A sequel titled was in development around the late 1980s. It was to feature Bravoman, now divorced, unemployed, and homeless, fighting to win back the love of his wife and return to his former glory. It was scrapped during the concept stages as the team was not sure if the concept would work as a game. Bravoman appears as a playable character in the 2005
PlayStation 2 game
Namco x Capcom, developed by
Monolith Soft, where he is paired up with
Wonder Momo; Waya-Hime also appears in the game, first as an enemy then later as a playable character. Bravoman is also featured in the
tactical role-playing game Namco Super Wars for the
WonderSwan Color. The arcade game
Marvel Land features a parade float in the design of Bravoman fighting Waya-Hime. In 2005, Japanese company Yujin released a
gashapon figure of Waya-Hime as part of their "Namco Girls" collection. One of Taki's alternate costumes in
Soulcalibur II is also based on Waya-Hime. The
fighting game Super Smash Bros. For Wii U features the soundtrack for
Bravoman as a selectable track for the
Pac-Land stage.
Pac-Man 99 also features a
Bravoman visual theme as
downloadable content.
ShiftyLook media As part of Bandai Namco's
ShiftyLook initiative to revive older properties, a new Bravoman
webcomic was created in collaboration with
Udon Entertainment, titled
Bravoman: Super Unequaled Hero of Excellence. Written by Matt Moylan and illustrated by Dax Gordine, the strip premiered on March 9, 2012, and focused on comedic elements such as Bravoman's poor control of his powers, Alpha Man's lackluster attempts to teach Bravoman, Dr. Bomb's misuse of
Engrish, and various examples of
metahumor. The comic also introduced two new characters that never appeared in the original
Bravoman game: Bravowoman, a no-nonsense female superhero, and Braveman, a self-obsessed television actor based on the North American box art for the TurboGrafx-16 version of
Bravoman. The series concluded with its 300th strip on March 16, 2014, shortly after the announcement of ShiftyLook's closure. The comic is no longer available for viewing, though its first 130 strips received a published book by Udon. An animated adaptation of the comic by Copernicus Studios premiered via ShiftyLook's
YouTube channel on May 20, 2013, and ran for twelve episodes, concluding on February 12, 2014. The series was written by Moylan and
Jim Zub, and featured the voices of
Rob Paulsen as Bravoman and Alpha Man;
Dee Bradley Baker as Dr. Bomb and Black Bravo, renamed Anti-Bravoman as in the comic;
Romi Dames as Waya-Hime; and
Jennifer Hale as Bravowoman. The web series was later removed from YouTube along with ShiftyLook's channel, and is currently legally unavailable for viewing.
Bravoman: Binja Bash!, an endless runner based on the comic, was released for
iOS and
Android devices on August 30, 2013. The game has since been delisted and is no longer available. ==Notes==