First Print/Series/Dragon Ball

Dragon Ball

The grandfather of modern shōnen — and one-third of the $275,000 grail trio. A complete, vintage series where condition is everything and Toriyama's passing froze the market. Here's every key that matters.

Publisher
ShueishaWeekly Shōnen Jump
Creator
Toriyama1955–2024
Series debut
1984WSJ #51
Volumes
42complete
The grail
Vol. 11985 · BGS 9.4
The keys

What's actually worth owning.

Organised by format — Japanese first prints, the Shōnen Jump magazine keys, and the English editions. Every entry assumes a first print in high grade; a later printing is a different, lesser asset.

We don't quote prices — the market moves too fast to trust a number on a page. Each Check live price → opens a filtered, real-time search on the open market: always current, and the links support the desk.
Japanese first prints · tankōbon

Volume 1 Grail

Shueisha · Sept 10 1985 · 初版

The grandfather of the modern shōnen format, and one-third of the $275K grail trio. Printed in 1985, when nobody preserved paperback manga — so a browning-free, high-grade copy is rarer than most vintage comics. Toriyama's 2024 passing permanently froze the print history; demand here is structural, not cyclical.

Volume 27 Milestone

Shueisha · 1991 · first Super Saiyan

The volume that first collects Goku's Super Saiyan transformation — arguably the single most iconic moment in all of shōnen. A milestone "event" key: the market pays for the scene, not just the number.

Volume 42 Milestone

Shueisha · Aug 4 1995 · the finale

The final volume — Toriyama's original ending, with its iconic farewell cover. After his passing, it may be the most historically significant book in the franchise, and it remains undervalued relative to that significance. A textbook milestone-key value gap.

Shōnen Jump · the magazine keys

Weekly Shōnen Jump 1984 #51 1st App

Shueisha · Nov 20 1984 · Chapter 1

The first appearance of Son Goku and Bulma — Chapter 1, "Bulma and Son Goku," the featured lead of the issue. Its cover is one of the very few Toriyama illustrations never reprinted. The Dragon Ball magazine grail, and the true #1 of the franchise.

"Dragon Boy" (Fresh Jump, 1983) Prototype

Shueisha · 1983 · Toriyama one-shot

The kung-fu one-shot Toriyama drew — on his editor's advice — to test whether a martial-arts shōnen would land. It did, and Dragon Ball followed. Not Goku himself, but the direct creative prototype for the series. A true deep-cut key for the completist.

English first prints

Viz Dragon Ball #1 First EN

Viz · March 1998 · monthly comic

The first English Dragon Ball — Viz's colorized, single-issue monthly format, before the switch to graphic novels in 2000. The English-market first appearance, and an accessible key with real crossover demand.

Viz Dragon Ball Vol. 1 Accessible

Viz · 2000 · English graphic novel

The English collected Vol. 1 — the affordable on-ramp to the series. (Dragon Ball Z's English serialization debut lives in US Shonen Jump #1, 2003 — a shared key with One Piece.)

Is your Vol. 1 a first print?

On a 1985 book, condition is the whole game.

  • Find the colophon (奥付) at the back — it lists the printing and date.
  • A first print reads 初版 / 第1刷; the date should sit near September 1985.
  • The real gate is paper browning — 1980s stock yellows, and browning-free copies are the true rarity.
  • Beware the many later editions (kanzenban, full-colour, 3-in-1) — they are not the first print.
Full Dragon Ball first-print ID guide →

Should you grade it?

The vintage grading calculus.

  • Grade the keys in the best condition you can find — Vol. 1, Vol. 42, Vol. 27.
  • On vintage the premium curve is brutally steep: a clean high grade is worth many times a browned mid-grade.
  • Browning caps the grade — no pressing fixes it, so pay up for white pages.
  • Toriyama's passing added structural demand; the keys reward patience.
Read the full Buyer's Guide →
Watchlist

The Dragon Ball board.

The desk's current read at a glance. Status reflects our thesis, not a price quote — always confirm with live sold comps.

Volume / ItemWhat makes it keyTierDesk status
Vol. 1 (JP, 1985)Grail-trio debut; browning-free is scarceGrailCore hold
WSJ 1984 #51Goku's first appearance; unreprinted cover1st AppWatch
Vol. 42 (1995)The finale; Toriyama's original endingMilestoneWatch — undervalued
Vol. 27 (1991)First Super Saiyan transformationMilestoneAccumulate
"Dragon Boy" (1983)Toriyama's prototype one-shotPrototypeDeep cut
Viz DB #1 (1998)First English Dragon BallFirst ENEntry buy
Viz Vol. 1 (EN, 2000)English graphic-novel debutAccessibleEntry buy
Desk status, defined Core hold a foundational key to own and hold long-term. Accumulate worth building a position into on weakness. Watch on the radar — tracking comps for the right entry. Entry buy an accessible starting position for a new collector.

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