![]() This would explain why bit-beasts were no longer a part of the main plot. It no longer was focusing heavily on Bit-beasts and instead focused more on the Bladers and the Beyblades themselves, especially on the attack patterns and their special attacks. G-Revolution marked the change in the overall stance of Beyblade itself as a franchise and even the manga was impacted by this. This is in stark contrast to the previous seasons where ripcord loading was shown rarely to none. ![]() G Revolution started emphasizing each beyblader doing their respective pre-launch setups before a battle, such as Tyson's elaborate launch setup at the start of the anime. The artstyle was different once again and while based on V-Forces artstyle, the characters resembled their ages more then in V-Force and it was overall well received as a season. It also had many more tie-ins with Season 1, though largely did not reference V-Force itself. ![]() It had more manga tie-in content such as the introduction of Hiro Granger and Daichi Sumeragi and more closely followed the manga itself, including adding content later on such as the BEGA series when it had yet to appear in the manga itself. G-Revolution took a different direction to V-Force before it and returned to focusing on Beyblade tournaments, the change of direction was owed to the Director of Season 1 returning to direct G-Revolution. ![]()
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