Beyblade Wiki
Register
Advertisement

Beyblade Burst Rise, also known as Beyblade Burst GT (ベイブレードバーストGT(ガチ), Beiburēdo Bāsuto Gachi; Lit: Beyblade Burst Gachi) in Japan, is the fourth season of the Beyblade Burst anime, and the eleventh season of the Beyblade anime overall. This season is an internet streaming only anime, with episodes uploaded on the CoroCoro and Takara Tomy Channels on Youtube every Friday at 4:00pm JST starting April 5, 2019.

Summary

Legendary Blader Valt Aoi has been training the next generation of elite Bladers at Spain’s BC Sol. One day, rookie Bladers Dante Koryu and Delta Zakuro witness Valt unleashing his newly-evolved Gamma Bey, Sword Valtryek. To their surprise, Valtryek radiates a golden light as it rockets around the stadium. Inspired by the limitless possibilities of this “Hyper-Flux” state, both Dante and Delta seek the same bond with their Beys.

Dante and his partner, Ace Dragon, set off for Japan, the birthplace of Beyblade. But the path to glory won’t be easy; plenty of tough competitors and Gamma Beys stand in their way, among them some of the best to ever let it rip. Dante soon realizes he’ll have to do whatever it takes to deepen his bond with Dragon.

Do Dante and Dragon have what it takes to overcome these challenges? And will they ever achieve Hyper-Flux? Here begins the story of Dante and Dragon’s rise to the peak of the Blading world.

Staff

  • Director : O Jingu
  • Planning : Shuji Wada, Makoto Wada, Takashi Ishimoto, Yutaka Tajima, Ken'ichi Kuroki
  • Character Design : Toshiaki Ohashi
  • Series Composition : Hideki Sonoda
  • General Manager : Katsuhito Akiyama
  • Executive Producer : Yuya Yokoyama, Naohiko Furuichi, Fumihiko Takahara, Toshinori Irie, Takehide Akimoto
  • Series Draft : Kazuki Sugimoto, Masahiko Yamazaki
  • Avatar Property Design : Yoshimori Nagamori
  • Coloring : Aya Ouchi
  • CGI Director : Futoshi Seo, Tetsuya Kubota
  • CGI Designer : Takahiro Nitta
  • Editing : Naoki Watanabe
  • Cinematographer : Daisuke Suzuki
  • Music : Roy Shakked
  • Sound Director : Yuki Matsuoka
  • Animation Producer : Isami Abe.
  • Property Design : Shin'ichi Miyazaki
  • BeyBattle Director : Jun Hatori
  • Sound Mixer : Takashi Shibata
  • Sound Editor : Toshio Mitsuyama
  • Sound Production : Taisuke Yoshimura
  • Original Picture : Yuro Tagashira, Hanako Ueda, Yoshimori Nagamori, Kouki Fujimoto, Shuto Torii, Akihito Aoki, Keimei Takagi, Ken'ichi Samugawa, William Lee

Cast

Character Japanese VA English VA
Valt Aoi Marina Inoue Kimlinh Tran
Dante Koryu Megumi Han Erika Harlacher
Arman Kusaba Atsushi Abe Griffin Puatu
Delta Zakuro Kensho Ono Brian Timothy Anderson
Fumiya Kindo Natsuki Hanae Kory Getman
Taka Kusaba Marie Mizuno Janice Roman Roku
Ichika Kindo Minami Takahashi Kayli Mills
Tango Koryu Taylor Henry
Joe Lazure Taishi Murata Aleks Le
Lodin Haijima Masami Iwasaki Imari Williams
Aiger Akabane Tomoko Ikeda Laura Stahl
Pheng Hope Sachi Kokuryu Sarah Anne Williams
Blindt DeVoy Kousuke Toriumi Alejandro Saab
Arthur Peregrine Shouma Yamamoto Ben Diskin
Gwyn Reynolds Sumire Morohoshi Cristina Vee
Kaio Koryu Kellen Goff
Rogia Koryu Julie Ann Taylor
Hanami Yasuaki Takumi DW McCann
Señor Hanami Yasuaki Takumi DW McCann
Another Joe Allen
Ken Urame Masafumi Kobatake Kaiji Tang

Episodes (Anime)

Main article: List of Beyblade Burst Rise episodes

Chapters (Manga)

Main article: List of Beyblade Burst chapters

Music

Opening Themes

Ending Themes

Videos

Gallery

Trivia

  • This season will mark the second Beyblade series ever to have a streaming only release in Japan. The first being BeyWarriors Cyborg.
  • This is the first Beyblade Burst season to have the same song as the Japanese opening and ending theme.
  • The GT abbreviation in the Japanese title stands for "GaTinko".
  • This season ties with Beyblade: G-Revolution and Beyblade: Metal Fury with the highest episode count being 52 Japanese episodes and also ties with Beyblade: Shogun Steel with being the shortest Beyblade season internationally being 26 22-minute episodes.
  • This season continues the tradition of the main protagonist posessing an Attack-type Bey. In this case, Dante Koryu and his Ace/Imperial Dragon.
  • Rise is the first Burst season where the Japanese and English versions do not start in the same year.
  • Rise is the second Burst season to have a singer who also redubs other openings as the singer of the English opening theme, first was Turbo, which was sung by NateWantsToBattle.
  • This is the first Burst season where the Japanese opening is the same length as the English opening.
  • This season marks the final appearance of regular launchers and Beylogger V2, as they are replaced by Sparking Launchers in the fifth season.

References

Advertisement