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Dungeon Encounters (Video Game)
- 300 statements
- 58 feature instances
- 4 referencing feature instances
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | type |
TVTItem | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | label |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | page |
DungeonEncounters | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | comment |
Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_1'); })Dungeon Encounters is a Dungeon Crawling Eastern RPG co-developed by Square Enix and Cattle Call Inc. and released for the Playstation 4, Nintendo Switch, and PC via Steam on October 14th, 2021. It is directed by acclaimed Final Fantasy director Hiroyuki Ito, credited with the invention of the franchise's signature "Active Time Battle" system, with music supervised by Nobuo Uematsu.One day, an utterly massive labyrinth from deep underground appears near a village and begins to spawn all sorts of fiends, causing havoc in the surrounding area. When the kingdom's attempts to enter the dungeon and stop the spread of the monsters fails, the local village, desperate to put an end to the terror, establishes the Academy to train civilians in the art of battle and sends out a call to the best and brightest adventurers in the land to conquer the dungeon once and for all.Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_2'); })Directly contrasting the grand, sweeping adventures that eastern RPGs have been commonly known for, Dungeon Encounters aims to boil down the JRPG and dungeon-crawling genres into what is effectively a literal numbers game. Players assemble a team of up to four characters and dive into a 100-floor dungeon represented as a grid of squares, filled with various kinds of enemies. As you chart your way through the dungeon, you will encounter events and foes, represented by hexadecimal values on the floor, each corresponding to specific battles and events. Battling foes allows the player to level up their characters, gaining HP and Proficiency Points that allows them to equip stronger gear. Charting enough of the dungeon allows the player to equip Skills that they find while exploring to make combat and exploration easier. A key element of the game is the enforcement of Unexpectedly Realistic Gameplay; for example, Petrified characters must be left behind, and if the party wipes, they will be stuck and the player will have to deploy another party from the village to rescue them. If the player runs out of usable characters, it's Game Over!Advertisement:propertag.cmd.push(function() { proper_display('tvtropes_mobile_ad_3'); }) | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | fetched |
2021-11-20T17:24:36Z | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | parsed |
2021-11-20T17:24:36Z | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | processingComment |
Dropped link to CloseEncountersOfTheThirdKind: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | processingComment |
Dropped link to FinalFantasyTactics: Not a Feature - ITEM | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | isPartOf |
DBTropes | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_10b6b5f7 | type |
Cherry Tapping | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_10b6b5f7 | comment |
Cherry Tapping: Your unarmed attack deals 1 point of piercing damage. You can exploit this with some enemies that only have 1 HP like Mummies, Zombies, and Ghost Ships to get some cheesy kills off them when they would otherwise pose a threat. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_10b6b5f7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_10b6b5f7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_10b6b5f7 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1238c1b2 | type |
Spell Levels | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1238c1b2 | comment |
Spell Levels: Reminiscent of the earlier Final Fantasy games, spell tiering is indicated by a number next to the name of the spell; higher spell numbers indicate bigger damage. There are four versions of offensive magic: Malio (fixed damage, single target), Maliflux (random damage, single target), Maliare (fixed damage, all targets), and Malafluxare (random damage, all targets). | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1238c1b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1238c1b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1238c1b2 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_12a22bd8 | type |
Katanas Are Just Better | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_12a22bd8 | comment |
Katanas Are Just Better: There are two Katana-type weapons in the game. Both of them allow the wielder to attack an enemy's HP directly without depleting their Physical Defense. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_12a22bd8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_12a22bd8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_12a22bd8 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15264ac9 | type |
Unexpectedly Realistic Gameplay | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15264ac9 | comment |
Unexpectedly Realistic Gameplay: You cannot move around with a Petrified party member and must leave them behind. Did you expect to be able to lug around a person-sized statue? | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15264ac9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15264ac9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15264ac9 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15430b2f | type |
Randomized Damage Attack | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15430b2f | comment |
Randomized Damage Attack: The weapon and spell categories in the game are split into "fixed" and "random" damage categories, which serve as counterparts to each other. While Swords, Spears, Bows, and Malio spells are fixed damage attacks, Blunt weapons, Guns, and Malaflux spells sport randomized damage. There is no lower limit to their damage variance either; while Random weapons have a higher maximum damage output to compensate for their lack of consistency, they can roll any damage value between 1 and their given maximum value on any damage roll. Most enemy attacks are of the random damage kind, compared to the player having access to both fixed and random damage sources. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15430b2f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15430b2f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_15430b2f | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_172079cb | type |
Dungeon Shop | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_172079cb | comment |
Dungeon Shop: You can occasionally find pseudo-rest areas with helpful resources and shops just like on Floor 0, in addition to "specialty" varieties such as a jeweler and a boots shop that you wouldn't find in town. There are a handful of unique shops scattered throughout the game that sell items that you can't find anywhere else, such as a shop that only deals in Rare Candy potions or a shop that only sells "secret" items. There is also a shop in the game that doesn't sell anything but buys items you sell to it for thrice its normal value. Floor 98 is home to a near-exact copy of the Hub Level on Floor 0, but infested with extremely powerful enemies. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_172079cb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_172079cb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_172079cb | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_19769f50 | type |
Defeat Means Friendship | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_19769f50 | comment |
Defeat Means Friendship: Everethe, the final Wanderer, is actually not "wandering" but is being kept as a thrall by the final boss, Panoptica. Facing and defeating Everethe and Panoptica in combat frees Everethe and cues the credits, and after the credits roll you can pick up Everethe and send him back to the Academy like every other playable character. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_19769f50 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_19769f50 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_19769f50 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1c0d4155 | type |
Necessary Drawback | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1c0d4155 | comment |
Necessary Drawback: You can get the Teleport skill near the bottom of the dungeon, which allows you to manually teleport to any tile in the dungeon if you have its coordinates. This would normally make it better than Ascension/Descension skills, so it comes with a pretty nasty caveat: specifying a tile that doesn't exist will cause the game to throw an error message before plunking you on a random tile anywhere in the dungeon as if you had used Gambler's Teleport, and if you had any party members with you you'll lose them and need to relocate them with Wanderer Tracking. By comparison Ascension and Descension skills are safer and more reliable since they can't backfire on you, but if you're exploring with a single character and know exactly where you need to go, Teleport is the more viable option. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1c0d4155 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1c0d4155 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_1c0d4155 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_27fdc960 | type |
Trap Door | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_27fdc960 | comment |
Trap Door: The lower floors of the dungeon feature Pitfall tiles that will activate if stepped on and drop your party to the next tile below that one. If there are no tiles in the dungeon that are below the tile you're standing on, you will lose your party via "falling for eternity" and they will be randomly scattered around the area where you lost them, forcing you to summon a backup party and pull them out with Wanderer Tracking. Pitfalls are also normally invisible, but you can find and equip a navigational skill that reveals their presence. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_27fdc960 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_27fdc960 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_27fdc960 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_2bdae2ae | type |
Awesome, but Impractical | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_2bdae2ae | comment |
Awesome, but Impractical: Valtoro is acquired at Level 80, gets some really powerful equipment, and has a huge HP pool on acquisition, but its inability to use normal gear makes it very difficult to slot in since it's essentially just a sandbag that knows magic for essentially the entire main campaign. Its specialized gear is also only found only from Guide Dang It! rewards until endgame and post-game, and its own gear has such prohibitively high PP costs that by the time you're able to actually equip all of its gear at once, you'll likely have access to multiple copies of the Javelin (not to be confused with the cheap starter Javelin), a Physical weapon that hits all targets for 350,000 damage and virtually outclasses all of Valtoro's offense. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_2bdae2ae | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_2bdae2ae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_2bdae2ae | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_352151a3 | type |
Recursive Reality | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_352151a3 | comment |
Recursive Reality: There is a game shop on Floor 95 that will sell you a copy of "Dungeon Encounters" for 2999 Goldnote The retail price of the game is $29.99, implying that Gold is roughly equivalent to yen in value. You can equip it to gain +75% Critical Hit Rate. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_352151a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_352151a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_352151a3 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_355215ef | type |
RandomlyDrops | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_355215ef | comment |
Randomly Drops: Enemies have a "drop" table and a "shop" table. The main difference is that while items from the drop table will go directly into your inventory, items from the "shop" table will be deposited in the relative shop if they "drop" and you must buy them from the shopkeeper. The game neglects to tell you when the latter occurs, which can be quite annoying as items dropping directly tends to be much rarer. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_355215ef | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_355215ef | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_355215ef | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_36249acd | type |
Lethal Joke Character | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_36249acd | comment |
Lethal Joke Character: Professor Cavy, a guinea pig enemy only seen on Floor 99. It almost never shows up, but if it does you're in for a wild ride, as Professor Cavy has 9,999,999 in all stats and 150 SPD. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_36249acd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_36249acd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_36249acd | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_38371b2 | type |
Rock Me, Amadeus! | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_38371b2 | comment |
Rock Me, Amadeus!: The entire soundtrack is rearranged versions of classical music. All of the battle encounter music is essentially Uematsu going as hard as he can on the electric guitar to pieces like "Flight of the Bumblebee". | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_38371b2 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_38371b2 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_38371b2 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_39aeb09e | type |
Rare Candy | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_39aeb09e | comment |
Rare Candy: Mystery Compounds are the only consumable items in the game and permanently raise a character's maximum HP or PP, which can otherwise only be raised by leveling up. Mystery Compounds A, B, and C raise a character's HP by 10, 25, and 50 points respectively, while Mystery Compounds D and E raise a character's PP by 1 and 5 points respectively. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_39aeb09e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_39aeb09e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_39aeb09e | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_415b3315 | type |
Stylistic Suck | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_415b3315 | comment |
Stylistic Suck: To emphasize the game's focus on gameplay, the game's graphical design takes on an extremely minimalist approach. The entire dungeon is represented as a 3D character model walking over a grid of squares with nothing to distinguish the environment besides the floor texture, lighting, and ambient sounds. All possible events and encounters are represented as hexadecimal numbers stuck to the floor rather than using icons or any sort of eye-catching graphic. Characters in battle are only represented as portraits against a static background and what animation exists for combat is essentially the bare minimum to represent what is happening. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_415b3315 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_415b3315 | featureConfidence |
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Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_415b3315 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_433e732f | type |
Only Smart People May Pass | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_433e732f | comment |
Only Smart People May Pass: It is possible to find events called Math Riddles, which are clues to finding unique treasures hidden in the dungeon. With each Math Riddle, you are given a hint card with a puzzle that is designed to lead you to a specific address in the dungeon to get a reward. The Math Riddles, compared to their Map Riddle counterparts, tends to test your ability to recognize patterns and relationships between a specific group of numbers. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_433e732f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_433e732f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_433e732f | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4ac55d49 | type |
Opening the Sandbox | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4ac55d49 | comment |
Opening the Sandbox: The game starts out fairly linear for the first 1/3rd of the dungeon, but once you pick up Greater Ascension and Greater Descension and various other navigational tools such as Conjured Waypoint and Fiend Shuffle, you can start teleporting around the entire dungeon with relative impunity and go virtually anywhere you want as long as you have the ability charges to make your way around and avoid combat. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4ac55d49 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4ac55d49 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4ac55d49 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4b0ef86e | type |
Advertised Extra | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4b0ef86e | comment |
Advertised Extra: Valtoro is actually on the game's cover art; they can be seen as a tail and a shadow. Too bad they're so far down in the dungeon and when you get them they're of limited use. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4b0ef86e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4b0ef86e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4b0ef86e | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4daeb0b9 | type |
Situational Sword | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4daeb0b9 | comment |
Situational Sword: The Cavy Sword. If the user is cavied, it does damage equal to the user's level cubed. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4daeb0b9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4daeb0b9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_4daeb0b9 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_50d71a78 | type |
Dual Wielding | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_50d71a78 | comment |
Dual Wielding: By default, all characters have two weapon slots to work with. While you can slot in one weapon and one magic, you can just as easily slot in two weapons or two magic. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_50d71a78 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_50d71a78 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_50d71a78 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5b81ca8d | type |
Disc-One Nuke | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5b81ca8d | comment |
Disc-One Nuke: The Cutlery Set. It's a Ranged weapon that has a 55% chance to One-Hit Kill the target via consumption, and it can be found on Floor 15. The catch is that only Sir Cat can use it, but once you get the ability to warp around more you can quickly pick him up and start gobbling down your foes with a super powerful fat cat. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5b81ca8d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5b81ca8d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5b81ca8d | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5cfeb43f | type |
Save Scumming | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5cfeb43f | comment |
Save Scumming: Averted. Unlike most RPGs, the game enforces an auto-save system and no form of manual saving. If bad luck befalls your party, there's no going back; you'll have to rescue them yourself. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5cfeb43f | featureApplicability |
-1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5cfeb43f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5cfeb43f | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5fc1c4b5 | type |
Mechanically Unusual Fighter | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5fc1c4b5 | comment |
Mechanically Unusual Fighter: Valtoro, the dragon that you can find petrified on Floor 78. It has the second-highest starting level of any character in the game, but due to being a dragon it is unable to equip conventional weapons or armor. In return, it has access to four items that only it can equip: the ultimate weapon Dragon Whisker, the ultimate magic Megamalafluxare, and the powerful Dragon Scale and Graphene Webbing armors. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5fc1c4b5 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5fc1c4b5 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_5fc1c4b5 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_62259825 | type |
Nintendo Hard | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_62259825 | comment |
Nintendo Hard: The start of the game is relatively kind, but after you dig down the first few floors the game slowly begins to reveal its "retro game design" roots. The game will push you to keep your equipment in absolute top shape (and you may have to resort to Item Farming when the shops fail you) just to survive and enemies get progressively more devious and unforgiving the farther you get. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_62259825 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_62259825 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_62259825 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_637ef67 | type |
New Game Plus | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_637ef67 | comment |
New Game+: If you get a Game Over, one of the options available is to start the entire game over but with your characters' levels retained. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_637ef67 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_637ef67 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_637ef67 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_6ec989d8 | type |
Guide Dang It! | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_6ec989d8 | comment |
Guide Dang It!: The Math Riddles and Map Riddles can be extremely frustrating to figure out by yourself; the former because the given hints are incredibly vague and tend to require lateral thinking, the latter because the game only shows you a tiny piece of the map where the treasure is located and expects you to go off that. The latter is thankfully easier since each stratum has a specific layout and you can narrow it down from there based on the map piece given, but the math puzzles aren't nearly as kind. Some of the more devious ones: Math Riddle 7 is the factorial of the number 9. Math Riddle 8 is the digits in the square root of 2. Math Riddle 9 is squared numbers, but with their digits split into individual values. Math Riddle 10 is atomic numbers. Math Riddle 12 is a cyclic number. Math Riddle 13 is a list of perfect numbers split up into double digit values. Math Riddle 14 is the number of seconds in a week. Japanese calendars use red to indicate Sunday and blue to indicate Saturday, corresponding to the given hint. Math Riddle 15 is a list of Super Bowl winning scores, starting from 1995 (Super Bowl XXIX) and ending with 2021 (Super Bowl LV). Math Riddle 16 is the coordinates for Devil's Tower, Wyoming as seen in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. Interacting with a certain event on Floor 89 will give you the Address Blade, a 99 PP Sword with 1 damage. The game does not tell you what you're supposed to do with it. Its "true" damage is the digits of your current address multiplied together. The location of the Perfect Camouflage ability, which allows you to completely ignore enemy encounters unless you interact with their tile. The game tells you that it exists, but never tells you how you're supposed to find it. Even worse, it's on a tile that is otherwise blank until you specifically interact with it. It's on 98.69.31, a hidden tile segregated completely from the rest of the floor. The only way you'll know that there's something off about Floor 98 is noticing that it is a copy of the Hub Level but with one extra tile, and the only possible way you could see the hidden tile is with Illusion Clairvoyance and Eagle Eye, and only if you stand in one specific spot on the main floor (where Two-Way Teleporter 9 would be) and check the bottom left corner of your screen hard enough to see the black outline of the tile against the red-and-black floor. Even then, if you aren't using Teleport to warp to the tile directly, you'll have to guess its location from a higher floor and use Greater Descension to drop down since there's no floor directly above it and there's no floor below, and it's far enough from the main floor that estimating where exactly you need to drop can be very challenging. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_6ec989d8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_6ec989d8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_6ec989d8 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_70d8269d | type |
Excuse Plot | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_70d8269d | comment |
Excuse Plot: A weird trope for a JRPG to have, but the plot of the game is virtually nonexistent. The only story the game has is the introduction that explains why adventurers are going into the dungeon and the single text box that appears after rescuing Everethe. Characters have an "info" tab that gives a little Flavor Text blurb explaining their backstory, but for all intents and purposes, every character is interchangeable with one another. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_70d8269d | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_70d8269d | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_70d8269d | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_7b7965dd | type |
Boss in Mook Clothing | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_7b7965dd | comment |
Boss in Mook Clothing: The Treasure Hunter fiend is a cross between this and a Metal Slime. They appear on hexadecimal value FC and are Lv. 1 enemies that drop 50,000 Gold on defeat and are only actually present on their tiles a portion of the time. If you do encounter one, you'll find that they have 10,000 PD/MD/HP, values that you most likely can't (and shouldn't) overcome for how early you can fight them. While they don't deal damage, they only ever steal your Gold in either 100, 10,000, or (if you're really unlucky) 500,000 Gold increments. For the record, it is possible to have negative money, preventing you from buying anything until you earn all that lost cash back. You also can't defeat it in a war of attrition since it will run away after a while. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_7b7965dd | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_7b7965dd | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_7b7965dd | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_8ad43dc9 | type |
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_8ad43dc9 | comment |
Ragtag Bunch of Misfits: The playable cast has some weird faces in it. While the majority are humans, you also have an anthropomorphic jaguar-man, an isekai protagonist, a dog, a flying robot-drone, a giant cat that looks like a cross between My Neighbor Totoro and a Moogle, and a dragon. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_8ad43dc9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_8ad43dc9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_8ad43dc9 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_92dfffae | type |
Retraux | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_92dfffae | comment |
Retraux: The game seems deliberately designed as a statement on the "classic" style of JRPGs that many franchises have moved away from over the years, as it whittles down the format to just the core gameplay concepts present in the genre and harkens back to the dungeon crawling and difficulty that the era was known for. It also uses the original version of Active Time Battle that the Final Fantasy games used to tout before the franchise shifted towards hybridized versions of the system in the early 2000's. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_92dfffae | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_92dfffae | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_92dfffae | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9bee1a7f | type |
Eldritch Location | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9bee1a7f | comment |
Eldritch Location: The dungeon seems to be one considering it is home to entire ecosystems of various kinds, and the last 10 floors are essentially a hellish voidscape. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9bee1a7f | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9bee1a7f | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9bee1a7f | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9cb3e22e | type |
Interface Spoiler | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9cb3e22e | comment |
Interface Spoiler: The game outright tells you the name of every single event in the game from the outset in the Event Log. This lets you check for items and abilities that you potentially have yet to claim and see the existence of things that you would otherwise not know about since the game never tells you. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9cb3e22e | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9cb3e22e | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_9cb3e22e | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a1bb05fb | type |
Lazy Backup | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a1bb05fb | comment |
Lazy Backup: Zigzagged. If you lose your playable party, you will be prompted to summon another party from the Academy to continue the exploration. The keyword is "from the Academy"; the playable roster must start from the Academy, no exceptions. If there are no deposited characters there and you wipe, it's Game Over, even if you know you still have usable characters and they're still in town! | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a1bb05fb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a1bb05fb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a1bb05fb | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a414c3f0 | type |
One-Hit Kill | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a414c3f0 | comment |
Sir Cat can do this to enemies with the Cutlery Set. Unlike when enemies do it, it's just a flat-out One-Hit Kill on enemies. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a414c3f0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a414c3f0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a414c3f0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a4cb54b4 | type |
Shifting Sand Land | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a4cb54b4 | comment |
Shifting Sand Land: Floors 20 through 29 are an arid desert region. The gimmick of this zone is that it is much more labyrinthine in design, with many obtuse pathways and dead ends. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a4cb54b4 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a4cb54b4 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a4cb54b4 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a8f9cca9 | type |
Pre-existing Encounters | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a8f9cca9 | comment |
Preexisting Encounters: All battles are marked as black hexadecimal values located on the map. Each hexadecimal value corresponds to a specific enemy encounter spread, which can be checked in the Battle Log. Rule of thumb is that higher hexadecimal numbers correspond to tougher battles - and the game is not afraid to plonk very high black numbers very early in the dungeon to tempt the suicidally curious. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a8f9cca9 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a8f9cca9 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_a8f9cca9 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_abd29ad8 | type |
No-Sell | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_abd29ad8 | comment |
No-Sell: You can acquire some skills that allow your party to negate status effects or certain enemy abilities. While they're a bit on the expensive side, many of them (such as banishment and petrification immunity or immunity to having equipment broken) will save your life. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_abd29ad8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_abd29ad8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_abd29ad8 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_af8974a3 | type |
Breakable Weapons | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_af8974a3 | comment |
Breakable Weapons: Equipment itself is not breakable by normal means, but a few enemy skills have a chance to destroy your equipment if they connect, rendering a character far weaker and more susceptible to getting killed. You can get a skill that gives you immunity against this. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_af8974a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_af8974a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_af8974a3 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_afc8ddc7 | type |
Armor-Piercing Attack | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_afc8ddc7 | comment |
Armor-Piercing Attack: A small number of enemy attacks have the ability to deplete your HP directly without depleting your Defense first. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_afc8ddc7 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_afc8ddc7 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_afc8ddc7 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_b0957348 | type |
Combatant Cooldown System | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_b0957348 | comment |
Combatant Cooldown System: The Final Fantasy Active Time Battle system is used in this game. Unlike the more recent Final Fantasy games, which use a version of the system adapted for action-based gameplay rather than turn-based, Dungeon Encounters uses the classic version of ATB used in games such as Final Fantasy IV and Final Fantasy VI. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_b0957348 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_b0957348 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_b0957348 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_ba3c18e6 | type |
Fixed Damage Attack | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_ba3c18e6 | comment |
The weapon and spell categories in the game are split into "fixed" and "random" damage categories, which serve as counterparts to each other. While Swords, Spears, Bows, and Malio spells are fixed damage attacks, Blunt weapons, Guns, and Malaflux spells sport randomized damage. There is no lower limit to their damage variance either; while Random weapons have a higher maximum damage output to compensate for their lack of consistency, they can roll any damage value between 1 and their given maximum value on any damage roll. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_ba3c18e6 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_ba3c18e6 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_ba3c18e6 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c3b32bf1 | type |
Rōnin | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c3b32bf1 | comment |
Rōnin: Houk Gau is more or less a samurai without a master who resorted to Walking the Earth after the death of his previous master left him without a purpose in life, leading to him coming to the Academy. His unique character gimmick is that he can equip the two Katana weapons in the game that give him piercing damage attacks. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c3b32bf1 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c3b32bf1 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c3b32bf1 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c75df49a | type |
Shout-Out | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c75df49a | comment |
Shout-Out: Math Riddle 16 simply shows the numbers "104 a 30" and "b 36 c". The answer is 44.40.10, referencing the coordinates that appear in Close Encounters of the Third Kind. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c75df49a | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c75df49a | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_c75df49a | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_cdfe12c3 | type |
Nothing Is Scarier | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_cdfe12c3 | comment |
Nothing Is Scarier: The fact that there is no music of any kind and only ambient noise in the dungeon overworld lends itself to the alien feeling of the dungeon, which only increases the farther down you go. It gets to the point where the last ten floors are accompanied by what can only be described as a otherworldly droning noise, making the place seem even creepier than it already is. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_cdfe12c3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_cdfe12c3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_cdfe12c3 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d08049db | type |
Taken for Granite | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d08049db | comment |
Taken for Granite: Petrification is a possible status effect. Petrified characters are effectively KO'd and can't be cured without the use of a Gorgon Shrine. If you lose a party member to Petrification, you can't move around with them and must leave them on the tile that the battle occurred. If all party members are Petrified, it counts as a wipe and you'll be forced to summon a backup party. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d08049db | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d08049db | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d08049db | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d2c0e2ed | type |
Schmuck Bait | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d2c0e2ed | comment |
Schmuck Bait: See that black number tile that's a way higher hexadecimal number than anything else you've been seeing on the past few floors? Go ahead and step on it. What's the worst that could happen? | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d2c0e2ed | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d2c0e2ed | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d2c0e2ed | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d5a561a0 | type |
After-Combat Recovery | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d5a561a0 | comment |
After-Combat Recovery: All allies recover their Physical Defense and Magic Defense after every fight. HP, however, does not heal after battles and must be healed at a shrine. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d5a561a0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d5a561a0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d5a561a0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d6f284a3 | type |
Anti-Frustration Features | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d6f284a3 | comment |
Anti-Frustration Features: Since one of the requirements for you to add a character to your party is to be standing on the exact same tile as that character, the known exact addresses of every non-wandering character are always listed in the Composition menu. Discovering a Wanderer also adds that character's address to the menu in case you don't have room for them and need to drop a party member to pick them up. This is also helpful for curing petrified allies, as Gorgon Shrines require you to designate the exact tile where the petrified character is located. Unlike Final Fantasy, where ATB Active is typically the default setting, in this game ATB Wait is the default setting. This helps ease players into the adventure from the start since combat tends to require more on-the-fly decision making than in Final Fantasy, especially once your Ability roster begins to build up and more options become available to you. Once you find a Riddle event, you can double check it at any time from the Event Log menu without having to physically go back to it. The 9th floor of every stratum contains a Two-Way Teleporter located right next to the descending stairs, giving you a checkpoint that you can use to quickly navigate to and from town without losing your progress. The game always shows your address in battle. This doesn't seem helpful at first, but it makes sense after acquiring the Address Blade, which always deals damage equal to the floor, Y coordinate, and X coordinate of the tile you're standing on multiplied together, so getting into a fight and not knowing the address beforehand would otherwise force the player to waste a turn checking if it's a viable combat option for the given fight. If you are absolutely, positively stuck without any way to get out of your situation without losing your team to a KO or worse, there's an option to Abandon Party so you can leave your team behind and summon a backup party without going suicidal. In the event that you Game Over, you have the option to simply retry your last exploration from the village. The game even bothers to Hand Wave this with a Voodoo Shark explanation. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d6f284a3 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d6f284a3 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d6f284a3 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d7d588c8 | type |
Lethal Lava Land | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d7d588c8 | comment |
Lethal Lava Land: Floors 30 through 39 appear to take place near an active volcano. Unlike the previous three zones, the paths in this stratum are far more linear, much like a massive, winding hallway. Enemies will often be placed directly in your path, forcing you to either use navigation skills to avoid them or confront them. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d7d588c8 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d7d588c8 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d7d588c8 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d9e48d0 | type |
Company Cross References | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d9e48d0 | comment |
Company Cross References: Aside from the obvious use of ATB, the game contains a few other Final Fantasy references. The menu interface is basically identical to that of a Final Fantasy game. Bahamut and Tiamat appear in the game as enemies, the latter taking on the appearance of a red three-headed dragon. Multiple weapons in the game are named after Final Fantasy staples, such as Save the Queen and the Chirijisayagata (after the Chirijiraden from the Ivalice games). The game has a Javelin weapon and an Escutcheon shield that are ranked the weakest in their class but have extremely overpowered variants with the same name, alluding to the Javelin II and Escutcheon II in Final Fantasy Tactics. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d9e48d0 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d9e48d0 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_d9e48d0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_dbb414ed | type |
Hand Wave | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_dbb414ed | comment |
In the event that you Game Over, you have the option to simply retry your last exploration from the village. The game even bothers to Hand Wave this with a Voodoo Shark explanation. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_dbb414ed | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_dbb414ed | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_dbb414ed | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e63317eb | type |
Green Hill Zone | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e63317eb | comment |
Green Hill Zone: Floors 10 through 19 are depicted as an open, grassy field. Sunlight streaming through the trees and the sounds of nature can be heard despite the fact that it is underground. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e63317eb | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e63317eb | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e63317eb | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e7eb0474 | type |
Hub Level | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e7eb0474 | comment |
Hub Level: The village, also known as Floor 0. There are no enemies here, and pretty much every helpful resource and shop (except the jeweler, boots shop and gun shop) can be found here. It is also the only floor with the Academy event, which you must deploy new parties from in case you lose or abandon your current party. Once you get far enough in the dungeon, you can also use Two-Way Teleporters to link the village to deeper parts of the dungeon as a form of checkpoint system. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e7eb0474 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e7eb0474 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_e7eb0474 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_eea96e78 | type |
Swallowed Whole | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_eea96e78 | comment |
Swallowed Whole: A possible fate for your party members is the Consumption status, in which an enemy literally eats a character and removes them from the party. They won't come back unless you beat up the same type of enemy that consumed your ally, which has a chance of regurgitaing your character. Sir Cat can do this to enemies with the Cutlery Set. Unlike when enemies do it, it's just a flat-out One-Hit Kill on enemies. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_eea96e78 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_eea96e78 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_eea96e78 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f654419c | type |
Baleful Polymorph | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f654419c | comment |
Baleful Polymorph: Your characters can get "cavied", in which they transform into guinea pigs. A cavied character has a much higher chance of missing their attacks. The only way to cure Cavy is to teleport all the way down to Floor 97 and tiptoe around extremely high-level post-game enemies to activate the single Cavy Shrine in the game. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f654419c | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f654419c | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f654419c | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f8f1249 | type |
Instructive Level Design | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f8f1249 | comment |
Instructive Level Design: The game's first attempt to outright teach the player that exploration skills are more versatile than they first appear when used in tandem with each other shows up in the fourth stratum, at Floor 45. In this area, it's very likely that you'll meet enemies who will Cavy your characters. Luckily, there's a teleporter that will take you to a Cavy Shrine to cure them... in Floor 97. The entirety of Floor 97 is a single straight path to the Cavy Shrine populated by enemies that (at the time) you have absolutely no business getting anywhere close to, much less challenging to battle. This clues the player in to the fact that they have ways to navigate the map without ever getting into a fight, and that with creative skill usage the game isn't as linear as it initially appears. | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f8f1249 | featureApplicability |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f8f1249 | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_f8f1249 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | type |
ItemName | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | comment |
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Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | featureApplicability |
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Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | featureConfidence |
1.0 | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) | hasFeature |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) / int_name | itemName |
Dungeon Encounters (Video Game) |
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