Jim Avery writes:
"Fortune Street is apparently quite an old Japanese series, starting way back in 1991 on the Super Famicom and featuring characters from the highly popular Dragon Quest series. It seems like the sort of thing you wouldn't expect to show up in North America, but this game reared its head at this year's E3, featuring both Mario and Dragon Quest characters. Does this new style of board game belong in your home?"
For the 30th Anniversary of Final Fantasy XV and Dragon Quest, familiar characters from each series join in the board game series Fortune Street. It will be a cross-over of Final Fantasy XV and Dragon Quest and will be on the PS4 and PS Vita. The following two tabs change content below.BioLatest Posts Jasper Song Games […]
This damn article got the title and the description wrong. It's Final Fantasy in general that's crossing over with Dragon Quest, not just FFXV in particular.
Good luck on the localization of that thing. The previous entry didn't even make it to the west.
"Fortune Street released in the U.S. for the Wii on December 5, 2011, with a MSRP of $49.99. The game was developed by Square Enix, and published by Nintendo for its U.S. release. It received an ESRB rating of "EVERYONE" with "Comic Mischief" listed as content for parents and gamers to be aware of.
A description for the game on the Nintendo Channel says, "Players race around the board trying to accumulate wealth and hit a target value while buying, selling and trading property with friends and family to see who can be the first to cash out. What appears at first to be a simple property-buying board game offers multiple levels of money-maximizing opportunity."
The game has been out almost a year-and-a-half now, but how much has it actually been played? If you own a Wii or even now a Wii U, and skipped over Fortune Street when it released, how many hours might you expect from the game if you decide to buy it now? Brew yourself some coffee, and let's take a look at the official U.S. Wii Nintendo Channel data to see how many hours Wii owners have reported playing the game, and what the average hours "Per person" are reported so far!", writes CoffeeWithGames.
I bought this game months this is literally all I play on Wii U now. It's so much fun bankrupting people. ^~^
SPC writes, "SuperPhillip Central is back with a new week of content. We hope you're ready, willing, and able to find some time to spend with us, listening to some great video game music. On today's docket, we have music from Fire Emblem: Awakening, Luigi's Mansion, and Sonic Generations."
This seems like the kind of game my sisters would love to play, though I bet I could get my dad in on it too. He likes playing Mario Party with us, but hates how he loses at every mini-game.