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Dragon Warrior Monsters (USA / SGB Enhanced / GB Compatible)

Game Boy Color
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
2000
78
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✪ Reviewed on April 5, 2025
68

Dragon Quest Monsters, cult JRPG monster capture and turn-based combat. Polished chibi GBC presentation and addictive loop. A portable monster JRPG benchmark.

Your verdict
Category
RPG 1 player 7+
Description
Terry, younger brother of Milly from Dragon Quest VI, explores Wonderland to collect and train monsters to serve him. Published by Enix, released in Japan in January 1998. Wild monster collection, fusion to create more powerful creatures, combat arenas against other trainers, Super Game Boy compatibility. Japanese edition.

Dragon Warrior Monsters review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
2/5
Story
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾0,75 MB 📅01/04/2000
Published by Enix

Dragon Warrior Monsters (GBC) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Western localization of the very first Dragon Quest Monsters, shipped in North America late in 1999 by Enix America, ahead of the English release of Pokémon Gold and Silver. Often dismissed as a clone at launch, it actually offers a deeper synthesis system and remains the only Terry entry ever translated into English. Its North American run keeps it a notable line on any Western GBC RPG shelf.

A questionable morality

Here you don't fight the monsters, you recruit them: you coax them mid-dungeon, breed them together for finer specimens and send them to brawl in your stead. Sold as tender domestication, the breeding really amounts to engineering a stable of creatures bred for combat, which raises a smile the moment you stop to think about it.

Is Dragon Warrior Monsters still worth playing in 2026?

Released back in 1998, Terry's Wonderland laid down much of what monster collecting on handheld would later become. Catching, raising and above all fusing creatures still feels meaningfully deep today, supported by a readable battle system and randomly generated dungeons that push replay value. Visuals and pacing show their age compared with modern entries, yet the breeding loop remains addictive enough to hook anyone fond of the genre or curious about the early portable roots of monster taming.

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