![]() Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot tells the story that you almost certainly already know. There’s new canon material to cover and these older storylines have been beaten to death by this point. ![]() It’s been nearly 24 years since Dragon Ball ended and games set in the franchise need to move on. This time on the last episode of Dragon Ball Z But I can’t say the same for everyone else. But it’s made with so much love for the source material and loaded with fanservice to the point that fans are going to likely have a great time regardless. The combat is okay, the graphics are acceptable, and the world is mostly empty and filled with pointless fluff. ![]() Make no mistake, Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot is a mediocre game. But it poses and answers a very important question for products based on licensed properties: can a mediocre game still be worth it if it offers the franchise’s fans exactly what they want? The answer here is a resounding yes. However, Dragon Ball Z: Kakarot is doing it again all the same. So much so that it seems more than a little redundant to keep doing it. Akira Toriyama’s beloved story about dudes randomly teleporting around and punching each other through entire mountains is well-trodden ground at this point. Games have been retelling the story of Dragon Ball for more than a quarter of a century.
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