In addition to the initial breeds, there are 8 uber-secret unlockables in each game. I feel like the corporations are trying to bamboozle kids into wanting more and delivering less. I simply disagree with that kind of marketing. In this videogame era of Pokemon, it seems that superficial differences between cartridges, (red/blue, leaf/water, gay/straight) sells more units, while having nearly no difference between them. I think that's a little cheap of Nintendo. The three versions are essentially the same game. That brings up my first problem with the game.
The three versions give you different dogs to select from initially, but as all 18 breeds are unlockable in each version, so it doesn't really matter which version you choose, unless you are jonsing for a particular breed. Nintendogs is a dog simulator that comes in several different varieties. That having been said, lets get to my review.
#Dogz 5 screensaver Pc
I have always been a fan of Nintendo, and I knew if they brought a complex AI simulator to market it wouldn't simply be a rehash of the PC screensaver Dogz. When I heard of a dog simulator, I must admit I was really, really excited. Every so often a game like this comes along and it's either the kind of thing you were waiting for, or something you would never buy in a million years. First of all, let's just say if you were going to buy this game, you would have already done so without reading a review.