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Digimon World (Japanese: デジモンワールド, Hepburn: Dejimon Wārudo) is a role-playing video game developed by BEC and published by Bandai for the PlayStation.It was followed by various sequels released for the PlayStation and other platforms.
Digimon World Championship (デジモンチャンピオンシップ Dejimon Chanpionshippu, lit. Digimon Championship) is a life simulation video game for the Nintendo DS developed by Epics and published by Bandai Namco Games as part of the Digimon franchise. It was released in Japan in February 2008 and North America in August 2008.
Common elements include battles between Digimon, with human "Tamers" present or otherwise, and the ability to "Digivolve" back and forth between several evolutionary forms. [1] Due to similar features and mechanics, several games have drawn comparisons to that of the Pokémon franchise.
The game is very different from the other Digimon releases since it is a totally card-based game. Players have a deck of 30 cards, [1] consisting of Digimon, support and special evolution cards. The evolution concept is similar to the other games, in that players start off with Child and finish with a Perfect (missing out Fresh, Fresh II and ...
Digimon World: Next Order [b] (stylized as DIGIMON WORLD -next 0rder-) is a role-playing video game in the Digimon franchise and the sixth game in the Digimon World series. The game is developed by B.B. Studio and published by Bandai Namco Entertainment. The game was released for PlayStation Vita in Japan on March 17, 2016.
Digimon ReArise: 2018 iOS, Android: Tales of Crestoria: 2019 iOS, Android: Sword Art Online: Alicization Rising Steel: 2019 iOS, Android: World Dai Star: Yume no Stellarium: 2023 iOS, Android: The Idolm@ster Shiny Colors: Song for Prism: 2023 iOS, Android [41]
Digimon World 2 [a] is a dungeon crawler video game developed by BEC and published by Bandai for the PlayStation as part of their Digimon series. It is the sequel to the original Digimon World , and was released in Japan in July 2000 and North America the following year in April 2001.
The Digimon series has inspired various video games, including the Digimon World and Digimon Story sub-series of role-playing games. Other genres have included life simulation, adventure, video card game, strategy, and racing games. By March 2001, Bandai had sold approximately 1 million video games worldwide, including 400,000 in Japan. [51]