Along with the Digimon found in the first three seasons of the cartoon show, Digimon World 3 features 20 original Digimon created specifically for the game. An additional side-quest allows players to seek out Digimon cards in order to build a formidable deck with which to battle others. There are a total of cards to be collected in the game. Tags Rpg. No reviews added yet. Comments will not be approved to be posted if they are SPAM, abusive, off-topic, use profanity, contain a personal attack, or promote hate of any kind.
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By using this website, you agree to our use of cookies. When outside of battle, the overworld graphics are fairly nice--that is, when not covered by the green panels used to disguise the load time see screen above. You find yourself taking a few steps then stopping to wait for the rest of the screen to reveal itself; trying to run around behind them with any accuracy is useless. By far, DW3's biggest flaw is that there's no story bringing up the rear.
Your goal is to become the champ--the end. In every town, it's the same old crap: Talk to a sorry bunch of blathering simpletons in hopes of finding the one with the information you need. Digi-fans will dig DW3 just 'cuz it's Digimon, but it's not a good game. Still sucking life from its marketing-juice stores, the Digimonsler simply refuses to keel over and die. Instead, it regularly resurfaces from a pool of recycled parts and slaps its tired brand name on extremely bland games like DW3.
The title might as well have been created from a How To Make a Time-Wasting RPG for Dummies book: 1 Let the player only walk a few steps before the timer initiates a battle; 2 Keep the story huge, vague and pointless; 3 Include a convoluted card game 'cause kids love that stuff; 4 Devote zilch to visuals, sound and the battle system; 5 No fun allowed.
OK, so I added 5, but you get the picture, right? I have to say that of the trio of Digimon World games, this one has the most successful formula.
It blends the sharp 20 graphics of the first title with the party-based 3D battles of the second for a visually appealing adventure that should keep the younger crowd enthralled. Oddly enough, for a game aimed at chil'en, the training elements are intimidatingly deep Digimon's poorly translated menu text doesn't help either.
The extensive training info isn't stored in one place, like a diary. Instead, you must talk to nearly every NPC you meet to get to the info nuggets you need. It's a little tough, but for fans of the series, this is the best one yet.
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