Dinosaur King Rock Paper Scissors Game

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Dinosaur King
Developer(s)Climax Entertainment
Publisher(s)Sega
Platform(s)Nintendo DS
Release
  • JP: November 11, 2007
  • NA: September 23, 2008
  • EU: September 5, 2008
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

A CCG arcade game from Japan. The player pays for a starter deck and scans the cards into an arcade cabinet. Then they play a fighting game where dinosaurs (real ones ranging from obscure to well-known) with superpowers fight both each other using both a literal rock-paper-scissors and an Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors battle system. Then they play a fighting game where dinosaurs (real ones ranging from obscure to well-known) with superpowers fight both each other using both a literal rock-paper-scissors and an Elemental Rock–Paper–Scissors battle system. As the player progresses, the arcade cabinet dispenses newer and rarer cards for them to add to their deck. For Dinosaur King on the DS, a GameFAQs message board topic titled 'Paper, Rock or Scissors?' May 19, 2008 The basic fight mechanic in Dinosaur King is quite easy to grasp. Your dinosaur has three different circular attack buttons-rock, paper, and scissors. Your opponent has the same three options,.

Dinosaur King (古代王者 恐竜キング 7つのかけら, Kodai Ouja: Kyouryuu King 7-tsu no Kakera, literally 'Ancient Ruler: Dinosaur King - Seven Pieces of Shrine' in Japan) is a video game for the Nintendo DS game based on the Dinosaur King TV series. It was released in the U.S. on September 23, 2008.

Plot[edit]

The game's story is about Max, Rex, and Zoe, the members of the D-Team (of whom only Max and Rex are available as player characters). One day, they find mysterious stones that allow them to summon dinosaurs, after creating special cards from fossils, using a special device called a Dinoshot. However, an evil group called the Alpha Gang steals a Dinoshot in order to create a dinosaur empire. It is the D-Team's job to stop the Alpha Gang.[1][2]

Gameplay[edit]

The gameplay is much like that of the Pokémon game series. Players collect dinosaurs by excavating and then cleaning fossils. Fossils are cleaned using a pick. However, the pick will only last a short time before it breaks. In addition to this, a perfectly clean fossil will produce a higher leveled dinosaur than one that is not, making it important for players to carefully use the pick.[1]

Battles take place as random encounters on the overworld map. Each side has a maximum of three dinosaurs which they can send out. The battle system is based on the game of rock, paper, and scissors-winning allows the dinosaur to attack, losing allows the opponent dinosaur to attack, and a tie inflicts neutral damage to either side. Several of the moves in the game become more powerful according to wins or losses, or they allow attacks on a tie.[1]

Dinosaurs become stronger as they gain levels through experience. At certain levels, they generate move cards, which can be attached to dinosaurs as the player desires. Moves vary in function from dealing damage, inflicting status effects, summoning other creatures to assist the dinosaur, or changing the battlefield itself to power up a specific type.[1]

Dinosaurs in the game are categorised according to elemental types, which include specific types of dinosaurs. Each type also has a strength and a weakness against another type. There are 72 dinosaurs available normally in the game, not including Secret type dinosaurs or dinosaurs which can only be obtained through entering a special code at a specific place in the game.

Reception[edit]

Dinosaur King Rock Paper Scissors Game

Dinosaur King has a score of 61% at review aggregator Metacritic, indicating 'mixed or average reviews'.[3]IGN journalist Mark Bozon gave the game a score of 6.6 out of 10, embracing its gameplay that he found nostalgic and its 3D animations, while dismissing the sound effects and bland 2D overworld.[4]

Notes[edit]

^ Known in Japan as Kodai Ouja Kyouryuu King: 7-tsu no Kakera (古代王者 恐竜キング 7つのかけら, Kodai Ouja Kyouryuu Kingu Nanatsu no Kakera, lit.Ancient Ruler Dinosaur King: The 7 Fragments)

References[edit]

How To Play Rock Paper Scissors Game

  1. ^ abcd'Dinosaur King'. Game FAQS.
  2. ^'Dinosaur King'. Gamefly. Archived from the original on 2014-10-22.
  3. ^'Dinosaur King (ds) reviews at Metacritic.com'. Metacritic. Retrieved April 12, 2010.
  4. ^Bozon, Mark (October 16, 2008). 'Dinosaur King Review'. IGN. Retrieved April 12, 2010.
Rock paper scissors

Rock Paper Scissors Game Rules

External links[edit]

Rock Paper Scissors Games Online

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