![]() ![]() The series ended over ten years ago, so just about every game that has come out since then has been going over the same sagas again and again. One problem that the DBZ games have been having for a while is that there's only so much story to tell. Burst Limit's main single-player mode is dubbed Z Chronicles, and it follows the Saiyan, Freeza and Cell sagas of the Dragon Ball Z storyline. ![]() That doesn't mean that Burst lacks the flashy moves and elaborate flurries of punches that DBZ is known for now they're just better woven into the combat system. Sure, it's still no Virtua Fighter, but if you thought that Tenkaichi was balanced too heavily towards the button mashers of the world, this game aims to fix things. Following the three-part Budokai Tenkaichi series of DBZ fighters, Burst Limit mixes up the formula by simplifying a lot of things, but upping the technical level of the fighting. For some reason, though, it's taken until now for Akira Toriyama's beloved series to make a 360 appearance. Given the immense and continuing popularity of the manga and anime series, Goku and his many friends and enemies have appeared on just about every game system under the sun. It's strange to think that after all this time, there hasn't been a Dragon Ball Z game for the Xbox 360.
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