Soundtrack The music was composed by Shinsuke Kazato and performed by the
Adelaide Symphony Orchestra. Most of the melodies and motifs are based on very similar music used in the 1987 anime
Ultraman USA (a.k.a.
Ultraman: The Adventure Begins), which was also scored by Shinsuke Kazato. The Ultraman G soundtrack was first released by Nippon Columbia Co., Ltd in 1992 as stock number COCC-9745. It was re-released in 2007 as part of Nippon Columbia's "ANIMEX2000" series of inexpensive album reissues, under stock number COCC-72238. As of 2016, this version is still available for order from Japanese record stores.
Toy line The series also received an equally short-lived toyline from DreamWorks toys. The figures were 10" tall and included Ultraman, who came with a mini Jack Shindo, as well as his enemies Bogun, Barrangas, Majaba, Gerukadon and Kilazee. Also released was a toy of the Hummer vehicle which included a mini figure of Charlie Morgan. A toy of the Saltop was advertised on the back of all boxes, though it was never released or produced according to a Bandai representative. Despite their unique size, the toys were not without their problems. Jack, Charlie and the Hummer were well out of scale with the other toys, while the Ultraman figure lacked articulation. Also, despite being the main villain for the first story arc, neither version of Gudis was released as a toy in the DreamWorks line (although one did appear in Bandai's Japanese vinyl Ultraman line).
Video game A video game based on the series was released for
Super Nintendo Entertainment System/Super Famicom. It is thought to have awkward controls and an unfairly high level of difficulty by many. It was based around the same engine as a Japanese Ultraman game based on the original series. In the game Ultraman fights Gudis, Bogun, Deganja, Barrangas, Super Gudis, Gazebo, Majaba, Kodalar, and Kilazee.
Comic book A comic book retelling of/sequel to the show was published in the United States by
Harvey Comics, kicked off in early 1993 under the "Ultracomics" label by a 3-issue miniseries written by
Dwayne McDuffie, penciled by
Ernie Colon, inked by
Alfredo Alcala, and with cover art by
Ken Steacy. The miniseries was followed in 1994 by an ongoing series, now published under Harvey's "Nemesis" label, written by Larry Yakata (with interior art still by Colon and Alcala). However, the comic treats Ultraman Great as the same Ultraman from
the original 1966 series. The comic has also been known to confuse
Ultraman: Towards the Future with the subsequent American-produced series,
Ultraman: The Ultimate Hero (which was released as
Ultraman Powered in Japan), of which the comic had included plenty of full-color publicity pictures in many issues to generate interest. After three issues of the miniseries and five issues (including a "Negative One") of the ongoing, the series was cancelled when Harvey ceased publishing comics entirely in mid-1994. Most of the issues had different collectible cover variants. ==Media==