

You can also spend time conversing with the people in the town, and form relationships with one of 7 cute girls which will slightly alter various storyline elements throughout the game. You can buy new buildings, or furniture, or decorations for the buildings as well. You can invest into rebuilding the town and as you do so, new characters, new shops, and new mini games will open up to you. But outside of the dungeon is where the game really shines. Within the tower, you can also find Monster Eggs which you can bring home to hatch into familiars which you can train and take with you the next time you enter the dungeon. Gameplay: 10/10 The main gameplay elements focus on entering the “Monster Tower” to search for treasure. And because it’s procedurally generated, it also offers a wide variety in terms of level design and challenges to the player as well. It’s an addictive game with very high replay value because it offers a lot of choice to the player in how they want to focus their time within the game. In fact, I still find myself playing it, almost 20 years later.

Overall: 57 / 80 71% C- “Good Game For Girls”Ĭoncept: 10/10 Azure Dreams was one of my favorite games growing up. (plus I greatly prefer digital distribution anyways). I’d buy it in an instant even though I still have my PS1 disc. I wish Konami would release this game on the Playstation Store. You can also check out the reviews there and see for yourself that this is a great game. Where to Buy: Unfortunately it’s very old and hard to find, at time of this review there is one copy left on amazon, being sold for $150+ Keep your eyes on this page here: I really recommend playing the original PS1 version. Note that the Gameboy Color version is widely different and not as good as the PS1 version, for example the Gameboy version removed all of the dating sim elements from the game. Platforms: Playstation 1, and Gameboy Color.
