A new Goku on the cloud. The manga had 519 printed chapters compiled into 42 tankōbon volumes.1 2 Two years after its release, Toei Animation released an anime adaptation that spanned approximately the first half of the work. After its transmission in 1989 on the Fuji Television channel in Japan, Toei premiered a continuation titled Dragon Ball Z, which incorporated the remaining content of the manga.1 A third anime produced by the same studio premiered in 1996. Named Dragon Ball GT, has an unpublished argument in whose writing Toriyama did not participate.3 In 2015, Dragon Ball Super began to be broadcast on Fuji Television, an anime that continues the events of Dragon Ball Z and that has a manga adaptation, published from June of the same year in Shōnen Jump.4 The violence and nudity present in some episodes of both the anime and the manga caused censorship by the distributors in different countries.5