Prepare your external hard drive. Join the community forums. Search for the hash. Because as Beerus would say (reading the archive exclusive sub): "Se non guardi questa versione, non hai ancora conosciuto la vera divinità."
To identify the Extended Cut in the archive, look for the filename containing: [Director's Cut] or [Special Edition] and a runtime of 01:45:22 . Streaming services are transient. Netflix Italy removes anime without notice. Dynit might lose the license tomorrow. Physical Blu-rays scratch and degrade. But an archive exclusive —distributed via peer-to-peer networks and stored on multiple hard drives across the country—is forever. Prepare your external hard drive
If you are searching for the , you are looking for a specific release group. Here are the common digital locations where this relic is preserved: 1. The Private Database (AnimeWorld & BSS) Before the crackdown on Italian anime sharing sites, platforms like AnimeWorld (now defunct) and BSS (Blog sullo Spettacolo) hosted "internal releases." These archives are now circulating on Telegram channels dedicated to Anime Vintage . Search for: [DBZ-ITA] Battle of Gods [BD 1080p] [Jap-ITA Sub-ITA] [Archivio Esclusivo] . 2. The Emule & EDonkey Nostalgia Believe it or not, the oldest "archive exclusive" files still live on the eDonkey network (eMule). Look for .mkv files with hashes starting with ED2K . These are usually fansubs from the "DragonBallIta" team, who worked directly from the Japanese Blu-ray raw before any official Italian distributor touched it. 3. Niche Trackers (Oldtoons, AnimeBytes) While difficult to access, these private trackers have "archival" sections. The exclusive nature means the file includes scanned covers from the Japanese Limited Edition Blu-ray and a .ass subtitle file with stylized fonts matching the original Japanese title cards. Because as Beerus would say (reading the archive