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Goku, Bulma, and Krillin ride Shenron

How to Read the Dragon Ball Manga in Order

One of the most enduring and iconic manga series in the world is Dragon Ball, created by Akira Toriyama. Since launching in 1984, the Dragon Ball manga has spawned several sequels and non-canonical spin-offs to consider when seeking to read it in order.

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Focusing on the adventures of martial artist protagonist Goku, Dragon Ball is inspired by the classic fantasy story Journey to the West, though expanding on it to incorporate science-fiction elements spanning worlds and timelines. Initially published by Shueisha, Dragon Ball has received an English-language translation through Viz Media. Hereā€™s how to read the Dragon Ball manga in order, from its original volumes to the ongoing Dragon Ball Super manga written by Toriyama and illustrated by Toyotarou.

How to Read the Dragon Ball Manga in Order

The Japanese manga maintains the Dragon Ball title across all 42 volumes, including the latter portion of the story that was adapted into the Dragon Ball Z anime. Conversely, the English-language version mirrors the anime seriesā€™ titles to avoid potential audience confusion, with the first 16 volumes published as Dragon Ball and the latter 26 as Dragon Ball Z. The story unfolds in chronological order across these volumes, with Dragon Ball Z following Dragon Ball.

Launching in 2015, Dragon Ball Super takes place before Chapter 324 in the 26th and final volume of Dragon Ball Z, documenting Goku and his friendsā€™ adventures after the defeat of Majin Buu but before the epilogue ten years later. At the time of writing, there are plans for 22 collected volumes of Dragon Ball Super, with the series currently ongoing. Like Dragon Ball and Dragon Ball Z, these stories unfold largely in chronological order.

Beyond the main series, the seventh volume of Dragon Ball reveals it is connected to Toriyamaā€™s previous manga series, Dr. Slump, as Goku encounters that storyā€™s protagonist Arale and her friends. Toriyamaā€™s 2013 manga series Jaco the Galactic Patrolman also takes place in the same world as Dragon Ball, albeit as a prequel to Dragon Ball, ending with a young Bulma beginning her quest to recover all seven Dragon Balls, which kicked off the original series.

Non-Canonical Dragon Ball Manga

There are a number of Dragon Ball manga titles that are not in the continuity of the main series as headed by Toriyama. Dragon Ball SD by Naho Ōishi is a condensed retelling of Gokuā€™s adventures while Ōishiā€™s one-off story Dragon Ball: Episode of Bardock provides a what-if tale of Bardock surviving his confrontation with Frieza. Toriyamaā€™s own 1999 manga series Neko Majin Z features Dragon Ball characters but is a self-aware parody of Toriyamaā€™s previous work.

Another self-aware parody is Dragon Garow Leeā€™s 2016 manga series Dragon Ball: That Time I Got Reincarnated as Yamcha!. This series has a high school Dragon Ball fan wake up in the body of Yamcha and, aware of how the story unfolds, decides to improve the life and reputation of the maligned character with a combination of intense training and knowledge of future events.

The most famous non-canonical Dragon Ball story is Dragon Ball GT, which began as a sequel anime series to Dragon Ball Z in 1996. DBGT would receive its own manga adaptation shortly after the animeā€™s conclusion in 1997. As DBGT wasnā€™t written by Toriyama, its narrative was rendered out-of-continuity by changes introduced years later by Dragon Ball Super.


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Sam Stone
Sam Stone is a longtime entertainment news journalist and columnist, covering everything from movies and television to video games and comic books. Sam also has bylines at CBR, Popverse, Den of Geek, GamesRadar+, and Marvel.com. He's been a freelance contributor with The Escapist since October 2023, during which time he's covered Mortal Kombat, Star Trek, and various other properties. Sam remembers what restful sleep was. But that was a long time ago.
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