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Otherworldly Munchkin: Let's Speedrun the Dungeon with Only 1 HP! ( 異世界マンチキン ―HP1のままで最強最速ダンジョン攻略― , Isekai Manchikin: HP 1 no Mama de Saikyō Saisoku Danjon Kōryaku ) is a Japanese manga series written by Yū Shimizu and illustrated by Makoto Aogiri.
The Mystery Dungeon logo used in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon games. Mystery Dungeon (Japanese: 不思議のダンジョン, Hepburn: Fushigi no Dungeon) is a series of roguelike video games. Most of the titles were developed by Chunsoft; other titles were developed by different companies with permission from Chunsoft to use the trademark.
Mystery Dungeon: Shiren the Wanderer, originally released in Japan as Fushigi no Dungeon 2: Fūrai no Shiren, [a] is a roguelike video game developed and published by Chunsoft. It is the second entry in the Mystery Dungeon series, following 1993's Torneko no Daibōken. It was originally released for the Super Famicom in 1995 in Japan.
[65] [49] [50] Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity was the 18th best selling game in Japan in 2012, with more than 373,000 copies sold. [80] The Chocobo series is thought to have had middling success, with strong launch sales but not a huge popular response. [81]
Shiren the Wanderer [1] is a video game series of roguelike and role-playing games developed by Spike Chunsoft (formerly Chunsoft).Unlike licensed crossovers within the Mystery Dungeon franchise, this series features original characters, including the eponymous rōnin protagonist Shiren and his traveling companion and talking weasel Koppa, with a plot and the location set generally in feudal ...
Delicious in Dungeon is a Dungeons and Dragons-inspired cooking adventure anime that sees a party led by Laios delving deep into a dungeon to take down a dragon that knocked them out previously ...
As for the game's balancing, Nagahata was the one in charge after an employee got confused with organizing data. He used Microsoft Excel's spreadsheets to organize data for items, monsters, and other content that relays on the genre. [12] The game was published in 1993 and became the first video game to bear the "Mystery Dungeon" moniker. [15]
Izuna: Legend of the Unemployed Ninja, known in Japan as Gōma Reifu Den Izuna (降魔霊符伝イヅナ, lit."Devil-conquering Soul Talisman Legend Izuna") and in Europe as Izuna: The Legend of the Ninja, is a Nintendo DS dungeon crawler video game developed by Success and Ninja Studio and published by Atlus USA in the United States and by 505 Games in Europe.