- The original Thai theatrical release was accompanied by a monaural mix, the original sound mix of the film. This mix has been included on a non-anamorphic NTSC speed Thai DVD mastered from decent film sources.
- The Japanese theatrical version, released five years after the Thai release, runs considerably shorter and at a tighter pace. The original credits sequence (over a fiery composite of the eight planets encircling the sun) is abandoned in favor of a montage of shots from the battle scenes later in the film. Some bloodshed from the Thai version is also excised (such as Hanuman crushing the lead robber). The sound design and musical selection has also been redone from the ground up, many of the monster vocalizations "borrowed" from recognizable Toho and Daiei creations.
- The 2001 Thai home video releases introduced a brand new stereophonic redub of the film, with the sound effects and music redone almost entirely once again. The DVD version conforms the soundtrack to reddened, anamorphically distorted scope print of the uncut Thai version, while the VCD version uses the shortened Japanese cut for the picture, the "montage" credits sequence redone in Thai using video generated text and the majority of the corresponding textless background shots.
- The Taiwanese Mandarin language version of the film cuts the credits, censors Koh's death by excising the shot of his blood covered face, and omits the following funeral scene. This version also dubs out references to Hanuman and removes his theme song from the soundtrack during the first fight scene, referring to him as another Ultraman in the dialogue.
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By what name was Hanuman vs. 7 Ultraman (1974) officially released in Canada in English?
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