About the Book
Source: Wikia. Pages: 177. Chapters: Animal, Baby Gamera, Bear Thief, Bee, Big Lizard, Bubbles, Captain Yellow, Chobi, Colonel Silver's henchmen, Dinosaur, Donbe, Fighter 40, Fighter 97, Future Oolong, Future Puar, Future Turtle, Giant Antlion, Giant Electric Eel, Giant Fish, Giant Tiger, Giran, Giras, Gorilla, Gregory, Hasky's Followers, Hikui Bird, Icarus, Immortal Phoenix, InoShikaCho, Jaguar's Dog, Jasmine, Jinku, King Furry, Konkichi, Korin, Leon, List of Tertiary Characters, Lord Yao, Man-Wolf, Mijorin, Monster Carrot, Mouma, Mousey, Namekian Frog, Neko Majin, Neko Majin, Octopapa, Oolong, Oonaan, Ostrich Chicken, Pippi, Porunga, Pterodactyl, Puar, Roundworm, Scratch, Shenron, Shu, Shusugoro, Sugoro, Susha, Toh Toh, Torga, Tournament Chairman, Treedon, Turtle, Usagi Majin, Wombat and Biker, Yordon. Excerpt: There are a large variety of animals seen through out the series. In the series, it is not unusual to see anthropomorphic animals living among humans as city residents; the two most recurring animal characters being Puar and Oolong. Other significant anthropomorphic animals in Dragon Ball include Captain Yellow, a high-ranking member of the Red Ribbon Army who is a tiger, Korin, a cat deity who lives atop Korin Tower, and King Furry, the King of the Earth, who is a dog. Some animals are capable of speaking human dialect without even being anthropomorphic, such as the dolphin who gives Goku and Chi-Chi directions to Kame House in the chapter "In Search of Kame-Sen'nin." Man-Wolf is part animal as well as part human and he is one of the eight finalists of the 22nd World Martial Arts Tournament. In Dr. Slump and the original Dragon Ball, humanoid animals were very common, but they don't appear as much in Dragon Ball Z. This is likely due to the more serious tone the series began taking. Bats in Pilaf's Castle Bats first appeared in "The Dragon Balls are Stolen!," inside of Pilaf's Castle. Fangs the Vampire has the vampiric abilities to turn into a bat. In ...