Dragon Ball Super has been around long enough that most fans have lived through the Beerus arc at least twice. First came the 2013 film Dragon Ball Z: Battle of Gods, then the opening episodes of Dragon Ball Super in 2015. Now Toei Animation is going back to the well one more time with Dragon Ball Super: Beerus, a full-scale remake that promises to be more than a simple repackage.
The announcement has split the Dragon Ball community pretty cleanly. Veterans who have been waiting years for Dragon Ball Super: The Galactic Patrol to adapt manga chapters 42-67 are understandably impatient. New fans and anyone who bounced off the original Super episodes, which were structurally rough in places, have more reason to be optimistic. For fans of Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero, this is also a good sign that the franchise is investing heavily in the Super timeline again.

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What the April trailer actually confirmed
A trailer dropped in April 2026 and did two things. First, it confirmed the animation quality is noticeably sharper than the original 2015 run. Second, and more importantly, it ended with Frieza's silhouette, which strongly signals that the Resurrection F / Golden Frieza arc is being folded into the remake alongside the God of Destruction arc.
That means the scope here is larger than just chapters 1-4 of the Dragon Ball Super manga. Episodes 19-27 of the original series are also getting reworked. Whether the God of Destruction Champa Arc (chapters 5-13) eventually follows has not been officially confirmed, but the trajectory points in that direction.
The official Dragon Ball site describes Dragon Ball Super: Beerus as featuring "extensive new cuts, revisions to existing scenes, a complete re-rendering of all footage, newly recorded dubbing with added score and sound effects, and a full reconstruction of the story." That is a lot more work than a standard remaster.
Fall 2026 is the window, but no firm date yet
No specific premiere date has been locked in. The confirmed release window is Fall 2026 in Japan, which puts the announcement window somewhere in the next few months.
Global streaming details have not been announced yet. Given how Toei has handled recent Dragon Ball releases, Crunchyroll is the most likely home outside Japan, but nothing is confirmed.
The story recap for anyone coming in fresh
Here's the lowdown for anyone new to this arc. Beerus, the God of Destruction, wakes up after a 39-year sleep with one goal: find the Super Saiyan God. Goku and the rest of the Z fighters have to scramble to figure out what that even means before Beerus gets bored and destroys the Earth. Classic Dragon Ball stakes, executed with a level of cosmic scale the series had not attempted before.
The key here is that the original 2015 anime adaptation was rushed and uneven in its early episodes. For anyone who tried to start Dragon Ball Super and found the pacing frustrating, this remake is specifically designed to fix that.
Full Japanese cast confirmed
The voice cast for Dragon Ball Super: Beerus keeps the longtime Japanese cast intact. Here are the main players:
The full cast also includes Takeshi Kusao as Trunks, Naoko Watanabe as Chi-Chi, Miki Ito as Android 18, and Hikaru Midorikawa as Tien Shinhan, among others.
Where Dragon Ball Super: The Galactic Patrol fits in
The most common concern from longtime fans is whether Dragon Ball Super: Beerus delays The Galactic Patrol adaptation. The short answer is no. Dragon Ball Super: The Galactic Patrol is confirmed to be in production, covering manga chapters 42-67, which include the Moro arc. No release date exists yet, but Toei has not walked back the project.
What most players miss when the Dragon Ball community debates this is that the two projects likely serve different purposes. Beerus is a reentry point designed to build a larger audience for Super before The Galactic Patrol arrives. Getting new fans invested now means a bigger audience for the manga-faithful content later.
For anyone who wants to stay sharp on the Dragon Ball gaming side while the anime catches up, check out the Dragon Ball Sparking Zero complete DLC and update guide for a full breakdown of what has dropped and what is still coming. The franchise is moving on multiple fronts right now, and the Dragon Ball: Sparking! Zero guides collection is worth bookmarking as both the anime and game sides of the IP heat up heading into late 2026.








