- Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker
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Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker Developer(s) TOSE[citation needed] Publisher(s) Square Enix Distributor(s) Designer(s) Yuji Hori Artist(s) Akira Toriyama Composer(s) Koichi Sugiyama Series Dragon Quest Monsters Platform(s) Nintendo DS Release date(s) - JP December 28, 2006
- NA November 6, 2007
- AUS March 13, 2008
Genre(s) Console role-playing game Mode(s) Single-player, multiplayer Rating(s) - OFLC: PG
- ESRB: E10+
Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker (ドラゴンクエストモンスターズ ジョーカー Doragon Kuesuto Monsutāzu Jōkā ) is a Nintendo DS role-playing game published by Square Enix, and the fourth installment of the Dragon Quest Monsters series. Square Enix released the game on December 28, 2006 in Japan and in North America on November 6, 2007.
This is the first game in the series to have online play, via Nintendo Wi-Fi. Like the other games in the series, the character and monster designs are credited to long-time Dragon Quest series artist, Akira Toriyama, with the music composed by Koichi Sugiyama.
Contents
Gameplay
Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker is the first game in the Dragon Quest Monsters series to be in 3D, and the first to be developed by TOSE. It uses cel-shaded animation, and the battles are of the same type in other Dragon Quest games: commands are issued in a turn based style, then are executed in full 3D.
The player's avatar is that of a tanned, grey/spikey haired youth with an editable name. He dreams of becoming a world famous monsters 'scout', which is a tamer of wild monsters who uses them in battle. There is a link to real world scouts in that there is a landmark in-game known as Baden's bell which is a reference to the scouts creator Baden Powell.
The battle system itself is very similar to previous Dragon Quest Monsters games. The player controls up to three monsters that make up the party, and can issue them direct orders or set them to one of 5 AI settings. The main character does not directly participate in battles except for when the player uses items.
Joker does not have random battles.[2] The only way to encounter enemies is to run into one on the overworld. The monsters can be seen, avoided, and attacked from their back to get a free attack round. Later on, the player gets the Whistle ability. This can be used at any time, other than in the city and where monsters don't appear, and in a way does count as a random battle as the enemies are randomly chosen.
The game takes place in the region known as Green Bays, consisting of seven islands. A jet-ski is used to travel from one island to another, with specific paths defined for every couple of piers. However, the main character may notice uncharted islands beyond some of the main islands. The chances for this are completely random and are not located on the main map. Pirates may also appear when traveling between islands, with the pirate captain, Crow, counting as a rare monster.
Wi-Fi
The game also has a Nintendo Wi-Fi element. The player connects to the server, and their monster team is ranked. The DS then downloads a set of opponents to battle. The battles are against the monster teams of higher and higher ranked other players. For each battle you win, you get a reward, either an item or a monster. These rewards change daily and can range from unexciting items to rare monsters such as liquid metal slimes. This feature is designed to be used once per day. The player can only fight one set of opponents, and get a reward once each day.
Monsters
The player gets more monsters by scouting them. Unlike previous games in the series, this is a battle command, and not the result of using items in battle. You can make as many scouting attempts as you want during a battle, until the monster decides to join, or takes offense. Success depends on the relative strengths of the monsters making the attempt versus the relative defense of the monster that is being scouted.
The monster families have been rearranged into a different categorization, so some monsters are in different families than they were on previous Dragon Quest Monsters games.
- Slime (スライム, suraimu).
- Dragon (ドラゴン, doragon).
- Nature (しぜん, shizen).
- Beast (まじゅう, majuu).
- Material (ぶっしつ, busshitsu).
- Demon (あくま, akuma).
- Undead (ゾンビ, zonbi).
- Incarni (しんじゅう, Shinjuu).
Unlike previous games in the series, there is not a Boss family. The Boss monsters (end game, or powerful bosses from Dragon Quest games) have been merged with the other families. For example, Zoma is now in the Demon family.
Monsters now all have a rank associated with them: F, E, D, C, B, A, S, and X. The ranks give an idea of how quickly the monster's stats will grow, and how hard they are to get/synthesize. There are 210 different monsters, though some are just color swaps of others, with different stats.
There are three monsters, Trode [3] (トロデ, Torode), Leopold [4] (レオパルド, Reoparudo), and Empyrea [5] (レティス, Retisu) that can not be scouted or bred in the normal game. The only way to get these monsters is to visit a DS Station in Japan or get all the monsters in your library and talk to a guy.[6] There, one can use the games' Wireless mode to fight against these monsters and attempt to scout them. Leopold and Empyrea are required in order to synthesize the main monster into its final forms.
Skill system
Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker features a skill system based on the one from Dragon Quest VIII: Journey of the Cursed King. Skill points are gained on certain character levels, and these can be assigned to one of the monster's (up to) three skill sets, learning techniques or gaining stats boosts.
Some skill sets can be upgraded by maxing them. Others can be unlocked when parents have specific skill sets mastered. When synthesizing, the resulting monster can choose its skill sets from those its parents had, the ones that monster naturally knows, and any new ones unlocked.
There are also skill seeds, which can be found during the night, and give 3 skill points to the selected monster.
Plot
The protagonist, Joker, is a young boy who wishes to join the upcoming Monster Scouting Tournament taking place in the Green Bays island cluster. Having been imprisoned for attempting to join without permission, Joker meets with Warden Trump, his father and leader of CELL, a secretive monster research organization. Trump gives Joker permission to join the tournament, but only to spy on the proceedings. After choosing his first monster, Joker heads for Domus Isle.
After being told that the opening ceremony has been postponed, Joker heads for Infant Isle to take the Scout's Pledge. After reaching the peak of the mountain, Joker witnesses a female scout attempting to scout a canine monster. The monster, who, unlike other monsters, can speak the human tongue, derides her attempt to tame him and escapes. The girl introduces herself as Solitaire.
After taking the Scout's Pledge and attending the opening ceremony, presided by Dr. Snap, the head of the Monster Scouting Organization, Joker heads for Xeroph Isle, the desert island. After falling through quicksand into an underground cave, Joker witnesses the monster that Solitaire tried to tame falling unconscious after being attacked by an orc. Joker defeats the orc and takes the wolf to the island scoutpost to be healed, but the staff are unable to do anything due to never seeing him before. Strangely, Dr. Snap appears and heals the creature. Joker overhears Dr. Snap talking to the wolfpup about the Incarnus, a legendary creature that once saved Green Bays from destruction. After Dr. Snap leaves, the creature asks Joker if he would accompany him to a shrine on the island, which he had been attempting to enter when Joker found him. Joker agrees and the beast, Wulfspade, joins him.
Joker and Wulfspade find the shrine and enter the innermost chamber where, after defeating a guardian Golem, Wulfspade transforms into a featherless avian creature, Hawkhart. After Joker agrees to give Hawkhart the Scout's Mark, the prize for winning the tournament, Hawkhart joins him permanently. They travel to Palaish Isle where, after finding the island's shrine and defeating its guardian, Hawkhart transforms again into a primate creature, Cluboon. It is here that the creature reveals to Joker his true identity: the Incarnus. He has appeared again at the sign of a great catastrophe, which he is trying to stop, and each transformation grants him greater power to do so.
After this, Joker travels to Infern Isle, a zombie-infested island where a great disaster once took place, and from there to Celeste Isle, a large island with two great towered temples: the Temple of the Sun and the Temple of the Moon.
Joker competes in the tournament and wins. When he goes to receive the scout's mark, Dr. Snap gives him the mark but then takes the Incarni with him to Infern Isle. After journeying through several different isles a disaster strikes Infern Isle. Joker arrives at Infern Isle and starts scaling up the volcano. Near the entrance to the inner volcano, Joker must battle the Ace of Darkness. After defeating the Ace of Darkness, Joker regains the Incarni. Joker arrives at the peak of the volcano. There awaits Dr. Snap, who transforms into a monster after he absorbs darkonium, and attacks Joker. After Joker wins the battle the Incarni seals the portal and disappears. Later on, after Joker is advised to go back to Infant Isle, the Incarni reappears at the Scout's Stone and rejoins Joker.
Development
Developed by behind the scenes game developer TOSE,[7] Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker is the first Dragon Quest game to feature Wi-Fi capabilities. Yuji Hori, famous for leading the development for all of the Dragon Quest games, added new gameplay elements to this installment, such as "scouting" for monsters.[8] Akira Toriyama, creator of Dragon Ball, also returned for Joker, creating the visuals for the game in his unique style.[2] Completing the Dragon Quest team, Koichi Sugiyama composed the tracks for Joker.[9]
Reception
Review scores Publication Score Review 1up.com B →[10] Weekly Famitsu 36 of 40 print GamePro.com 6.5 of 10 →[11] GameSpot 7.5 of 10 →[12] Hardcore Gamer Magazine 9.5 of 10 print IGN.com 7.9 of 10 →[13] Nintendo Power 8 of 10 print Play Magazine 7 of 10 print Metacritic[notes 1] 76 of 100 →[14] Notes: - ^ Provides aggregate scores.
Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker received fairly decent scores overall, gaining an average of 76% on Metacritic.[15] GameSpot's Austin Shau gave the game a 7.5/10, or "Good", with mostly positive comments, but advised users to approach the intense level-grinding with caution.[2] IGN gave a similar score, 7.9, citing the game's excellent graphics and over all quality. IGN stated that the game "should definitely surprise some newcomers to the franchise in the sheer amount of depth and versatility it presents."[16] Nintendo Power gave the game 8/10, and defended Joker, saying it was not just a Pokémon pretender.[17] Similarly, GameSpy gave Joker an 8/10, and enforced the idea that the game is more than just a copy of Pokémon.[18] Gamezone also gave the game a positive review with a score of 8/10.[19] However, GamePro, who gave Joker a 3.25/5, felt the game was just "another monster catch-and-battle game" along the lines of Pokémon. The review also cited the Scouting to be tricky and that the battle camera can be annoying.[20] Game Informer gave the game 8/10, with the game receiving the "Handheld Game of the Month" for the December 2006 issue. Japanese gaming magazine Famitsu gave the game a positive review with a total score of 36/40.[21]
Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker sold 593,994 units in the first four days after release in Japan.[22] To date, it has sold over 1.45 million units.[23] Joker was wildly popular in Japan, spawning merchandise based on the game, such as carrying cases for the Nintendo DS.[24]
Sequel
Main article: Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker 2Near the end of January, Square Enix announced the development of Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker 2. The game is not a direct sequel to Joker, featuring a new protagonist, more than 300 monsters (some from Dragon Quest IX: Sentinels of the Starry Skies) and direct online multiplayer battling over Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection.
References
- ^ squareinsider.com. Retrieved January 12, 2008
- ^ a b c Austin Shau (2007). "GameSpot review". http://www.gamespot.com/ds/rpg/dragonquestmonstersjoker/review.html?sid=6183007. Retrieved Nov 16 2007.
- ^ From Dragon Quest VIII, known as Trode outside Japan
- ^ The Demon Dog from DQ VIII, known as Leopold outside Japan.
- ^ Known as Empyrea from DQ VIII, and Ramia from Dragon Quest III
- ^ "DSステーション". Nintendo.co.jp. http://www.nintendo.co.jp/ds/ds_station/index.html. Retrieved 2008-11-03.
- ^ GameSpy Staff (2007). "DQM: Joker at Square Haven". http://squarehaven.com/games/Nintendo-DS/Dragon-Quest-Monsters-Joker/. Retrieved Dec 5 2007.
- ^ GameSpy Staff (2007). "Joker Ships". http://ds.gamespy.com/nintendo-ds/dragon-quest-monsters/832950p1.html. Retrieved Dec 5 2007.
- ^ "IGN: Joker Preview". 2007. http://ds.ign.com/articles/825/825434p1.html. Retrieved Dec 5 2007.
- ^ "Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker". 1UP.com. http://www.1up.com/reviews/dragon-quest-monsters-joker. Retrieved 2008-11-03.
- ^ Emily Balistrieri. "Review : Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker [DS]". GamePro.com. http://www.gamepro.com/article/reviews/145828/dragon-quest-monsters-joker/. Retrieved 2008-11-03.
- ^ Austin Shau (GameSpot). "Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker for DS Review - DS Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker Review". GameSpot. http://www.gamespot.com/ds/rpg/dragonquestmonstersjoker/review.html?sid=6183007. Retrieved 2008-11-03.
- ^ Bozon (2007-11-06). "IGN: Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker Review". Ds.ign.com. http://ds.ign.com/articles/833/833153p1.html. Retrieved 2009-01-07.
- ^ "Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker (ds: 2007): Reviews". Metacritic.com. http://www.metacritic.com/game/ds/dragon-quest-monsters-joker. Retrieved 2008-11-03.
- ^ "DQMJ at Metacritic.com". 2007. http://www.metacritic.com/game/ds/dragon-quest-monsters-joker. Retrieved Nov 27 2007.
- ^ "IGN review". 2007. http://ds.ign.com/articles/833/833153p1.html. Retrieved Nov 6 2007.
- ^ Nintendo Power staff, ed (2007). Nintendo Power, Dec 2007. Future US, Inc. p. 86.
- ^ Elisa di Fiore (2007). "DQMJ review". http://ds.gamespy.com/nintendo-ds/dragon-quest-monsters/834351p1.html. Retrieved Dec 4 2007.
- ^ Gamezone review Retrieved 11-5-07
- ^ Emily Balistrieri (2007). "DQMJ review at GamePro.com". http://www.gamepro.com/article/reviews/145828/dragon-quest-monsters-joker/. Retrieved Dec 4 2007.
- ^ Freund, Josh (December 28, 2006). "News - Latest Famitsu reviews - Dragon Quest Monsters Joker (DS) & more". GamesAreFun.com. http://www.gamesarefun.com/news.php?newsid=7378. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
- ^ Consolewars.com. Retrieved November 27, 2007
- ^ "Nintendo DS Japanese Ranking". Japan-GameCharts.com. http://www.japan-gamecharts.com/ds.php. Retrieved 2008-12-13.
- ^ "DQMJ DS pouch at YesAsia.com". 2007. http://www.yesasia.com/global/1004540644-0-0-0-en/info.html. Retrieved Dec 9 2007.
External links
- Official Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker website (Japanese)
- DS Station (Japanese)
- Official North American site
- Dragon Quest Monsters: Joker at the Open Directory Project
Dragon Quest / Dragon Warrior series Main series Spinoff titles Kenshin • Swords • Monster Battle RoadSlime titlesShōgeki no Shippo Dan • Rocket SlimeTorneko no Daibōken • The Last Hope • Torneko 3 • Shōnen YangusAnime and manga Characters Creators Yuji Horii • Koichi Sugiyama • Akira ToriyamaRelated companies Media • Gameplay (Character classes)Categories:- 2006 video games
- Dragon Quest games
- Multiplayer online games
- Nintendo DS games
- Nintendo DS-only games
- Tose (company) games
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