Dragon Quest (universe): Difference between revisions
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|latestinstallment = ''{{s|dragonquestwiki|Dragon Quest Builders 2}}'' {{Flag|Japan}} (2018) | |latestinstallment = ''{{s|dragonquestwiki|Dragon Quest Builders 2}}'' {{Flag|Japan}} (2018) | ||
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'''''Dragon Quest''''' ({{ja|ドラゴンクエスト|Doragon Kuesuto}}, ''Dragon Quest'') | '''''Dragon Quest''''' ({{ja|ドラゴンクエスト|Doragon Kuesuto}}, ''Dragon Quest'') is a series of role-playing games originally published by Enix, now [[Square Enix]]. The original success story of Japanese RPGs, the series laid the foundations that would define the genre for generations to come, directly inspiring monumental titles including ''[[Final Fantasy]]'' and ''[[Pokemon]]''. | ||
The series symbol is the emblem | The series symbol is that of [https://dragon-quest.org/wiki/Ramia the phoenix Ramia], who appears as the emblem on Erdrick's shield. | ||
==Description== | ==Description== | ||
''Dragon Quest'' was originally inspired by the North American computer RPGs ''Wizardry'' and ''Ultima'', which happened to also be very popular in Japan. | ''Dragon Quest'' was originally inspired by the North American computer RPGs ''Wizardry'' and ''Ultima'', which happened to also be very popular in Japan but were deemed too difficult for the average player to enjoy. Copywriter [https://dragon-quest.org/wiki/Yuji_Horii Yuji Horii], famed [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mangaka mangaka] Akira Toriyama, and composer Koichi Sugiyama were assembled together to work on the project out of Horii's desire to bring the joy of RPGs to the masses, streamlining the experience to it's most pure form. An overnight sensation thanks to advertising in Toriyama's ''Weekly Shonen Jump'' publisher, the game became an outstanding sensation that took the Japanese media by storm and opened the door for non-action games on Nintendo's 8-bit hardware. | ||
{{clr}} | {{clr}} | ||
==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''== | ==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]''== | ||
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*Characters from Dragon Quest previously crossed over with characters from ''[[Mario (universe)|Mario]]'' in ''Itadaki Street DS'' and ''Fortune Street'' for Wii. | *Characters from Dragon Quest previously crossed over with characters from ''[[Mario (universe)|Mario]]'' in ''Itadaki Street DS'' and ''Fortune Street'' for Wii. | ||
**The ''Dragon Quest'' enemy [[Slime]] also appeared in ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Sports Mix}}'' as a playable character. | **The ''Dragon Quest'' enemy [[Slime]] also appeared in ''{{s|mariowiki|Mario Sports Mix}}'' as a playable character. | ||
*The series was originally released as Dragon ''Warrior'' in the north American market, due to the regional copyright to Dragon Quest being held by boardgame manufacturer TSR. | |||
{{Universe}} | {{Universe}} | ||
{{Dragon Quest universe}} | {{Dragon Quest universe}} | ||
[[Category:Dragon Quest universe]] | [[Category:Dragon Quest universe]] |
Revision as of 16:48, June 11, 2019
Dragon Quest (universe) | |
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Developer(s) | Square Enix (formerly Enix) Level-5 |
Publisher(s) | Square Enix Nintendo |
Genre(s) | Role-playing game |
Console/platform of origin | Nintendo Entertainment System |
First installment | Dragon Quest (1986) |
Latest installment | Dragon Quest Builders 2 (2018) |
Dragon Quest (ドラゴンクエスト, Dragon Quest) is a series of role-playing games originally published by Enix, now Square Enix. The original success story of Japanese RPGs, the series laid the foundations that would define the genre for generations to come, directly inspiring monumental titles including Final Fantasy and Pokemon. The series symbol is that of the phoenix Ramia, who appears as the emblem on Erdrick's shield.
Description
Dragon Quest was originally inspired by the North American computer RPGs Wizardry and Ultima, which happened to also be very popular in Japan but were deemed too difficult for the average player to enjoy. Copywriter Yuji Horii, famed mangaka Akira Toriyama, and composer Koichi Sugiyama were assembled together to work on the project out of Horii's desire to bring the joy of RPGs to the masses, streamlining the experience to it's most pure form. An overnight sensation thanks to advertising in Toriyama's Weekly Shonen Jump publisher, the game became an outstanding sensation that took the Japanese media by storm and opened the door for non-action games on Nintendo's 8-bit hardware.
In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
- 72. Hero: As part of Challenger Pack #2, the protagonists from Dragon Quest XI, III, IV, and VIII all join the roster under the generic name “Hero”, with the protagonist from Dragon Quest XI being the default.
Trivia
- This is the second character-based third-party universe from Square Enix, the first being Final Fantasy.
- Characters from Dragon Quest previously crossed over with characters from Mario in Itadaki Street DS and Fortune Street for Wii.
- The Dragon Quest enemy Slime also appeared in Mario Sports Mix as a playable character.
- The series was originally released as Dragon Warrior in the north American market, due to the regional copyright to Dragon Quest being held by boardgame manufacturer TSR.
Dragon Quest universe | |
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Fighter | Hero (SSBU) (XI, III, IV, VIII) |
Stage | Yggdrasil's Altar |
Other | Hero (I, II, V, VI, VII, IX, X) · Martial Artist · Mimic · Slime · Veronica |
Spirits | Spirits |
Music | Ultimate |