TeamFourStar | ||||||||||
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![]() TeamFourStar logo | ||||||||||
Website | teamfourstar | |||||||||
YouTube information | ||||||||||
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Years active | 2008–present | |||||||||
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Subscribers | 4.26 million[1] | |||||||||
Views | 2.27 billion[1] | |||||||||
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Last updated: August 2024 |
TeamFourStar is aYouTube channel andproduction company most notable for the creation of the web seriesDragon Ball Z Abridged, anabridged parody of theanime television seriesDragon Ball Z. Noted for itssatirical humor of various story elements from the original anime, the series became popular online and garnered praise from both fans and critics alike. However, in 2020, the group decided to end the series after producing episodes for 11 years.
TeamFourStar was created in 2008 by members Scott "KaiserNeko" Frerichs, Nick "Lanipator" Landis, and Curtis "Takahata101" Arnott.[2][3] That same year, they created theDragon Ball Z Abridged series, a non-profit parodyabridged series consisting of footage from the titularDragon Ball Z anime interspersed with humor.[4][2][5] The abridged series satirized various story aspects of theDragon Ball Z universe, such as the power level system and the"over 9000" meme,[5] the appearance of characterBroly in the movieBroly: The Legendary Super Saiyan,[6] and the general dialogue and humor of the original series.[5] Since its creation in 2008, the series garnered online popularity as many of the episodes accumulated millions of views.[7][6]
In 2014, TeamFourStar's channel was listed amongst theGoogle Preferred program.[8]Despite this, their channel dealt with copyright issues due to their usage ofDragon Ball Z footage, withToei Animation offering them numerous copyright strikes as a protective measure for their properties.[9] These copyright issues led to the channel temporarily removing theDragon Ball Z Abridged series on YouTube along with their channel briefly going offline,[10][11] and was one of the main factors for the ending of the series.[3][9]
In 2018, TeamFourStar released episode 60 ofDragon Ball Z Abridged after the series went on a year of hiatus, ending on episode 59 with acliffhanger.[12][13] The channel initially promised a fourth season that would focus on theBuu Saga, the final arc of the original anime. However, in 2020, TeamFourStar decided to end the series, citing a loss of passion as well as the changing climate of YouTube in regards to copyright.[3][14][15]
Gaming outletKotaku cited aPatreon post from Scott Frerichs that read:
Many shows lose steam as time goes on as the creators extend their work far beyond its natural lifespan; we're feeling that with this, and that's a scary, depressing thought… We don’t want to end up likeThe Simpsons,Dexter,Scrubs, just to name a few. And yes, we know, there's more story to work with. But in all honesty... there just isn't the emotional attachment and passion for the arc that drove the last three seasons… Copyright claims have put us at risk of losing that channel, and our livelihoods in jeopardy. We have our employees to look out for; our friends, our colleagues, and doing right by them—by striving to create original, monetizable, copyright-friendly content, that also carries our heart and soul as creatives—is undeniably important. We've thought about hosting DBZA on other sites, but nowhere has been safe, and worse, it would serve to draw attention away from our hub, which ultimately could lead to less views, less support, and either the scaling back or collapse of our company.[3]
In August 2023, TeamFourStar collaborated with YouTuberTotally Not Mark, and created a series of clips from the Buu Saga. They were dubbed as "Buu Bits", with most of the original cast returning.[16]
TeamFourStar'sDragon Ball Z Abridged series has received acclaim from both critics and fans alike, many of them extolling it for both its faithfulness to the original anime and its satirical depiction of the series' different tropes. Joe Ballard fromCBR praised the abridged parody for its combination of humor surrounding the characters along with its sense of realism, stating that "whereDragon Ball Abridged really shines is with its ability to balance its humor with an added sense of awareness and realism that doesn't really appear in the original series."[17] Writing for pop culture outletThe Mary Sue, assistant editor Princess Weekes gave praise to the series for its storytelling, voice acting and humor, stating that it "give(s) you the best crash course into the franchise by having a very character driven narrative with a lot of jokes and a realRick & Morty sense of talking about the universe.” She went on to further elaborate that "DBZA is a labor of love, and you see that with every joke, the voice acting, and the time taken to make each edit work seamlessly into the next. It is a triumph of storytelling and modernizes the series for viewers today."[4] Jake Draugelis fromClickOnDetroit remarked that the allure of the series derived from their retaining of "the spirit of the original anime intact as they parody it… The tendency for other abridged series is to lose their heart on the path to funniness, but the good folks at Team Four Star have gotten so good at voicing DBZ characters that they have been asked to do voice work in official DBZ properties."[12]
Some outlets have even considered the abridged series to be superior to the original in various aspects.[17][18] Nick Valdez fromComicBook.com asserted that the series "added the necessary layers the originalDragon Ball Z anime was missing.” He went on to commend the abridged series for its ability to take itself less seriously than the original series: "While fans were able to find the fun in all of the fights and frenetic animation,Abridged drops the pretense of the series' coolness and pokes fun at the series' more wild elements."[19] In alisticle fromCBR which compared the abridged series to the original, Brian Sheridan asserted that the series triumphed over the original in terms of its voice acting, character and plot development, and its dialogue and humor.[5]
As of November 2024, TeamFourStar's channel has reached over 4.26 million subscribers and 2 billion views.[20]
Two well-known parodies of popular anime that ultimately fell victim to YouTube's evolving copyright laws were TeamFourStar's Dragon Ball Z Abridged and LittleKuriboh's Yu-Gi-Oh!: The Abridged Series. It's well documented the struggles that Team FourStar and LittleKuriboh went through with YouTube's stringent copyright laws, even causing both channels to pull their beloved series off of YouTube for a period of time.
Countless creators of varying fame and genre have been uploading videos on the subject, includingCr1TiKaL, The Fiery Joker, GradeAUnderA,Jimquisition, Anime America, Mr. Enter and Team Four Star (whose channel was also deleted briefly) to name a small handful.