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All Consoles. 3DO. Atari 2600. Atari 5200.
Open your mind, and take in the lush wilderness of Avalon as you first collect the cards, then arrange them in their correct order. Collect bonus cards and awards as you journey across the mist-shrouded land of Avalon to save its people from evil in this fun Card game! Become a hero in Avalon Legends Solitaire free online! Big fish card games. Avalon Legends Solitaire online. Play free Avalon Legends Solitaire game online at Big Fish. Restore the Deck of Nature! This is solitaire at its best - relaxing, addictive, and challenging. With 12 bonus items to buy, 13 awards to unlock, and multiple challenges to overcome on the way, Legends of Avalon Solitaire will provide you with hours of card-stacking fun. How to play Avalon Legends Solitaire Combos, power-ups, awards, and bonus items all play a part in this enchanting card game. Complete all 200 levels in your quest to save Avalon and reunite the Deck of Nature. Achievements earn you gold, which you can then exchange for power-ups.
Atari 7800. Atari Jaguar. Atari Lynx. Coleco Colecovision. Dreamcast. Game Gear.
Gameboy / Color. Gameboy Advance. GameCube. GCE Vectrex. MAME. Mattel Intellivision.
Memotech MTX512. MGT Sam Coupe. MSX1. MSX2. Neo Geo. Neo Geo CD. Neo Geo Pocket.
![Dokapon Dokapon](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125682049/577143060.jpg)
Download Dokapon Journey! Nakayoku Kenka Shite (JP) ROM for Nintendo DS (NDS) from Rom Hustler. 100% Fast Download.
Nintendo. Nintendo 64. Nintendo DS. PC-Engine. PlayStation.
PlayStation 2. PSP. Sega CD. Sega Genesis.
![Dokapon Dokapon](/uploads/1/2/5/6/125682049/425057923.jpg)
Sega Master System. Sega Saturn. Super Nintendo. TurboGrafx-16. WonderSwan / ColorSearch.
Last year's Dokapon Kingdom for the Wii was certainly a mixed bag. On the one hand, I really loved it for being the first and only RPG/Party game mash-up I had ever played. Although the lack of online multiplayer as well as painfullylong CPU turns marred the experience, I was relatively pleased and was able to look past some of its shortcomings and appreciate the new things it tried. However, now that the second entry in this emergent series has been released, I don't feel the need to be so forgiving.For a follow-up title, Dokapon Journey recycles basically every element from its predecessor.
Again you play as a warrior competing with two or three others in order to get the king some money (and marry his daughter). The plot may be a little hokey, but since this is a party game, I don't really think it matters that much.Your character (along with all the others) can then spin a spinner and move along a board with obstacles, monsters, shops, and treasure. One thing that is immediately annoying is how strict the moving system is. If you have a specific monster you want to fight, and it is five blocks away, you will have to spin a 5 exactly on the spinner to be able to engage the monster. So, if for instance, if you spin a 6, you will land on the space behind the monster, and you will then need to hope that you spin a 1 so that you can backtrack the one space you missed. This can make engaging in battles a little cumbersome, and makes luck a little too important in the gameplay. The battle system in the game, however, isn't half bad.
When you land on a monster space, you will have to draw a card to see who goes first. You can then choose from four standard 'attack' or 'defend' actions based on your characters class (chosen at the beginning of the game). While most standard battles will be decided after one turn, if you are fighting a big monster, your battle turns will replace your normal moving turns.This is a real detriment to the gameplay, because battles take far too long when you have to wait your turn for every attack phase. While other characters can run around, get treasure, and buy things from shops, you are stuck in battle and can't move until the battle ends.
And when you have a battle that lasts more than three turns, it can get very boring.The battle system itself suffers from being dull, chiefly because it works a little too well as an RPG. It is strictly turn-based, with no active elements whatsoever. You trigger attacks by pressing the face button tied to a specific attack (such as 'strike' or 'MP Blast') and then wait for the other party to attack (or defend), and then your turn is over. When you are in battle, the extent of the gameplay per turn is pressing two buttons, which is not exactly that satisfying.
This issue is compounded by the fact that other player's turns can take an excess of two to three minutes each (or even longer if they decide to go shopping for new weapons/equipment), and you have to wait ten minutes just so you can press two buttons.
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