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  1. Dragon Ball GT (Japanese: ドラゴンボール GT, Hepburn: Doragon Bōru Jī Tī) is a Japanese anime television series based on Akira Toriyama's Dragon Ball manga that ran from February 1996 to November 1997. Produced by Toei Animation, the series premiered in Japan on Fuji TV and ran for 64 episodes.

  2. dragonball.fandom.com › wiki › Dragon_Ball_GTDragon Ball GT

    • Overview
    • Plot
    • Sagas
    • English adaptations
    • TV special
    • Release
    • Manga

    The series continues the adventures of Goku, who is turned back into a child by Emperor Pilaf accidentally wishing this using the Black Star Dragon Balls in the beginning of the series and is forced to travel across the galaxy to retrieve them. The first half of the series focuses on Goku, Pan, and Trunks, while the second half brings back most of the prominent characters from Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z. The series follows the Dragon Team against far more powerful foes such as the Luud Cult, the Machine Mutants, Baby, Super 17, and the Shadow Dragons.

    The series is most commonly referred to as taking place 5 years after the Peaceful World Saga, though in promotional material for the English dub it was referred to as occurring 10 years later. It was also on one occasion instead referred to as taking place six years later.

    •Black Star Dragon Ball Saga (Episodes 1~16)

    •Baby Saga (Episodes 17~40)

    •Super 17 Saga (Episodes 41~47)

    •Shadow Dragon Saga (Episodes 48~64)

    US (Funimation) version

    The English adaptation of Dragon Ball GT ran on Cartoon Network between November 7, 2003 and April 16, 2005 and had reruns until June 13, 2005, but the version by FUNimation had a major alteration: the first 16 episodes of the series, the "Black Star Dragon Ball Saga", were cut and replaced by a single US-only episode which summarized the episodes; this became the new series premiere and the rest of the episodes began with episode 17. This edit was implemented by the producers of the English dub to prevent viewers from possibly being put-off by these differently toned early episodes. The 16 missing episodes have since been released as the "Lost Episodes". When first aired, Funimation recorded a new musical score composed by Mark Menza and the openings and closings were replaced with something completely different from the original. For example, a rap was used for the opening and used different clips from the show to make up the visuals. However, when FUNimation released the series to two remastered boxed sets in 2008, the original Japanese music was restored, and English versions of the opening and all four closings were created, which are all very close to the original versions. From early 2012 until January 2015, the FUNimation version, including the "lost episodes", was shown on Nicktoons.

    International (Blue Water) version

    Outside of the United States, (excluding Australia and New Zealand) a different English dub of the series was aired, featuring the voice actor of Canadian voice acting group Blue Water Studios. While the voices are different from both the American and international English dubs of Dragon Ball Z, the original background music by Akihito Tokunaga was kept, the episodes were aired in their proper order, and the scripts were kept much closer to the original Japanese version. However, the international version kept the original Japanese theme song but used English subtitles. An English version of the GT theme song was sung while this dub aired on Toonami in the UK, however these were different lyrics to the original song and not a direct translation.

    Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's Legacy (悟空外伝! 勇気の証しは四星球, Gokū Gaiden! Yūki no Akashi wa Sūshinchū, lit. "Goku Sidestory! The Proof of his Courage is the Four-Star Ball")

    Funimation Remastered Box Sets

    In 2008 FUNimation began production of remastering the entire Dragon Ball GT series similar to the remastering process of Dragon Ball Z. Unlike the Dragon Ball Z remastered sets, the Dragon Ball GT Remastered Season Sets are presented in a 4:3 full frame and come with 5 discs rather than 6. The GT Sets are not presented in high definition. Just like the Dragon Ball Z remastered sets, the GT Sets include English dialogue with original Japanese background music, 5.1 surround sound, English dialogue with US broadcast stereo and original Japanese mono. Both Dragon Ball GT Season Box sets include a booklet including character profiles" and an episode guide. : Season One was released on December 9, 2008. The box set includes the Black Star Dragon Ball Saga and most of the Baby Saga, spanning the first 34 episodes over 5 discs. : Season Two was released on February 10, 2009. The box set includes the last six episode of the Baby Saga, Super 17 Saga and Shadow Dragon Saga, spanning the final 30 episodes concluding the series. The TV special Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's Legacy is included as part of the Box set. On September 21, 2010, FUNimation released Dragon Ball GT: The Complete Series which featured all 64 episodes of the show and Dragon Ball GT: A Hero's Legacy. Season 1 Dragon Ball GT Season 2 Dragon Ball GT The Complete Series Dragon Ball GT Volume 1 Dragon Ball GT Volume 2 Dragon Ball GT Volume 3 Dragon Ball GT Volume 4 Dragon Ball GT Volume 5 Dragon Ball GT Volume 6 Dragon Ball GT Volume 7 Dragon Ball GT Volume 8 Dragon Ball GT Volume 9 Dragon Ball GT Volume 10 Dragon Ball GT Volume 11 Season Release Date Sagas Dragon Ball GT: Season 1 December 9, 2008 Black Star Dragon Ball and Baby Saga Dragon Ball GT: Season 2 February 10, 2009 Super 17, Shadow Dragon Sagas and Dragon Ball GT: The Complete Series September 21, 2010 All 64 episodes and

    The "Anime Comics" manga version of Dragon Ball GT began in the January 2014 issue of Saikyō Jump, starting with the Evil Dragons Arc. Because the original story comes from an anime rather than a manga, this media is sometimes referred to as an animanga, a portmanteau of "anime" and "manga".

    Presented in full color (as opposed to the limited-color version from serialization), Shueisha released the first three volumes of Dragon Ball GT on December 4, 2019, with pricing for ¥1,000 each (plus tax), and covered the entirety of the series' Evil Dragons arc. Previously, the Dragon Ball GT anime comic was exclusive to its Saikyō Jump serialization.

    : Volume 1 (Evil Dragons Arc)

    : Volume 2 (Evil Dragons Arc)

    : Volume 3 (Evil Dragons Arc)

    Dragon Ball GT Anime manga 2014 promo

  3. Stream and watch the anime Dragon Ball GT on Crunchyroll. The Dragon Balls have been scattered to the ends of creation, and if Goku, Pan, and Trunks can’t gather them in a year’s time, Earth...

    • (10.1K)
    • E1-A Devastating Wish
  4. A list of 64 episodes of the anime series Dragon Ball GT, a sequel to Dragon Ball Z. The series follows the adventures of Son Goku and his friends after the events of Dragon Ball Z.

    No.
    Dub Title/translated Title Japanese ...
    Directed By
    Written By
    1
    "A Devastating Wish" / "The Mysterious ...
    Kazuya Hisada (Chief Animation Director: ...
    Aya Matsui
    2
    "Pan Blasts Off" / "I'll Take the Lead!
    Masayuki Uchiyama
    Aya Matsui
    3
    "Terror on Imecka" / "The Ultimate ...
    Yuji Kuwata
    Aya Matsui
    4
    "The Most Wanted List" / "Wanted!!
    debojyoti dev
    Masashi Kubota
  5. Oct 5, 2023 · Watch the entire series of Dragon Ball GT with the Bluewater dub and remastered HD quality. Follow Goku and his friends as they face new enemies and adventures in a futuristic world.

  6. Feb 7, 1996 · Synopsis. Emperor Pilaf finally has his hands on the Black Star Dragon Balls after years of searching, which are said to be twice as powerful as Earth's normal ones. Pilaf is about to make his wish for world domination when he is interrupted by Gokuu Son.

  7. Several years after the events of Dragon Ball Z, Goku has taken Majin Buu's reincarnation ; Uub, to train. But his life is once again turned upside down when...

    • 76 min
    • 527.9K
    • SmugStick
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