, Gohan, Mirai Torunkusu, Bejiita, and Pikkoro head to the Dark Planet to face Raichii and the living embodiment of his supercomputer (known as Hatchyhakku).
A few years later, Toei Animation released an animated guide to this game (since they had co-created the game with Bandai), which was basically just told the story of the game in animated form. All the original character seiyuu were used, and the animation ranged from passable to quite good, with the style close to that of the Seru Saga. Later on, during the days of the Nintendo 64, Bandai released a game system known as the Playdia, which was a simple system with games that were basically like those "Choose your own path" books, where you progress to a part of the story, forced to make a decision, and then you see the results of your action afterward. Bandai used the footage from Toei's animated guide as the backbone for the Playdia remake of the Famicom game. Some american fans of DBZ came across this version of the game, recorded one of the correct paths, subtitled it, and released it on the internet as the "Lost Movie" or the "Lost OVA" when in fact it's neither.
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