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Balu bear
Balu bear







The most notable being a Tiger Thief character that appears in the episode " Terror and Plague" and " Goku's Traffic Safety".

  • The Bear Thief has been the base of several other anthropomorphic animal and bandits that appear in the various media in the Dragon Ball franchise.
  • The mercenary leader who appears in " Tien's Atonement" looks almost identical to the Bear Thief.
  • Latin American Spanish dub: Carlos Magaña.
  • Funimation dub: Dameon Clarke, Bob Carter ( Revenge of King Piccolo).
  • Japanese: Masaharu Satō, Takahiko Sakaguma ( Revenge of King Piccolo).
  • He also makes an appearance as an enemy in Dragon Ball Online. He is also a boss in Dragon Ball RPG: Shōnen-hen. In Dragon Ball: Revenge of King Piccolo, the Bear Thief is the first boss in the game, fought just after Goku encounters Colonel Silver. Similarly, different types of enemies modeled after him appear in Dragon Ball Z: Attack of the Saiyans: Bandit, Snow Bandit, and Bandit King. Also, Dragon Ball: Origins has a few regular enemies modeled after the Bear Thief. He makes his first 3D appearance in Dragon Ball: Origins, as the boss of level 1-4 (he also appears as one of the collectible figures). The Bear Thief's first playable appearance is in Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure, where he first serves as the boss of the first level and can be unlocked as a playable character later in the game. In Dragon Ball Z: The Legacy of Goku II, a whole group of Bear Thieves is introduced: the Kuma Mercenary Clan. He is boss in early titles such as Dragon Ball: Shenron no Nazo, Dragon Ball 3: Gokuden (and its WonderSwan Color remake), and Dragon Ball Z: Super Gokuden: Totsugeki-Hen. The Bear Thief appears in several Dragon Ball video games. The Bear Thief in Revenge of King Piccolo
  • Bombs – The Bear Thief throws bombs at his opponent.
  • Azure Dragon Sword - A large Chinese broadsword.
  • Howl – Used in Revenge of King Piccolo to increase his defense.
  • Down Thrust – A ground pound with his sword.
  • He uses it in Dragon Ball: Advanced Adventure and Dragon Ball: Revenge of King Piccolo.
  • Sword Blast – The Bear Thief slams his scimitar into the ground creating a small shockwave.
  • The Bear Thief attacks Goku with his scimitar Having not been able to even touch Goku, the Bear Thief is defeated with a punch between the eyes. This leads to a confrontation between the two. The Bear Thief intends to have Goku give up the turtle for him to eat it, but Goku refuses. The Bear Thief encounters Goku and Bulma early in their adventure to collect the Dragon Balls as they are escorting Master Roshi's Turtle back to the ocean. The Bear Thief is shown to have an appetite, eagerly wanting to turn Turtle into soup and drooling at the sight of him.
  • Sensor Sweep: Robert E.The Bear Thief is a giant brown furred bear that wears clothing and wields a broadsword.
  • This isn’t a strike against The Wide World or its stories at all these are the stories you hear from older men in their parlors and in taverns–light, airy and thoroughly enjoyable to listen to over and over again, even if there’s no great profundity to be found beyond the pathos and human kinship we feel with the teller in the telling. While every story has been well-written and uniformly entertaining, there’s not been anything particularly thought provoking to write home about, which I suppose is why I’ve had a difficult time doing so myself. Next week, I’ll be featuring the cover story while I’ve still got about 1/3 of the issue left, I think I’ll be wrapping up on the issue so far as Short Reviews are concerned. This sucker’s gonna find its way into some memes. There’s really not a lot to say about this story, and I might have skipped talking about it, but I had to scan the illustration, cuz that bear looks crazy. The bear seizes the thief and begins dancing the thief’s screams wake everyone up, and he confesses because any punishment seems less horrifying than dancing with Balu. While the thief is staging his crime scene, a traveling troupe is just happening to be passing through the streets. Tear open some sacks, break a few jam jars, lead the bear to be left licking up sweets and make off with a bunch of stuff to fence later. Sometimes you need a good diversion a short, droll piece to fill a page.Ī dancing bear is sold to a rich guy who keeps it around because when you are rich, it’s nice to have things like dancing bears, especially since fancy ladies loves such conversation pieces.Ī thief hopes that he can steal a bunch of sweet stuff (jams, honeys, bags of sugar) and pin it on the bear. Ward appeared in the June 1944 issue of The Wide World.









    Balu bear