but have once again resorted to using cropped imagery. After taking some time to reevaluate DBZ's future on the format, they've decided to give full season sets another go. No, it wasn't until the 'Level' sets debuted on Blu-ray that we saw DBZ in its definitive form, but a lack of sales seemingly forced a knee-jerk reaction from the studio, as all subsequent releases outside of the first season had been canceled. As something of an apology, Funimation released the infinitely more faithful 'Dragon Box' sets, but boosted contrast and a lack of audio options kept it from being the definitive collection everyone had hoped for. Complete season sets were finally delivered in the 'orange brick' collection, but die-hard fans of the series began a war of words upon learning the studio had cropped the show for a widescreen friendly presentation. Despite being nearly 300 episodes after all was said and done, the original DVD's trickled out with a paltry offering of 3-5 episodes per disc. Oh, the tortured life of Dragon Ball Z on home video.
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