Goku from Dragon Ball Z
Image via YouTube

Crunchyroll has just added the motherlode for ‘Dragon Ball’ fans

This new Crunchyroll collection's power level is over 9,000!

Anime streaming site Crunchyroll is dropping a Dragon Ball collection with a power level of over 9,000. The platform confirmed in a press release received by WGTC that 15 movies from the franchise will be available to watch. The movies — 14 of which are from Dragon Ball Z and one from Dragon Ball Super — are releasing in groups on three different dates.

Recommended Videos

Seven movies are already available to stream on Crunchyroll as they came out on June 22. Here’s a list of the movies:

  • Dragon Ball Z: Dead Zone
  • Dragon Ball Z: World’s Strongest
  • Dragon Ball Z: Tree of Might
  • Dragon Ball Z: Lord Slug
  • Dragon Ball Z: Cooler’s Revenge
  • Dragon Ball Z: Return of Coller
  • Dragon Ball Z: Super Android 13

Then, on June 29, six more Dragon Ball Z movies can be binged. Here they are:

  • Dragon Ball Z: Broly – The Legendary Super Saiyan
  • Dragon Ball Z: Bojack Unbound
  • Dragon Ball Z: Broly – Second Coming
  • Dragon Ball Z: Bio-Broly
  • Dragon Ball Z: Fusion Reborn
  • Dragon Ball Z: Wrath of the Dragon

The first 13 movies listed above are/will be only available with English, Latin American Spanish, and Brazilian Portuguese subtitles, and can be watched in the U.S., Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Latin America.

The final two films — Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection F and Dragon Ball Super: Broly — will drop on July 6.

And for those who don’t like reading subtitles, they can be watched with English, German, and French dubbing (and with English, German, and French subtitles as well). They’re also available in more places: the U.S., Canada, the United Kingdom, Ireland, Australia, New Zealand, French-speaking European countries, German-speaking European countries, and Africa. Dragon Ball Z: Resurrection F and Dragon Ball Super: Broly won’t be available in Latin America.

Hundreds of episodes from the Dragon Ball franchise are already on Crunchyroll

Crunchyroll is a fantastic destination for wannabe Z-Fighters to spend their time. They have episodes from all four iterations of the Dragon Ball franchise available to stream right now, including all episodes of Dragon Ball (153), Dragon Ball Z (291), and Dragon Ball GT (64). They can be watched subbed or dubbed.

Dragon Ball Super, which has released 131 episodes thus far, is on Crunchyroll also, but with only subtitles.

The franchise has been adapted from Akira Toriyama’s wildly popular manga and has been around as anime since the 1980s. In their heydays, Dragon Ball — but more specifically, Dragon Ball Z — was credited for converting countless young TV watchers into anime fans — including this writer.


We Got This Covered is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more
related content
Read Article Is there a ‘Jinx’ manga special chapter?
Heesung licks his lips in the special episode of the BL manhwa, “Jinx.”
Read Article Are there any filler episodes in ‘Attack on Titan?’
Attack on Titan Reiner Braun Armored Titan
Read Article How old is Eren in season 4 of ‘Attack on Titan?’
Read Article Is there a ‘Demon Slayer’ season 4 English dub release?
Read Article ‘My Hero Academia’ season 7 episode 3 release date and time confirmed
Cathleen Bate, aka Star and Stripe, in the season 6 finale of 'My Hero Academia'.
Related Content
Read Article Is there a ‘Jinx’ manga special chapter?
Heesung licks his lips in the special episode of the BL manhwa, “Jinx.”
Read Article Are there any filler episodes in ‘Attack on Titan?’
Attack on Titan Reiner Braun Armored Titan
Read Article How old is Eren in season 4 of ‘Attack on Titan?’
Read Article Is there a ‘Demon Slayer’ season 4 English dub release?
Read Article ‘My Hero Academia’ season 7 episode 3 release date and time confirmed
Cathleen Bate, aka Star and Stripe, in the season 6 finale of 'My Hero Academia'.
Author
Stephen McCaugherty
Hailing from British Columbia, Stephen McCaugherty has been exercising his freelance writing chops since 2019, and he does his best work when he's kicking back in a hostel somewhere around the world — usually with terrible internet. Primarily focusing on reality competition shows, movies, and combat sports, he joined WGTC as an entertainment contributor in 2023.