Fushigi no Dungeon - Fuurai no Shiren GB 2 - Sabaku no Majou (Japan / BFWJ)
Game Boy Color
🇯🇵
Reviewed in 2000
74
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✪ Reviewed on September 27, 2025
68
A Japanese roguelike gem that sends Shiren into procedural dungeons across a haunted desert to face the Sand Witch. Permadeath, mischievous luck and tactical depth keep every step tense. A demanding treat for genre fans.
Your verdict
Category
Roguelike1 player7+
Description
Shiren the Wanderer explores procedural dungeons in the desert to defeat the Sand Witch in this second GB entry of the Mystery Dungeon saga. Published by Chunsoft, released in Japan in January 2000. Randomly generated dungeons, permanent death resetting the character, demanding roguelike gameplay, AFMJ compatibility. Japan exclusive.
Fushigi no Dungeon - Fuurai no Shiren GB 2 - Sabaku no Majou review
3/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Polished"
3/5
Music
★★★★★
"Memorable"
2/5
Story
★★★★★
"Classic"
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Mild"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Difficult"
Lifespan
"Massive"
Plunging again into desert dungeons regenerated with every attempt sets up a loop where failure sends you back to the start and no run resembles the last. Identifying items, outsmarting traps and surviving a fearsome difficulty takes dozens of tries. That endless unpredictability, the Shiren series' hallmark, guarantees a replay value roguelike fans cherish.
Fushigi no Dungeon - Fuurai no Shiren GB 2 - Sabaku no Majou, the second serial code of ChunSoft's roguelike on Game Boy Color, distinct from the first pressing. This serial variant, identical in content but marked differently, gives collectors precise identification work on an already sought title. Its desirability lies in that code-chasing and the lasting esteem of the Shiren series among fans of procedural dungeons.
Is Fushigi no Dungeon - Fuurai no Shiren GB 2 - Sabaku no Majou still worth playing in 2026?
The second handheld Shiren in the Mystery Dungeon series, Sabaku no Majou sends the wanderer to explore generated dungeons in the desert to defeat the Witch of the Sands. The roguelike here is as deep as it is merciless: permadeath, crucial inventory and fine reading of situations. Richer and more legible than its predecessor thanks to color support, it remains a high point of the genre on the machine. The Japanese language barrier remains. An essential for fans of demanding roguelikes, still captivating today.
Gameplay — Fushigi no Dungeon - Fuurai no Shiren GB 2 - Sabaku no Majou