Though they may not always get the credit they deserve, there's no denying the driving force of excellence that anime fighters have been putting forth over the last few years in gaming. The DS's top fighter – and one of the best pocket brawlers out there – is an anime fighter, Bleach DS, and Wii and PS2's most recent must-have battlers also hark back to classic anime inspiration as well with games like Naruto: Clash of Ninja on the Nintendo side, and the Dragon Ball Z Budokai series, which found its home on PS2 long before Wii was around. Last year's DBZ effort brought Wii and PS2 together, and we're seeing that again with, as both versions have some improvements over the previous effort, but also some downfalls along the way. To say that the Dragon Ball Z fighters have reached a saturation point would be a bit of an understatement. Every year we get a new game, every year they add a new word or number after the main Dragon Ball Z marquee, and every year a few more characters are brought into the package to help boast why exactly players need to drop another lump of cash down for the same general experience. When looking at the titles individually, there's no denying that Dragon Ball Z has delivered some of the best anime fighters in gaming history, complete with more playable characters, modes, and options than any of its competition. As a whole, however, the series does very little from version to version, acting like EA's own sports games or racing titles, and eventually everyone decides to skip a game or two along the way.
The best place to get cheats, codes, cheat codes, walkthrough, guide, FAQ, unlockables, tricks, and secrets for Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi 3 for Nintendo Wii.
The cel-shaded style makes a return. Budokai Tenkaichi 3 may just be that game. Not because it's a poor effort by any means, but because so much of it is rehash from the previous game, and what is new isn't always an improvement over BT2. The roster now stands at 161 fighters, the game includes new day/night levels (with some special abilities only working under specific conditions), and a few new tactics for seasoned fighters to make use of, but in the end the core experience is identical to previous versions, and there's even some content lost along the way. Take a look at the main story mode, for example.
In Tenkaichi 2, story mode made up a simply ridiculous mass of content, including more battles than any sane person would ever care to complete. You had every saga, every possible battle within each episode of the show, and a never-ending list of fights to enjoy because of it. The presentation was simple, but the payoff was huge. In this year's Dragon History mode – the new 'story mode' – you'll get a more cinematic experience, but also a much, much smaller overall offering. The game's scripted sequences are now handled in-engine, so while the overall flow of the story is well integrated with the battles now, they're also restricted a ton. Only two fighters are shown on the screen at once, and with some scenes utilizing over a half dozen characters at once (the overflow of which are audio only, as the characters are essentially talking from 'off-screen') the actual storytelling is totally gimped. Players also miss out on a ton of potential battles too, as the story is far more cinematic, but glosses over the 'inconsequential' fights from the show.
Last year gave you every fight imaginable with very little cinematic offering, while this year does exactly the opposite, sacrificing a ton of depth for a decent – but far from perfect – story element. In our opinion, it's a step backwards for the series.
Go on 'Dragon History' then go to a saga that has 'City (Ruins)' as a place. (I use the last one in the android saga). Break everything there until you get it. If you don't.surrender and try again, you will get it soon. Then go to a different saga, with the 'City (Ruins)' as a place destroy everything until you find it.if you don't surrender and try again you will get it soon.
Then go back to the first place and break stuff same thing. Then go back to the other city place. Keep doing the process until you get all 7! Heres what you do. Go to the versus menu and select team battle. For example if you want 2 Vegito, s (even though his real name is Vagitorrot)in the game choose Goku (Kakorrot)or Vegeta (go with Vegeta he's faster and more agile than Goku). Now after choosing Goku and Vegeta choose egito and two other people.
When in battle try not to get hit wait for your ki gauges to go to their highest then use fusion. A good thing about starting off normal then using fusion. Health and kiguages get carried over so equip them with king Kias training.