Super Dragon Ball Heroes -2018- The Complete Se... | High Speed |

While Dragon Ball Super is the mainline story, Super Dragon Ball Heroes is the arcade-fueled, no-holds-barred, caffeinated fanfiction that somehow became an official anime. And the complete series? It is a wild ride you need to buckle up for. Let’s get one thing straight immediately: This is not a thinking man’s anime.

The 2018 Super Dragon Ball Heroes promotional anime (often abbreviated as SDBH) exists to sell a Japanese arcade card game. Consequently, the plot is a conveyor belt of “Greatest Hits” scenarios.

Welcome to the multiverse of madness that is . Super Dragon Ball Heroes -2018- The Complete Se...

Posted by: The Capsule Corps Crew | Reading Time: 4 minutes

But that is precisely the charm.

Super Dragon Ball Heroes doesn’t waste time on filler or exposition. It is pure, uncut dopamine. You click play, and within 90 seconds, Super Saiyan Blue Gogeta is throwing hands with a giant mechanical robot version of Cell. For hardcore fans: Absolutely. The complete series (44 episodes across 4 arcs) is a treasure trove of action figures come to life. It is the ultimate “What-If” machine.

The story kicks off with the Prison Planet Arc . The mysterious Fu (son of DBGT’s Baby) creates a massive jigsaw planet where Trunks (from the Future Trunks arc) and Goku must fight an “Evil” version of Super Saiyan 3 Cumber—a legendary Saiyan from the distant past. While Dragon Ball Super is the mainline story,

If you have ever found yourself yelling at the TV screen during Dragon Ball Super , thinking, “Why doesn’t Goku just fuse with Vegeta, then fuse with Gohan, and then fight a golden version of Cooler inside a prison planet?” — then boy, do I have the show for you.

The complete series is available on Funimation/Crunchyroll (dubbed) and various digital platforms (subbed). The English dub is surprisingly solid, with the cast clearly having the time of their lives being this ridiculous. Final Verdict Super Dragon Ball Heroes (2018) is the junk food of anime. It’s loud, messy, colorful, and nutritionally empty—but sometimes, that is exactly what you want. It respects no canon, breaks every rule, and gives us the fights Akira Toriyama never thought to write. Let’s get one thing straight immediately: This is

Tread lightly. If you care about power scaling or narrative consistency, this show will give you an aneurysm. However, if you just finished Super Hero and want to see Broly fight Beerus? Dive in.

So grab a senzu bean, turn off your brain, and watch Vegeta finally get a win against a main villain (sort of). You won’t regret it.