Dragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home Entertainment
Dragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home EntertainmentDragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home EntertainmentDragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home EntertainmentDragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home Entertainment

Dragon Ball Z Complete Seasons 1-9 Blu-ray Box Set - Amazon Exclusive | Anime Collection for Fans, Gift for DBZ Lovers | Perfect for Binge-Watching & Home Entertainment

$144.33 $262.43 -45%

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Product Description

After learning that he is from another planet, a warrior named Goku and his friends are prompted to defend it from an onslaught of extraterrestrial enemies. This set contains seasons 1-9 across 36 discs in an exclusive slip-case, and presented in 1080p HD!

Customer Reviews

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This review is for the Blu-ray version of the complete series box set. I'm going to assume you've seen the series, so I'll focus on the quality of this exact product. Overall, I'm very happy with this set. I'm convinced that this was the best choice of the options available. Now for details:It started when one of my old VHS tapes that I recorded off Toonami glitched and broke my VCR (Agh, I can't replace that!). I went on here to get a DVD copy but couldn't find much comparative information on the different sets. Did I want Blu-ray, DVD, Kai? I checked out Kai on Internet Archive and decided I didn't like the new voices or that awful circus parade music and I did like the funny episodes that Kai left out, so that was out as an option. From the pictures posted the Blu-ray copy took up less shelf space than the DVD version, so I went with that.My copy arrived in perfect condition, but I checked it over thoroughly. No disks were broken, scratched, or missing, so I embarked on a ten-day binge to check every episode for glitching. While I was at it, I streamed the other series options alongside to compare them. The first episodes I compared to the 1996 US TV version, the Cell saga I compared to the DVD edition and then the Kai edition. Here's my take: the video on the Blu-ray is better than all the other versions, although Kai came close.The picture I posted is a side-by-side comparison of the picture from the DVD (on the laptop) and Blu-ray (on the TV) editions. My computer screen is far better than my TV, but the picture on the TV is better because of the superb quality of the Blu-ray. The clarity is amazing. I can see all the individual character in the hand-drawn lines. The DVD version I used for comparison was letterbox ratio, so maybe that's an option with that set. I can confirm that the Blu-ray is widescreen only. If Amazon didn't cut off my picture, you can see that the widescreen edition is not just zoomed and cut. They actually drew in more picture on the sides. In some cases, the letterbox version seemed more cut down than the widescreen version. Other scenes didn't transition to widescreen as nicely, so some are better and some are worse. No lines or details were missing in my version, like some reviewers had.For audio, I liked the '96 TV version best. It was much funnier, had snappier pacing, better voices, and way better music. If there ever is a complete series version of a 90's style TV edit with Ocean Group voices I'd pay twice this much for it, but that won't happen. I already mentioned my opinion of Kai's English audio, but if you want Japanese voices, that would be a better bet. The Japanese audio track on this set is tinny and thin, probably because it's a very old recording made using old technology. Kai is re-recorded and is sure to sound better than this. The English dub is perfect quality. I like the fact that the Toonami music track is available on here, but it's too bad it is the second track. I have to remember to change it with each disc. For people concerned about bad language, it's rarely in the English dub. I think just in the Freiza arc. It's all over the subtitles though.The menu system is intuitive, and this series works perfectly with my remote. The audio and subtitle buttons work as they should for when I forget to run the setup first. Each disk has annoying ads that Autoplay on loading, but they can be easily skipped with the menu button on my remote, so I don't care. Each episode is divided into intro, segment 1, segment 2, and ending, so it's easy to skip intros and endings if you want to go through the trouble. Better yet, use the marathon mode (genius!) and have the system skip them for you.The cases are not great. There's no episode guide, they don't always close securely, and they have those nasty plastic disc holders that tear discs up. At least the plastic is fairly soft, and the disc holders don't have sharp points, so they won't scratch the discs. The discs will snap onto the holder securely, but it takes some careful persuasion. Getting them off without risking breaking the discs can be tricky. I tried replacing the plastic holders with poly sleeves, but the cases fit too snugly for that. The outer box is not well glued and wants to fall apart, but some packing tape will fix that. There's a lot of excess packaging that isn't environmentally friendly. It does take very little room on my shelf; the box is 5.75" wide.

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