Dragon Ball Z: Ultimate Tenkaichi's sound design is as throwaway as it often is with most fighting games based on popular manga and anime franchises. It features the requisite bland synth J-rock anthems, and the instrumental stuff has a way of burying itself in your subconscious without being catchy or generally appealing. Voice acting is mostly reduced to the usual grunting, screaming, and unintelligible battle cries. Sound effects are pulled directly from the show, meaning you'll hear more than your share of devastating impact sounds, along with a smattering of "pew pew pew" sounds for Ki attacks, not to mention the apparent sound of a divebombing aircraft that plays when somebody is hurtling through the air at breakneck speed.