Codex Gamicus
Mystery Dungeon
Basic Information
Type(s)
Series
Chunsoft
Adventure

Mystery Dungeon (不思議のダンジョン Fushigi no Danjyon?) is a series of roguelike video games, most of which were developed by Chunsoft, but with select titles in the series developed by other companies with permission from Chunsoft to use the name.[citation needed]

Although 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.

The first title, Torneko no Daibōken: Fushigi no Dungeon starred Torneko, a shopkeeper character from the same developer's Dragon Quest IV (Chunsoft being developer of the first five games Dragon Quest series).

Mystery Dungeon games are notable for being among the few console games in the roguelike genre. The series has inspired similar titles in Japan, most of which appropriate their games mechanics from Mystery Dungeon, rather than Rogue itself.

Gameplay[]

Most Mystery Dungeon games centre around exploring a dungeon with randomly generated layouts and fighting other characters therein in a turn-based manner; every time the player performs an action such as attacking or walking, the opponents also take action. Escape from the dungeon is usually only allowed in certain places, or through the use of certain items. Additionally, when the player loses the game the player loses all money plus half the player's items in the more forgiving variants, or loses everything and has to start from scratch in others.

Dragon Quest series[]

  • 1993: Torneko no Daibōken: Fushigi no DungeonSuper Famicom
  • 1999: Torneko: The Last Hope (Torneko no Daibōken 2: Fushigi no Dungeon) – PlayStation; remade for Game Boy Advance in 2001
  • 2002: Torneko no Daibōken 3: Fushigi no DungeonPlayStation 2; remade for Game Boy Advance in 2004
  • 2006: Dragon Quest: Shōnen Yangus to Fushigi no Dungeon – PlayStation 2; developed by cavia, inc.
  • 2006: Dragon Quest Fushigi no Dungeon Mobile - NTT docomo, au, Yahoo!

Shiren the Wanderer series[]

Chocobo series[]

Though developed by Square, both of the above were supervised by Koichi Nakamura, president of Chunsoft.[1]
  • 2008: Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon (Chocobo no Fushigina Dungeon: Toki Wasure no Meikyū) - Wii; developed by h.a.n.d.
  • 2008: Sido to Chokobo no Fushigina Dungeon: Toki Wasure no Meikyū DS+ (Final Fantasy Fables: Cid and Chocobo's Dungeon DS+) - Nintendo DS; developed by h.a.n.d.

Pokémon series[]

Main article: Pokémon Mystery Dungeon
  • 2006: Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Blue Rescue Team & Red Rescue Team (Pokémon Fushigi no Dungeon: Ao no Kyūjotai & Aka no Kyūjotai) – Nintendo DS & Game Boy Advance
  • 2008: Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time & Explorers of Darkness (Pokémon Fushigi no Dungeon: Toki no Tankentai & Yami no Tankentai) – Nintendo DS
  • 2009: Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Sky (Pokémon Fushigi No Dungeon: Sora no Tankentai) - Nintendo DS
  • 2009: Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Keep Going! Blazing Adventure Squad, Let's Go! Stormy Adventure Squad & Go For It! Light Adventure Squad (Pokémon Fushigi no Dungeon: Susume! Honoo no Boukendan, Ikuzo! Arashi no Boukendan & Mezase! Hikari no Boukendan) - WiiWare

Individual Releases[]

  • 2004: The Nightmare of Druaga: Fushigino DungeonPlayStation 2; co-developed by Arika
  • 2004: Kidō Senshi Gundam: Fushigi no Dungeoni-mode

See also[]

References[]

External links[]

Template:Mysterious Dungeon series