![]() ![]() Features distinct to the Shiren the Wanderer series include the "Melding Jar" which allows players to synthesize items and weapons into more powerful ones. An effort has also been made to expand the series' gameplay features, such as adding job systems to some games, and giving each dungeon a different feel and goal. When the player loses the game, the player loses all money and half the items in the more forgiving variants, or loses everything and has to start from scratch in others. ![]() Escape from the dungeon is usually only allowed in certain places, or through the use of certain items. Chunsoft described the gameplay as being like chess. These are in a turn-based manner, where the player's every action such as attacking or walking, is met by the opponents' action. ![]() Most Mystery Dungeon games center around exploring a dungeon with randomly generated layouts and fights. It was turned into its own spin-off series due to its worldwide popularity. Pokémon Mystery Dungeon is part of the franchise since 2005 and serves as a crossover between Pokémon and Mystery Dungeon. Its gameplay was notably changed to the sport genre, specifically towards association football, compared to the main series' roguelike genre. It is only one game based on the monsters from the Shiren the Wanderer series. The franchise had its first spin-off game in 2004, titled Shiren Monsters: Netsal. Other games who are not developed or published by the company but uses the same moniker would also appear throughout the years, namely the Touhou Project series with its spin-offs titled Fushigi no Gensokyo. Currently, One Way Heroics is the latest crossover with the series. ![]() Chunsoft has also started several lines of branded Mystery Dungeon games, starting with one features the Chocobo from SquareSoft's Final Fantasy series in 1997, then Bandai's Gundam, Konami's TwinBee and Namco's Tower of Druaga series in 2004, Game Freak's Pokémon series in 2005, and Atlus's Etrian Odyssey series in 2015. Mystery Dungeon games are among the few console games in the roguelike genre. The first game, Torneko no Daibōken: Fushigi no Dungeon stars Torneko, a shopkeeper character from the same developer's Dragon Quest IV. Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to InfinityĪlthough all games in the series bear the Fushigi no Dungeon moniker somewhere in their Japanese titles, only the Shiren the Wanderer games contain original characters all other license their characters from other role-playing game franchises. Shiren the Wanderer: The Tower of Fortune and the Dice of Fate Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time and Darkness Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Red and Blue Rescue Team The Nightmare of Druaga: Fushigi no Dungeon Main article: List of Mystery Dungeon video games Release timeline 1993 Though it is relatively inspired of older roguelike games, like NetHack, the franchise had a few unique gameplay elements that would appear in future titles one such is rescuing other players online via a generated password. The premise of most Mystery Dungeon games is to play a silent protagonist who travels across the world to discover mysterious dungeons that have randomly generated rooms and never have the same patterns upon entering into it more than once, with the protagonist sometimes accompanied by a group of party members or going alone. Despite the moderate popularity of the franchise, there have been numerous manga, anime, and novels published under it, whether they are coming from the company's original series, Shiren the Wanderer, or across many crossovers. The series has inspired other entries in Japan and has moderate popularity, mostly from crossover entries with the Torneko's Great Adventure series in Japan, the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series worldwide, and lesser with the Chocobo games based on the creatures from the Final Fantasy series. It began on the Super Famicom, progressing to almost all of Nintendo's and Sony's home and handheld consoles, WonderSwan, Dreamcast, Windows, and mobile devices. The series began when co–creator of Dragon Quest, Koichi Nakamura, was inspired by Seiichiro Nagahata's experience with Rogue, who is also a fellow developer from the company, and a desire to create an original series. Most were developed by Chunsoft, now Spike Chunsoft since the merging in 2012, and select games were developed by other companies with Chunsoft's permission. Mystery Dungeon, known in Japan as Fushigi no Dungeon, is a series of roguelike role-playing video games. ![]()
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