Digimon World: Dusk
- As you travel throughout the land, collect, tame, train, and evolve over 400 Digimon from 8 different species. Each game contains some unique and rare Digimon that can only be obtained owing to wireless communication with the other version of the game.
- Digimon World: Dawn & Dusk both contain a new world map, which always shows where you have been and where you are currently located. The maps also show info on each dungeon, including what items and Digimon are available.
- Raise, train and evolve your new Digimon at the Digifarm – you can chat with your Digimon, install or remove Farm Goods. Different Farms and Farm Goods help your Digimon learn new abilities, boost stats, even while you are not at the DigiFarm.
- With intense 5 on 5 turn-based battles, manage your Digimon’s locations to gain an edge over your enemies. Digimon World Dawn & Dusk have a unique storyline that interweaves the tales of two very different characters and journeys.
- Take your Digimon to battle over Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection. Take Tamer points during Wi-Fi battles then trade your Tamer points for rare items. Rare Digimon can also be bought by Digi-matching.
Product Description
Digimon World: Dusk DS For the first time in Digimon History, two sports meeting with analogous, yet connected tales will debut on the Nintendo DS at the same time. In Digimon World Dawn, take control of a rookie Digimon Tamer from the Light Fang team of Sunshine district. When a huge earthquake with unknown life energy hurts the access points to the Digital World, many Digimon mysteriously devolve into Digi-eggs. With rumors that the incident was caused by the Night Crow team, you must investigate the cause of the earthquake, know what happened to the Digimon, and restore the city! In Digimon World Dusk, take control of a Tamer from the Night Crow team of Dark Moon district. When a huge earthquake with unknown life energy strikes the Digital World, the whole town is heavily hurt. With rumors that the incident was caused by Light Fang team, it is now is up to you to find out what caused the incident, and restore the city.
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The game is a excellent game. It is addicting, especially if you are one of those who enjoys raising critters.
It has its flaws… ok it has a lot of flaws, but if you are like me, you get so into the raising and battling of the game you are able to overlook the irritating sound, terrible graphics, and poorly presented storyline.
I give it a 6/10. I delight in playing it, but, it could have been improved a ton before release.
Rating: 3 / 5
Was a very excellent game there is a splendid deal of choices as far as digimon selection goes, and I am very fond of the digifarm. The battle system was a bit of a disapointment (first person) and there isn’t very much endgame make pleased. By and large but it is certainly worth buying
Rating: 4 / 5
This is a splendid game if you like Pokemon or other monster rasing RPGS. Its very addicting and although I’ve only played 3 hours, I can see its a long game; especially if you want to get all the Digimon. Unlike Pokemon which limits you to what your Pokemon can evolve into, in this game there are several digivolutions for your Digimon and you can always go back on a stage and change it up. There are also alot of quests which is deifferent from Pokemons linear questline. By and large I recommend getting this if you like these kinds of sports meeting or Digimon.
Rating: 5 / 5
Pokemon and Zelda are some of the RPGs that I’m most familiar with. I selected out this game because it looked fascinating and would be a break from what I’m used to RPG-wise. If you’re interested in buying, buy used–it’s certainly worth the cash that you save. I haven’t started with wi-fi stuff at all, so I’ll be referring to make pleased from the main storyline.
First, the negatives of this game. There really isn’t a right tutorial so a few things in the game are hard to figure out. There are help files that can be read, but they aren’t interactive at all. Battle-wise, this game is a small bit too simple, especially with multiple degenerations. I have somewhat mixed feelings about the platform part of this game. It starts out honestly unadorned, but some areas (Loop Swamp and Macro Sea for example) are poorly layed out and don’t even start to make sense (they reminded me a lot of some of the dungeons from Final Fantasy X-2, but those were shorter and a small less frustrating). Combine that with the fact that there’s a moderately high encounter rate and getting owing to quests when you have no thought where you’re going (if you don’t use a guide, for example) can be a dirty chore. Since I’ve played a lot of Pokemon and Zelda, I would’ve hoped that there were some puzzles, but there really aren’t any (unless you count navigating areas). When you compare this game to other RPGs, it cascade a small bit small (there are some ‘fetch X item for me’ quests, but navigating areas makes even those painful). A lot of the menus are done in the colors of the starter digimon in this game (pink and violet) which might be a unenthusiastic, though I don’t really mind. Like the Pokemon sports meeting, you can’t take everything in a release version, so if that’s your goal then you’ll be wanting to buy both versions (doesn’t bother me, but it might bother some–I wasn’t interested in getting Dawn).
Time for some positives. This game reminded me a lot of when I was younger. That in and of itself was enjoyable for me. Nearly every digimon from the show can be obtained and the ones that have been added since look excellent (not like newer generations in other catch ‘em all sports meeting :p). Dianamon and Apollomon were made particularly for Dusk and Dawn, and both look cool (though I reflect Dianamon looks cooler). I found the degeneration/digivolution process to be crafty and fascinating, it’s a small more complex than using a thunderstone or getting to X level. Since there are so many cool digimon, it’s a bit disappointing that you can only have six in your party, but there’re smart objects called farm islands that allow you to raise digimon even if they aren’t right there with you. Raising digimon is easily one of the funnest parts of the game; it can certainly leave you feeling accomplished. Once you get started, this game can be very addictive. It’s simple to get past the negatives mentioned earlier.
If you’re on the fence whether or not to buy this game, keep a few things in mind. This won’t satisfy the RPG-lover, but it is meant to satisfy those wily digimon-tamer cravings which sometimes pop up. If you give it a chance, you could find yourself liking the excellent parts (maybe enough to forgive the terrible) and finding your own reason to appreciate this game. For those that have formerly loved Pokemon or Digimon (either currently or when you were younger), go ahead and get this game.
Rating: 4 / 5
This is a excellent game in the Digimon World series (don’t agonize if you haven’t played the other ones). The game had a battle system and view stylishness reminiscent of Dragon Warrior Monsters, you see only your opponents and the attack animations of your own attacks during battles, and that was a welcome bit of nostalgia for me when I played this. The storyline is OK, could’ve been a small less predictable, but hey what isn’t predictable anymore? I will warn you, there is going to be a moderate amount of level grinding especially when you’re trying to get past some of the more irritating boss fights, but if you play any MMORPG’s you’ll barely notice it. I found the wifi breeding to be quite enjoyable, seeing the different digimon various people had raised. I would also like to say that finding people who had obviously used hacking devices (for example, action replay and gameshark) to make their digimon powerful or their farms overloaded, really is irritating when you’ve worked hard, so don’t do it. By and large a excellent game from an always evolving and always fun series.
Rating: 4 / 5