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Now that Dragon Ball Super is on pause and fans are left waiting for the next chapter, the void is real. But it doesn’t have to stay empty. These ten anime bring the same energy, the raw ambition, over-the-top fights, and impossible stakes that made Dragon Ball iconic. Until Goku’s back to blowing up galaxies again, these shows like Dragon Ball Super are more than enough to keep that flame burning.
1) Gurren Lagann

Simon and Kamina live trapped underground, mining tunnels and dreaming of the surface. Until Simon unearths a mysterious Core Drill and activates Lagann, a miniature mecha. With Kamina’s sheer determination, they punch through the Earth’s crust and spark a rebellion against the Spiral King.
Over 27 episodes, the story rockets from underground skirmishes to galactic-scale confrontations, even spawning two hit films that reimagine key battles. This is pure power escalation; a journey from “we’ll win one fight” to “we’ll punch galaxies.” It hits the same energy as Dragon Ball Super’s multiverse and Ultra Instinct moments.
Like Goku and Vegeta, Simon and Kamina push each other past their limits, delivering emotional moments that land like cosmic pep talks. Whether it’s the towering mecha spectacle or Kamina’s defiant battle cries, DB Super fans will feel a familiar thrill. If you miss DB’s big, bold transformations and emotional payoffs, Gurren Lagann offers that same joy.
2) Yu Yu Hakusho

Yusuke Urameshi is the kind of kid teachers warn you about: short-tempered, always skipping class, and not exactly a role model. But when he dies saving a child from an oncoming car, even the afterlife is caught off guard. With no spot prepared for him in heaven or hell, he ends up earning a second shot at life as a Spirit Detective.
The show kicks off like a ghost story but quickly turns into a shonen powerhouse. By the time the Dark Tournament rolls around, it’s all about bone-breaking fights, strategy-heavy matchups, and characters who keep breaking their own limits just to survive. It’s got that same power-up frenzy Dragon Ball is known for, with fighters clashing in massive arenas, backed by pride, loyalty, and wild transformations.
Yusuke himself feels like a more jaded version of Goku. A street brawler turned warrior, always charging forward even when the odds are stacked. While Kuwabara, Hiei, and Kurama round out the lineup with their own unique fighting styles and personalities, giving strong Z-Fighter energy.
3) Yaiba

If Dragon Ball had a loud little cousin raised on chaos and samurai movies, it would be Yaiba. Yaiba Kurogane is a wild, over-the-top kid who’s basically Goku with a katana; always hungry, always charging headfirst into battle, and somehow too dumb to stay down. His journey kicks off when he stumbles into modern Japan after training in the jungle, only to discover he’s destined to defeat the reincarnated demon god, Onimaru.
What makes Yaiba such a fun ride is how unfiltered it feels. Fights escalate fast, power-ups get ridiculous, and the enemies are straight out of a fever dream. One moment, it’s a sword duel; the next, it’s giant robots and magical girl parodies. It takes Dragon Ball’s early humor, combines it with supernatural mayhem, and cranks the energy to eleven.
Even the art style echoes early DBZ, which makes sense since Gosho Aoyama leaned heavily into Akira Toriyama’s influence. For fans who miss the pure chaos of Dragon Ball’s OG days, before gods, angels, and timelines, Yaiba brings back that reckless fun. It’s not about perfect animation or complex arcs. It’s about throwing hands, cracking jokes, and seeing how many explosions you can fit into twenty minutes.
4) Fist of the North Star

A brutal martial arts saga set in a post-apocalyptic world where only the strong survive, Fist of the North Star is pure ‘80s shonen. The premise is as heavy as the punches. After nuclear war turns Earth into a desert wasteland, Kenshiro wanders the ruins in search of his kidnapped fiancée and justice, taking down tyrants and gangs with the ancient assassination art of Hokuto Shinken. Each arc escalates the stakes, introducing rival martial artists who are just as unhinged and powerful, with philosophies shaped by loss, war, and raw survival instinct.
While Dragon Ball leaned into adventure and growth, Fist of the North Star dives deep into stoic masculinity and moral retribution. Still, the DNA is similar. Both shows revolve around superhuman martial arts, training that borders on torture, and fights that blow the laws of physics out of the sky.
5) Baki the Grappler

Baki Hanma doesn’t shoot lasers or charge up energy waves, but he does break bones with his bare hands. Born to Yujiro Hanma, the strongest man alive, Baki trains nonstop to one day beat his dad. This anime is less about saving the world and more about surviving fights that feel like life-or-death every single time.
The show dives straight into underground fighting rings, where strength rules and every punch could end a match. There’s no magic system here. Just brute force, crazy technique, and fighters who’ve pushed their bodies to the edge. Baki takes hits that should end careers and keeps getting up, just like a certain Saiyan fans know well. The series also has the same spirit of pushing limits, meaning Dragon Ball fans who love high-stakes one-on-ones and intense training arcs will feel right at home.













