The Dragon Ball Super Card Game will be seeing reprints in the near future. It has already been revealed that Bandai will be releasing a comprehensive preview of the entire set of cards from the next Mythic Booster collection. This set will contain reprints of cards from previous expansions, decks, and promotional items, all with alternate artwork. The Mythic Booster cards will not have their own unique set numbering, but will instead keep the information from the original set when they are released in December 2021, pending international delays and other factors.
This will be a useful set, especially for players who want to construct decks using cards from goods that are no longer available. Collectors will also appreciate this set because every card has fresh new artwork, including the set’s secret rare: Cell Xeno, which is included in the set’s price. During the time when the Dragon Ball Super Card Game showcases the cards from this upcoming expansion, Bleeding Cool will provide insight into the cards from the perspective of a card collector.
One of the most remarkable things that Dragon Ball Super has done in the process of bringing new, Akira Toriyama-written storylines into the Dragon Ball canon is to adapt characters who were previously not part of the Dragon Ball canon. Gogeta was first conceived as a character who couldn’t possibly occur in the manner in which we imagined it.
Fusion Reborn, which is probably the best DBZ-era film owing to its fierce and almost emotional depiction of Goku and Vegeta’s rivalry, marked Gogeta’s debut on the big screen.
This film, like many of the anime’s films, ran counter to the events of the main storyline, and was therefore deleted.
Vegeta is no longer alive, Goku has returned to the Other World, Gohan has returned to Earth and not with the Kais, no one else is battling Buu, and Buu is nowhere to be found in the film. (That hasn’t stopped me from making a decades-long endeavour to mislead my head into thinking I can squeeze this one in, however.)
A different approach was taken with Dragon Ball Super, with the most recent instalment, Broly, intended to be an official part of the series’ tale that fits in with the series’ purposeful intention. Not only does the film adapt Broly from the non-canon films, but it also introduces Gogeta, who makes his first appearance in the film and possesses the power to turn Super Saiyan Blue.