Dragon Ball | Fighterz Switch Nsp Dlc Update 133 Updated
As of this writing, Bandai Namco has officially ended major content support for Dragon Ball FighterZ. The "Ultimate Edition" released, and the rollback patch was the final major code change. Therefore, Update 133 is the terminal build. It is stable, complete, and contains every single byte of content ever released for the game.
For CFW users, this is fantastic news. You no longer need to chase incremental patches. The "Dragon Ball FighterZ Switch NSP DLC Update 133 updated" pack circulating now represents the definitive, final archive of the game.
Install DLC NSP:
Install the DLC pack exactly as you did the update. Tinfoil will merge the DLC entitlements automatically.
Apply Sigpatches (if DLC doesn't show):
If after launching you see locked characters, reboot to Hekate, click “Payloads” → fusee.bin with chainloading enabled. Then re-run Tinfoil’s “Fix Boot” or reinstall Sigpatches. dragon ball fighterz switch nsp dlc update 133 updated
Launch the game:
From your Switch home screen, open Dragon Ball FighterZ.
Yes. Absolutely.
Here is the honest truth: The PS5 and PC versions look prettier, but the Switch version with Update 1.33 is the ultimate portable training mode. As of this writing, Bandai Namco has officially
If you have a hacked Switch and a microSD card to spare, Dragon Ball FighterZ + Update 1.33 + All DLC is arguably the best fighting game on the entire system. It is Dragon Ball Z: Budokai Tenkaichi 3 levels of "must-have" for the train commute.
Once booted, press + on Dragon Ball FighterZ. Under "Version," you should see 1.33. Under "Add-On Content," you should see all 3 FighterZ Passes marked as "Purchased."
While Bandai Namco slowed down major character releases after the FighterZ Pass 3, update 1.33 focuses on quality of life, bug fixes, and full compatibility with the final DLC waves. Here’s a detailed changelog based on official patch notes (adapted for the Switch version): Install DLC NSP: Install the DLC pack exactly
The keyword phrase includes both “133” and “updated” — this suggests scene groups have re-packaged the update to fix previous issues, such as missing DLC signatures or compatibility problems with firmware 17.0.0+. Always look for “updated” releases, as they are often the most stable.
Solution: This happens if you installed the update out of order. Go to System Settings -> Data Management -> Manage Software -> Dragon Ball FighterZ -> "Check for Corrupt Data." If that fails, delete the game and reinstall base -> update -> DLC in that exact sequence.
After extensive testing on a Switch OLED (Mariko) and Switch Lite (CFW), here are the results:
Verdict: Update 133 makes Dragon Ball FighterZ on Switch the definitive portable version – it’s arguably better optimized than the PS Vita or mobile phone attempts.