Although honestly I found I could just hit the A button, selecting a random viable attack and I never struggled until post-story. To get the best chance in each different location/dungeon, you’ll want to try and have your team with a type advantage or at least moves that are. The moves have different properties including whether it’s ranged or an up close attack or if it’s a stat buff. Your Pokémon has four different moves, which is very similar to the mainline games. If you have a job on that floor, it highlights that there’s a Pokémon in need or item to find. Each location has several floors where each one is randomly generated. Enemies cannot attack until you’ve used your turn, which gives you a great chance to pick out a move or item to help. Each movement or action you take is a turn, in that turn other team members will move and so will enemies. In Rescue Team’s case it is a top down turn based game, only it’s not turn based in the same way Pokémon is. If it’s your first Mystery Dungeon game then pull up a seat. If you’re familiar with Mystery Dungeon games then you know exactly what to expect, the core game is generally the same. Although it does help with the much tougher jobs, because the games difficulty is steep after that point and if you want to see the whole story out you need all the help you can get. Most of the newer content appears after the credits roll, which in a way is a shame that you don’t get to see it until you’re 20+ hours into the game. In fact there’s even more content then before! Since the original game the Pokemon world has seen the addition of Mega Evolutions, these forms are now included in this game too. This DX version isn’t impacted by being spread across two different platforms, the main change is that all the original pokemon are included in the one game. Technical capabilities and the single screen VS dual screen differences aside, the most notable difference was each version having different exclusive Pokemon. While it isn’t directly in the title, Rescue Team DX is a combination of the two original Red and Blue versions, one on the Gameboy Advance (Red) and the other on the Nintendo DS (Blue). Even with the amount of Pokemon available it still feels overwhelming at the thought of trying to get them all to join your Rescue Team. I had actually forgotten after all this time that the first game in the series actually contains three gen worth of pokemon, even back then it was nearly 400 pokemon! If you’re more familiar with the more recent generations then this will be a blast from the past. For me it was one of the more enjoyable elements to the game, it is wholesome and charming and too cute for its own good. If you’re new to this quite-old game then you get to enjoy it all fresh. If you played the original then you know what to expect already. But you can now actually choose what you want from the larger pool of selectable Pokemon if you’re not happy with the game's decision. As you do more rescue jobs the closer you get to uncovering why you’re in your predicament, and play your role in a much bigger story.Īfter answering some personality-based questions, the game picks a Pokemon that best suits your answers. Natural disasters are on the rise and other Pokémon have been acting aggressively. How this happened remains a mystery for sometime, but now you can speak to other Pokemon! Quickly befriending another Pokemon (that you get to choose), you become a Rescue Team. You are a human who has awoken to find themselves turned into a Pokemon. Rescue Team starts off the same way, from the original game and every one after that. The question is, does the rest of the game receive the same upgrade? The most notable upgrade with the remake is the lovely new visuals. While the mainline Pokemon games still have the two different versions every generation, the remake of the original Rescue Team combines them into a DX package. Red Rescue Team was for the GBA and the DS got Blue. Even though it was over a decade ago, the Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Rescue Team games bridged between the final years of the Gameboy Advance and the rise of the Nintendo DS. Nothing makes you feel older than being reminded how many generations of gaming have passed before a game gets a remake.
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