- Platform: Game Boy Color
- ESRB Rating:
Everyone - Media: Video Game
Everyone
Product Details
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In the first installment, you play as the descendant of the legendary Loto,a valiant Dragon Warrior. Your quest is to save the land of Alefgard fromthe evil clutches of DracoLord. Along the way, you must battle dragons,retrieve stolen sacred objects, and of course, save imperiled royalty.Dragon Warrior II will have you playing three different characters,all descendants of the original hero of the previous game, in a worldthat's grown larger. You'll need to use strategy and teamwork between yourcharacters to defeat foes who often outnumber your party.
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Dragon Warrior 2, though it doesn't have backgrounds when you're fighting monsters except when you're fighting bosses, is a much deeper and more involving game. Now, you can fight more than one monster at a time and respond with your own party of three members .
(not FOUR members which Amazon's reviewer above foolishly stated, probably thinking of Dragon Warrior III...)
The world in DW2 has grown about 4 times larger (it looks like it has grown a lot more in the map, but that's because they shrunk land area of the original continent by about half), and you can sail by boat to different parts and islands. There is also a much greater evil to defeat. It obviously takes much longer to beat too...
One of the things I like about DW1, but particularly in DW2, is the very small amount of "Dungeon Crawling" you have to do; in my opinion "Dungeon Crawling" is simply cheating on the amount of time it takes to play a game that doesn't have a lot of actual land to cover. While there are caves and towers, you'll be spending most of your time in the normal world. Unlike some more recent RPGs which cause you to Dungeon-Crawl for no specific reason (like Zelda DX), this one focuses more on walking around like you would in real life.
And the ending to either DW1 or DW2 is not dissapointing, but quite satisfying; When I finished DW2, I started playing DW1 again because took me a long time to beat DW2.
Which brings me to my next point; it's really enjoyable to have these two games on one cartridge, because you can see all of the connections and changes between the 1st and the 2nd; when that guard says about Alefgard "that kingdom has changed much over the years", he's not kidding.
A WARNING though; even though the box cover features somewhat cute characters and so do the introduction cutscenes, this is not for people who do not appreciate involving storylines, so be forewarned!
I must say, I'm eagerly waiting for Enix's Dragon Warrior III remake which looks even better than these games!