A great evil is trying to revive 'The Black Sun” and ', the God of Destruction, by using the unknown power of the Star Fragment and with that. Gingka and Co.' S new adventure begins!!
Characters See for more information. Episodes See for more information. DVDs See for more information. Unlike its past seasons, Warner Home Video owns the DVD rights instead of Sony Pictures Entertainment, thus each volume of 4D contains two episodes. Once it reaches, the 15 minute format for those episodes in the TV version changes back into a 30 minute format for the DVD version.
This is confirmed on the back of DVD Volume 14. Music Japanese opening theme 1: • Performer: YU+KI • Episodes: 2-52 Japanese opening theme 1: • Performer: YCHRO • Episodes: 1-52 English Opening Theme 1: • Episodes: Entire Series Metal Fight Beyblade 4D (manga) After the epic battle against and the victory of the Big Bang Bladers world championship,, the #1 Blader in the World, is revealed to be a, and must enter the new 'Ultimate Bladers' tournament and gather the remaining nine Legendary Bladers who are competing, in order to stop the ultimate evil, from awakening to destroy the world. See also: Controversy Hasbro Metal Fury/Shogun Steel Beyblade Before Hasbro released the Hyperblades, Hasbro released Beyblades that couldn't change modes, had wrong parts, had hollowed fusion wheels, and no stickers.
Hasbro was notorious for this for a few months until fans decided to boycott Hasbro's Beyblades until they released Beyblades that were the same as their Takara Tomy counterparts. Hasbro decided to release the Beyblades that could change modes, and released them under the name Hyperblades. The Hyperblades still didn't include stickers unlike Takara Tomy and even carried on this tradition with the Shogun Steel and Beyblade Legends brand due to stickers being a choking hazard. Although Hasbro realesed the 'Hyperblades', Hasbro still released Beyblades that couldn't change modes and even released the previous Beyblades under Spark FX Beyblades such as Beat Lynx and Proto Nemesis. Hasbro possibly released these Beyblades because they didn't want to confuse the children with the 4D system and the 'extra parts'. When Hasbro released the Shogun Steel Beyblade, they released the Beyblades with cross-shaped stone faces and even recoulored some of the Beyblades such as Kraken, Zirago, Dragoon, Pegasus, Behemoth, Phoenix, Orochi, and Bahamoote.