Mã:
Encoder            DBNL
Uploader           Gurpi
Size               250mb
Source             DVD
Audio              Japanese and English
Video              640x480
Subtitles          English
The Dragon Box releases feature an aspect ratio of 4:3, the original Japanese audio (with options for an English track or English subtitles), the original episode previews, and a complete opening and closing credits and a collectors booklet. Each Dragon Box contains roughly 1000 minutes of footage on 6 discs. The English audio features Dolby Digital 5.1 while the Japanese audio is in monaural.

Originally announced at the Otakon 2009, FUNimation has stated that the reason why the Dragon Box was so hard to get was that Toei Animation wanted to keep the Dragon Boxes a Japanese release only, so they would not grant FUNimation access to release the Dragon Boxes in North America, or any region.

Once Toei finally granted permission for FUNimation to produce a North American Dragon Box, they began work to reproduce the Japanese Dragon Boxes as faithfully as possible. They promised they wouldn't touch a single detail of picture or language or violence (example: 16:9 cropping controversy from Dragon Ball Z season sets). At Otakon 2009 FUNimation put a Dragon Box mock-up prototype on display, but the discs were yet to have the footage added into them, and the book that was provided had only blank pages.
Unlike the Japanese Dragon Box for Dragon Ball Z, which was released in two volumes, each containing roughly half the entire series, the North American Dragon Box is being released in seven volumes, each with roughly 42 episodes on six discs. Whereas each volume cost 100,000 yen in Japan (approximately $1,100 USD), each volume of the North American version has a list price of $69.98 USD.
Dragon Box Four cover art

FUNimation marketed the Dragon Box for Hardcore Fans, which by their estimation meant fans of the Japanese version as the Japanese version with subtitles is the default language when viewing, the Japanese title cards are used with no alternate angles, and all of the packaging and booklets use the Original Japanese spellings for the characters' names. (IE: Son Goku, Tenshinhan, Freeza etc.) Adding an English dub was said to have been an Afterthought on FUNimation's part, and thus they only used the 5.1 surround dub track from the Season Sets. The 5.1 Track was carried over from the Season sets and is the English Voices and original Japanese Music track. The Boxes entirely exclude the Broadcast Audio track featuring the US score by Bruce Faulconer. This was seemingly done to keep the video and audio birates at an acceptable level, as more audio tracks would cause the Birate to dip low.
Difference Between Previous Releases


FUNimation's first masters were much closer to their true selves, but heavily pushed toward the blue spectrum; greens became blues, while blues themselves became blacks. The orange bricks blurred and smoothed away the details and pushed the saturation even further. The Dragon Box master restores the original color scheme and full detail in all areas without compromise.
Screenshots












Download Episodes Here:

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http://fileserve.com/list/Sb5FWWF