Dragon Ball Ichiban Kuji Fantastic Adventure 2: full-on “early series” adventure vibes
If you love “adventure” Dragon Ball—the one that’s all about training, improbable journeys, and everyday little items that somehow become iconic… Ichiban Kuji Dragon Ball Fantastic Adventure 2 is absolutely on that wavelength. This lineup pulls from standout moments at the very start of the story: Goku, Krillin, Gohan (as a kid), Bulma, and Chi-Chi, with prizes that are super “slice of life” but 100% Dragon Ball.
The Ichiban Kuji Dragon Ball Fantastic Adventure 2 prizes (A to H + Last One)
I’m breaking down everything officially announced—sizes, item types, and most importantly, the “Dragon Ball moment” each one brings to mind.
- Prize A: Goku & Krillin “milk delivery” figure (approx. 12 cm) — an iconic training duo at Master Roshi’s, when Goku and Krillin grind through chores (including deliveries) as part of their training.
- Last One + Double Chance Prize: Goku & Chi-Chi on the Flying Nimbus trinket tray figure (approx. 15 cm) — an emblematic Dragon Ball scene with Goku and Chi-Chi on the Flying Nimbus, and on top of that it’s a genuinely useful item (a trinket tray).
- “Practical” prizes: Kid Gohan teapot (approx. 17 cm), ceramic collection (4 designs to choose from), Bulma perpetual calendar (approx. 17 cm), tote bag (approx. 40 cm), pouches, rubber goodies, and stationery.
- Important point : Several prizes are “choice” items (ceramics, pouches, rubber goods, stationery). So if you draw in-store, you can aim for the design you want when it says “choice available.”
Prize-by-prize details (with official images)
One prize = one (official HD) image, and I’ll place each piece back into the Dragon Ball universe—without making up anything that hasn’t been announced.

Prize A: Goku & Krillin “milk delivery” figure (approx. 12 cm)
This is one of the most “real” parts of Dragon Ball: Goku and Krillin deep in training at Master Roshi’s, where progress doesn’t come from a transformation, but from a hardcore routine repeated over and over. The milk delivery scene is one of those daily trials that builds their foundation before the big tournaments. The figure goes all-in on motion and the duo dynamic—and it’s rare to get a piece that celebrates this side of Dragon Ball so much.

Prize B: Gohan teapot (approx. 17 cm)
A practical prize based on kid Gohan: it’s exactly the kind of “everyday detour” fans recognize instantly, because Dragon Ball knows how to make simple details around the Son family memorable. And most importantly, it’s designed to match the ceramic collection from Prize E (announced as an item “linked” to this teapot).

Prize C: Tote bag (approx. 40 cm)
A large-format tote bag featuring Dragon Ball characters. Clearly the “you’ll actually use it” prize: listed at around 40 cm, so it’s not some tiny novelty bag. Perfect if you want something low-key but still fully Dragon Ball in your everyday life.

Prize D: Bulma perpetual calendar (approx. 17 cm)
Bulma is science and adventure from the very beginning: without her, no radar, no structured quest, no “team” coming together. Here, she’s highlighted via an acrylic perpetual calendar (approx. 17 cm), a desk/decor item that fits her “genius inventor” vibe and the adventure feel of the early arcs.

Prize E: Ceramic collection (4 designs to choose from)
A ceramic prize announced in 4 “choice” variants: part cup (approx. 8 cm) and part small plate (approx. 9 cm). Key info: it’s presented as a set designed to go with Gohan’s teapot (Prize B). If you want a coherent “teapot + cup/plate” Dragon Ball set, this is clearly the combo to aim for.

Prize F: Pouches (4 designs to choose from, approx. 15 cm)
Drawstring pouches for small accessories, announced in 4 “choice” versions, approx. 15 cm. The appeal here is how simple and usable they are (storage format), with a design said to be fairly understated—so it’s easy to carry without a huge loud graphic.

Prize G: Rubber assortment (8 designs to choose from)
A rubber “goodies” prize with 8 designs to choose from, split across three types: tray (approx. 9 cm), coaster (approx. 8 cm), and good-luck charm (approx. 7 cm). It’s the perfect kind of prize if you want small Dragon Ball pieces to place on a desk or hang up, without going for a big figure.

Prize H: Stationery assortment (10 designs to choose from)
Dragon Ball stationery in 10 “choice” variants, with formats clearly listed: notebook (B6), clear folder (A4), bill holder (approx. 20 cm), and stickers (approx. 6 cm, set of 8). Definitely the “I want Dragon Ball in my bag / my classes / my job” prize—and the fact that it’s choice makes the draw way less frustrating.

Last One Prize: Goku & Chi-Chi on the Flying Nimbus trinket tray figure (approx. 15 cm)
The Last One is the “scene that sticks with you” prize: Goku and Chi-Chi on the Flying Nimbus. And the smart part is that it’s not just a figure—it’s also a trinket tray, so you can actually use it (keys, coins, small items) while keeping a Dragon Ball “adventure mode” scene on display. Note: this same item also exists as a Double Chance prize (same reward, separate drawing).
Practical info for Ichiban Kuji Dragon Ball Fantastic Adventure 2: price, dates, where to find it
In-store release planned from Saturday, February 28, 2026 (gradual rollout). Online sales planned from Monday, March 2, 2026 at 17:00. Suggested price: 790 yen (tax included). The Double Chance campaign runs from release until late May 2026, with 30 winners announced (in-store + online combined).
If you have to “pick targets”: Prize A (Goku & Krillin) is pure Master Roshi training goodness, and the Last One (Goku & Chi-Chi on the Flying Nimbus) is the kind of instantly recognizable piece—plus it’s useful.