Dragon Ball
This is what the anime remake of ‘Dragon Ball Z’ would look like: Bulma looks great in a new Japanese ad
The Japanese technology company Findy is appealing to engineers around the world through an ad animated by one of the promises of the sector.

Many ‘Dragon Ball’ fans have been asking for years and even decades for a remake of the ‘Dragon Ball’ and ‘Dragon Ball Z’ anime with the style and quality of current Japanese animation. ‘Dragon Ball Daima’, the latest series based on the universe created by Akira Toriyama, has set a new milestone in animation within the saga, offering a handful of memorable scenes and episodes at the audiovisual level. Perhaps for this reason, the Japanese technology company Findy has relied on one of the current promises of anime for the realization of an ad with Bulma as the main protagonist, demonstrating how ‘Dragon Ball Z’ would look today with a redesign of its anime style. And the result is truly spectacular.
This is what ‘Dragon Ball Z’ would look like in 2025 with a total redesign
Thus, the technology company Findy has appealed to engineers around the world to join its project in full expansion in Japan, all through a unprecedented anime-style ad in which they have redesigned numerous sequences of Bulma during several arcs of ‘Dragon Ball Z’, achieving a most striking effect. So much so that fans have already shown their excitement for how the classic Toei anime would look like with a layer of current anime.
For this purpose, we have counted on one of the names that is currently sounding the most among the Japanese animation scene: Shun Sawai. This young animator has already proven his worth in such popular anime as ‘Oshi no Ko’, ‘My Dress-Up Darling’, ‘Shikimori’s Not Just a Cutie’ or ‘Detective Conan: The Scarlet Bullet’, as well as actively working on two of the latest anime in the Toriyama saga such as the movie ‘Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero’ and the series ‘Dragon Ball Daima’.
Thanks to this new ad we can enjoy more than a few scenes starring Bulma during different arcs of ‘Dragon Ball Z’, such as the Saiyans, Namek or the Androids. All this while maintaining the classic style of Toei’s work but with a redrawing and animation of the most current, offering a fleeting but promising glimpse of how it would be a remake of the adventures of Goku today.

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