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Seaquest DSV – Gameboy Game

Original price was: $41.47.Current price is: $32.23.

-22%
(69 customer reviews)

Available on backorder

only 12 left in stock

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  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

Available on backorder

only 12 left in stock

Free Domestic Shipping – No Minimums!

  • 121 Day Warranty Period
  • Personalized Support (8am to 11pm EST)
Guaranteed Safe Checkout

The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Seaquest DSV Game Boy Game Cartridge Cleaned, Tested, and Guaranteed to Work!

PRODUCT DETAILS
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Game Boy
Region:Region Free
ESRB:Everyone
SKU:GB_SEAQUEST_DSV

———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.

Additional information

Weight 8 lbs
Product Type

Platform

Gameboy

ESRB Rating

Everyone

Genre

Action & Adventure

Players

1-2

Condition

Refurbished

69 reviews for Seaquest DSV – Gameboy Game

  1. Frank Grainger

    Set in 1924, the fifth season of Downton Abbey is as good as any previous season and even better than some in the sense that the dramatic tension is relentless. By now, for regular viewers, the cast seems like old frends, even family, but the Great War has wrought its irrevocable effects upon everyone, and interbellum Britain is a changed place. The situation revolving around Edith’s daughter, suspicions surrounding the death of Mr. Green falling first on Bates, then on Anna, and the rapidly changing – even revolutionary – times in general all combine to create a whirlwind pace in which the social dynamics of the Abbey’s residents above and below stairs find themselves changed with those times. There are even foreshadowings of the Second World War and beyond and, sadly, another death that was particularly difficult for me. Fear not, though, the season is chockablock with joy and redemption, revels and revelations as well. (Not all change is for the worse, you know.) The season ends with the happiest and – for me – the most remarkable Christmas episode yet. Or was it simply my emotional relief after all of that stress? At any rate, I wholeheartedly recommend this series and this season..

  2. Jeena

    I know full well this is not an accurate representation of the way "upstairs" treated "downstairs" folks during the time depicted. It’s a fantasy, but it’s a lovely one. What I enjoy are the characters, who are so well cast, as well as the sumptuous costumes and homes and furnishings and period cars and gorgeous landscapes and articulate speech (you just know these people know how to write a letter without making grammatical errors). Not all the characters are likable (although most definitely are), but they’re all quite convincing, and you can’t have a drama without some evil-doers. This isn’t a documentary, so I don’t expect it to be realistic. Sometimes it’s nice to take a mental vacation from what’s real. As an avid consumer of documentaries on British history, I know that it’s necessary to suspend disbelief while watching this. I don’t find that hard to do, perhaps because I know very well how far from the brutal truth it really is. Pure fantasy. I’m OK with that once in a while, especially when it has the casting and production values this one does. However, I would hate to see anyone believing that what’s depicted here is a totally realistic depiction of Edwardian society. It’s simply not.

  3. Doglady

    Still a fan of the series although it isn’t as strong as it had been. My main reason for submitting a review is to caution those who watch the US version on TV to be ready for differences in these DVDs. In episode 6, two complete scenes are omitted. One with the Bates where Mr Bates details why it seems unlikely that the "device" being hidden by his wife would actually have been Lady Mary’s and the other a dialogue between Lady Violet and her new maid Denker. It seems to be explained by the "Original UK edition" but I wasn’t prepared for two entire scenes to be omitted in someting labeled PBS Masterpiece on the advertising.

  4. lynn

    I am patiently waiting for Season 6. I miss the cast of characters as much as the elegant décor and gorgeous English settings. The show is so incredibly authentic it makes you feel as though you are a part of it. This show will absorb you in way that allows you to escape. I became so enthralled with it I could hardly wait for the next episode. I found myself pampering myself more and I even started having incredible dreams while watching this program. It reminds me of when you go antique shopping or when you travel and take in so many wonderful sights they begin popping up your dreams.

  5. Mary Murphy

    I decided to give this show a chance, given all the hype I have been hearing. I am so glad I did! I absolutely love this show! The characters are great, and so easy to love or hate, or love to hate haha. I really like that this does not drag things out like so many other shows see to do. I love the time it is set in, it is so fun to see, it’s like traveling back in time! I get so involved and in the characters, and I was so saddened when some of them have died. It is fascinating to see how people lived back then, I’m England too. The upper class are so proper and some are so snooty. But some are so kind and sweet. I think Matthew was my favorite male character and Mary is my favorite female character. Lord Grantham has his good attributes as well, he’s easy to love too. Cora has such a good heart, such a sweety. I’ll be sad when this show ends.

  6. Shauna

    I love this series! I have become invested with these characters and love the time period! It’s so hard to find something to watch without nudity and awful language. This bureaucratic family and their servants captivates with loyalty, secrecy, love, loss, war, murder and wonderful snide remarks by the dowager duchess. As the seasons roll on, each character comes to the forefront. The villains keep popping up their ugly heads to put a wrench in someone’s happiness. If you start watching, you won’t stop! Enjoy!

  7. LHB

    Not much great TV used to end perfectly but recently TV producers, directors and writers seem to have been paying more attention to how they wrap up their masterpieces.Downton Abbey is a masterpiece and I cannot think of a better way of wrapping it up (except with a few more seasons) than Season 5.Really brilliant stuff at the very highest end of what TV has ever had to offer.I give my very highest recommendation to Season 5 and to all the preceding Seasons.I must add that the video and audio quality of each and every Season of Downton Abbey on retrolio Prime is of the absolute highest quality. I very seldom use my Blu Ray player these days because retrolio Prime streaming video is at least the same quality and you don’t have to worry about dropping a disc or otherwise making it unplayable.Downton Abbey is one of the high points of TV in the entire history of the genre!

  8. Wesley Kramer-Jones

    Oh the history of it all! Downton Abbey continues to enthrall you in the ever changing landscape that is Early 1900’s England. A must see for all history buffs and those who simply love good storytelling!Set at the lovely Highclere Castle, this shows follows the lives of the nobles that live there and the people that take care of them. This show does an amazing job at giving you insight into both life styles of the rich and those who serve them and does a good job giving equal time to them both.You find yourself becoming more enthralled with the characters and feel a connection to both the family upstairs and the servants downstairs. This shows takes you through the ups and downs of a changing world in the early 1900’s! Great Show! I highly recommend it!

  9. T. Tinker

    It took me four seasons of not watching DOWNTON ABBEY to realize why I should watch it, to understand what the series is about. It is about the demise of the English aristocracy not as a plutocracy but as a pinnacle of conscience and taste. Ideally, noblesse oblige makes certain that all those whose lives and fortunes depend on a patriotic and prosperous aristocracy are well provided for. Traditionally the English aristocracy did just that–fostering, if imperfectly, a literate and upwardly mobile middle class. But two World Wars in the twentieth century took a terrible toll on English lords and ladies–killing many of the landed gentry during WW I, and bankrupting many great houses after WW II. DOWNTOWN ABBEY describes the agony of a family trying to do more and more with less and less. The family’s declining wealth forces the sale of precious assets, and its declining prestige causes conflict at dinner tables and in meeting halls. I watched Season Five of DOWNTOWN ABBEY with an appreciation of the modern oppressions that drive inhabitants of great houses to abandon one another in order to welcome tourists at their front doors.

  10. John D. Cofield

    Season 5 of Downton Abbey is set in 1924, in the middle of a decade of turbulent change throughout the world. The Earl and Countess of Grantham, their children and other relations, and their servants are not immune to these changes, and an important theme of this season is how well they react to and acclimate themselves to changing realities.Romance, as ever, is uppermost in nearly everyone’s minds at Downton Abbey. Lady Mary and Lady Edith are coming to terms with their losses, and are seeing new possibilities and new disappointments. Meanwhile their parents’ marriage, despite a few rocky moments in earlier seasons, now seems stronger than ever. Even the indomitable Dowager Countess and the just as redoubtable Isobel Crawley are not immune to romance and disappointment this season. And of course the elegant Lady Rose is as effervescent as ever, but she finds new depth and happiness with her own love story. Downstairs, love blooms afresh between some surprising players and continues to bring happiness and sorrow to the Bates, to Thomas, and to Daisy. Meanwhile Tom Branson, who used to be Downstairs but is now Upstairs, continues to balance uneasily between the two worlds.This season is not one for major surprises or turning points, in many ways it seems to be marking time, waiting perhaps for the sixth and possibly last season to really wrap things up. Downton Abbey has been a delight in so many ways since it first appeared five seasons ago, but its roots are so quintes.

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