Dragon Ball Kai Ultimate: Butōden

Ultimately, Ultimate Butōden is best appreciated as a historical artifact—a glimpse of a "what if" path where fighting games embraced the touchscreen as a primary input device. It is not essential for casual fans, but for the dedicated Dragon Ball enthusiast or the fighting game connoisseur curious about forgotten mechanics, it is a fascinating, punchy, and wonderfully weird chapter in the franchise’s long gaming history. It dared to ask: "What if throwing a Spirit Bomb required a gesture of power?" And for that ambition alone, it deserves respect.

The audio also leans heavily into the Kai aesthetic. The soundtrack features energetic rock-infused tracks that fit the tempo of the fights. Crucially, the game includes voice clips from the Kai English dub cast, lending an air of authenticity. However, the voice work is limited to short exclamations and move names, which, while faithful, can become repetitive over long play sessions. The game’s primary single-player mode follows the Dragon Ball Z saga from the Saiyan arrival through the defeat of Majin Buu. For fans, this is a well-trodden path. The mode is presented as a series of linear fights interspersed with brief dialogue panels. While functional, it lacks the depth of an original story or what-if scenarios found in other titles like Budokai 2 . dragon ball kai ultimate butōden

Where the game attempts to innovate is in its RPG-lite "Potential" system. By earning points in battle, players can permanently upgrade their characters’ stats (attack, defense, Ki, etc.). This allows for a degree of customization, letting you turn a fragile speedster like Krillin into a tank or focus Goku entirely on Ki blast damage. However, the progression is linear and eventually trivializes the main story difficulty. Ultimately, Ultimate Butōden is best appreciated as a