| Yu-Gi-Oh! The Dawn of Destiny | |
|---|---|
![]() North American box art | |
| Developer | Konami Computer Entertainment Japan |
| Publisher | Konami |
| Series | Yu-Gi-Oh! |
| Platform | Xbox |
| Release | |
| Genre | Digital collectible card game |
| Modes | Single player Multiplayer |
Yu-Gi-Oh! The Dawn of Destiny is astrategy video game developed byKonami Computer Entertainment Japan and published byKonami. It was released exclusively forXbox on March 23, 2004, in North America, November 19, 2004, in Europe, and December 3, 2004, in Australia. It was the first of theYu-Gi-Oh! franchise on theXbox. The game has over 1,000Yu-Gi-Oh! cards and integrates theYu-Gi-Oh! trading card gameplay and rules with 3D monster battles.The Dawn of Destiny also includes new duel modes such as Link Duel mode and Triple Duel mode, where players can test their skills against three duelists.
The game follows the official card battling rules while bringing the Yu-Gi-Oh! bestiary to life in 3D. Duelists can watch the results of the cards they play in real-time 3D battles, or use the game's Library feature to browse the hundreds of monsters featured in the game. The number of cards available in Dawn Of Destiny is well over 1,000.
The player can build up to three decks, which can be stored. The game's deck-building interface is designed to be easy to use. The single-player mode allows fans to duel against favorite characters from the animated series, while the game's "Link Duel Mode" lets two human opponents go head-to-head. As with many earlier Yu-Gi-Oh! releases fromKonami, Dawn Of Destiny comes packaged with three (actual) game cards, including the Egyptian God Monster card "Winged Dragon of Ra" (a collector's item which may not be used in official rules duels).
On January 9, 2004, Konami Digital Entertainment announced three games to be released in theYu-Gi-Oh! series:Yu-Gi-Oh! World Championship Tournament 2004 for theGame Boy Advance,Yu-Gi-Oh! Xbox (working title) for theXbox, andYu-Gi-Oh! Power of Chaos: Kaiba the Revenge forPC, all to be released in spring 2004. Each game starredYugi Mutou and his friends and shipped with three exclusive limited edition game cards. The game marked the debut of the franchise on the Xbox. 1,000Yu-Gi-Oh! cards were to be available, including exclusive cards that had never appeared in any otherYu-Gi-Oh! video game.[2]
| Aggregator | Score |
|---|---|
| GameRankings | 53%[3] |
| Metacritic | 53 out of 100[4] |
| Publication | Score |
|---|---|
| Game Informer | 6 out of 10[5] |
| GamePro | |
| GameRevolution | D+[7] |
| GameSpot | 5.2 out of 10[8] |
| GameSpy | |
| GameZone | 6 out of 10[10] |
| IGN | 5 out of 10[11] |
| Official Xbox Magazine (US) | 5.8 out of 10[12] |
| TeamXbox | 5.9 out of 10[13] |
| X-Play |
The game received "mixed" reviews according to the video gamereview aggregatorMetacritic.[4]