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Super Dragon Ball Z
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)

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Based on total audience overlap on PlayTracker,
players who liked Super Dragon Ball Z also liked:
Boxart for Bomberman
Bomberman
on RetroAchievements (Nintendo DS)
80% audience match

Bomberman is a free multiplayer game for mobile phones (iOS and Android) available in the Google Play Store, developed and published by Konami, exclusively in Japan. The game features a single or multiplayer battle mode, as seen in many other entires in the Bomberman series.

Boxart for Elevator Action Returns
Elevator Action Returns
on RetroAchievements (Saturn)
67% audience match

Elevator Action Returns, also known as Elevator Action II, is a 1994 run and gun arcade game developed and published by Taito. It is the sequel to Elevator Action (1983), featuring a much more gritty and realistic setting. Returns retains the elevator-based gimmick from the original, but expands the gameplay system and replaces the spy motif with a new scenario involving a paramilitary team fighting against a terrorist group.

Boxart for Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi
Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
60% audience match

Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi lets you play as more than 60 characters from the Dragon Ball Z TV series. You can battle using authentic special attacks of each character as you run, fly, and swim through fully destructible and free-roaming levels. Design your own character by assigning and upgrading 10 different attributes. Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi has multiple game modes for both one and two players.

Boxart for Zatch Bell! Mamodo Battles
Zatch Bell! Mamodo Battles
on RetroAchievements (GameCube)
57% audience match

Zatch Bell! Mamodo Battles is a 3D fighting video game for the PlayStation 2 and GameCube that was published by Bandai in 2005 and is the third game of the Yūgō Tag Battle series. It was the first Zatch Bell! video game released outside of Japan.

Boxart for Saint Seiya: The Hades
Saint Seiya: The Hades
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
50% audience match

Saint Seiya: The Hades is a three-dimensional fighting video game developed by Dimps and published by Bandai for PlayStation 2. A direct sequel to Saint Seiya: The Sanctuary, and developed by the same team, it utilizes the same graphics engine as its predecessor, as well as a significant portion of its storyline, while addressing certain criticisms of gameplay and introducing a new narrative arc.

Boxart for Shrek: SuperSlam
Shrek: SuperSlam
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
50% audience match

Shrek SuperSlam is a fighting video game featuring characters from the Shrek series of films.

Boxart for Dynasty Warriors 3: Xtreme Legends
Dynasty Warriors 3: Xtreme Legends
on RetroAchievements (PlayStation 2)
50% audience match

Dynasty Warriors 3 is the third installment of the Dynasty Warriors series in North America and the second within the Shin Sangoku Musou series in Japan. It is a spin-off from the video game Romance of the Three Kingdoms and based around a series of books by the same name, written by Luo Guanzhong. The game contains a number of fictional and non-fictional elements from the same era in Chinese history that Romance of the Three Kingdoms is set. However, it follows the main events of part of the story which is to unify China under the single rule of a kingdom.

Boxart for Nuclear Strike 64
Nuclear Strike 64
on RetroAchievements (Nintendo 64)
50% audience match

Nuclear Strike is a shooter video game developed and published by Electronic Arts for the PlayStation in 1997. The game is the sequel to Soviet Strike and the fifth instalment in the Strike series, which began with Desert Strike on the Sega Genesis. The Soviet Strike development team also created Nuclear Strike. EA released a PC port the same year; THQ developed and in 1999 published a Nintendo 64 version called Nuclear Strike 64. Nuclear Strike is a helicopter-based game, with strategy elements added to the action gameplay. The plot concerns an elite special force - the player's allies - pursuing a nuclear-armed rogue spy through a fictionalised Asian setting. It retained the earlier game's engine but added several modifications to improve graphical performance and make the game more accessible. The game features 15 playable vehicles, a large increase from previous games. In addition to the main fictionalised Apache, there are secondary helicopters, jets, armour and a hovercraft. The player also commands ground troops in occasional real-time strategy sections. The game received positive, negative and mixed reviews. Critics noted a weak storyline, though GameSpot dismissed this is as unimportant in an action game. GameSpot called the graphics - which made use of specialised hardware such as 3Dfx Voodoo video cards and the N64 Expansion Pak - "about as good as it gets", while Allgame said they are "decent" and Daily Radar called them "horrible". Critics praised the full motion video as well as the music and sound effects. Reviewers enjoyed the straightforward gameplay but several complained of a close similarity to its predecessor Soviet Strike and questioned the game's value as a result.