The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Dragon Warrior 3 original NES Nintendo Game cartridge only – Cleaned Tested and Guaranteed to Work!
PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:0719631000029
Condition:Used
Genre:Role-Playing
Platform:Nintendo NES
Region:NTSC (N. America)
ESRB:Everyone
SKU:NES_DRAGON_WARRIOR_3
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.
Alan B Holder –
A classic. To find one that works this well still is amazing. Possibly the best on the series, after DW 4.
barbara ambler –
came quickly and safely packaged. enjoy these older games a lot. slower than the newer games, but still fun to play.
Catherine –
Another masterpiece by Enix. I still remember renting this game from the local grocery store as a child and it was legendary. Great 8-bit memories.
Bryan –
At first we see our brave hero’s father battle a fire breathing dragon on top of a volcano, and eventually drag the father in the volcano. Oh my goodness! You’re the son, you visit the king on your 16th birthday and discover your enemy is called Baramos. After you register your party and add everyone to your party, you’re on your way to the fields to battle slimes and black ravens. As is traditional RPG style, you gain experience points for defeating enemies. Everything you associate with RPG’s such as attack power, defense, magic spells, gaining levels etc occurs in Dragon Warrior III, arguably done very well this time around.Make your party nice and strong with some weapons and armor at a nearby town and battle more of the same enemies in the fields. Enter a cave and battle more ravens, in addition to giant anteaters, horned rabbits and slimes. Oh joy! There’s masked moths when you reach the temple. Froggores and babbles too. You get the thief’s key from the old man. You use this key to explore locked doors around the dungeon. Return to land, refresh your party, buy any health or weapons you need, and continue to the land to battle scorpion wasps. Inside another temple you battle spiked hare, demon anteaters, caterpillars and magicians.Enter a strange portal, walk up the stairs, head through the forest, appear on an island, enter castle of royalty, talk to the king, return to the land to face poison toads, rogue knight, healer and magicians. Buy equipment, swo.
Video game girl –
I gave this game five stars because it’s fun and addictive. This game is for people who miss old-fashioned RPGs.
Zzonkmiles –
Disclaimer: This review is for the NES version of Dragon Warrior III, not the remake of it available for the Game Boy Advance or Japanese Super Famicom.—–Dragon Warrior III is arguably the strongest of the four games released on the NES. It has two detailed worlds to explore; multiple sidequests; an army of distinct playable classes; and an array of dungeons, towers, caves, and castles to explore. Several new features are also introduced, including the ability to create hybrid classes by using a class change; the ability to fly (and not just sail); unique magic spells allowing you to transform into other characters, ironize so you can see new enemies’ attack patterns, and instant death spells; and a vault where you can deposit your hard-earned cash and items for safekeeping.The game’s controls are greatly improved over those of its predecessors. The key system was improved so that each new key opens all doors that previous keys could open (thus making it unnecessary to hold 3 or 4 different keys that could only open one type of door). The Return spell was also greatly improved, thus allowing you to travel around the world far more easily. Navigating the menus is also a bit easier.Dragon Warrior III is a long quest. The different classes you can select greatly increase its replay value and affect the game’s difficulty. The class change feature, available to all characters (except the hero) after level 20, allows you to customize your team even further. For example,.
amerk –
The gameplay itself is outstanding. I was very impressed with the second, being that it was so much larger than it’s original, and when I played the 3rd I was greatly impressed. This game (being of course based on the NES version and therefore 8 bit style) surpasses some of the newer games on the market today. The storyline is decent, not too complicated, and the characters do not seem to really interact with their surroundings, but the puzzles and the dungeons and overall the entire game will take several hours to complete. However, near the end, one of the things that turned me off was the constant barage of attacks, one after another, without letup. That alone can make a person frustrated, especially when time is of value. Other than that one flaw, I loved it.
gerald marshall –
Back in the day of the NES, the now-common occurrence of franchise flooding was seldom a problem. And for the most part, franchises that did flood the NES were of a high quality. Cue Dragon Warrior III, the third game in the long-running RPG series from Enix, a game that came only a couple of years after the original landed stateside. A hit among the new RPG crowd that was developing around Nintendo’s 8-bit console, Dragon Warrior III continued with conventions set by, of all games, Dragon Warrior II. In the original Dragon Warrior, the hero was on his own. Fighting enemy parties that never consisted of more than one enemy, the original was about narrow-minded preparedness. Dragon Warrior III continued to open up both the gamer’s party and the enemy parties to more than one per side, creating for the first time in the series a real feeling of strategy. RPG parties with role characters, like healers and fighters, were brought to the forefront of Dragon Warrior III, and just about every J-RPG made ever since.
steven vasquez –
Great rpg
GARY E. PARZIK –
classic RPG that stays true to the cause………..still lots of fun after all of these years…I now own all four.