Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time (Nintendo DS)

Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Time (Nintendo DS)

Type: Nintendo DS Game - Genre: Kids Games

Available platforms:

8 offers were found from
£9.95 - £22.97

Offers

Sort by:
Price: low to high

Related products

Where The Wild Things Are (Nintendo DS)

Where The Wild Things Are ...

Type: Nintendo DS Game - Genre: Adventure

Featured offer: £12.95 at Zavvi

7 offers from
£7.99
See all prices
Sherlock Holmes: The Mystery Of The Mummy (Nintendo DS)

Sherlock Holmes: The Mystery Of ...

Type: Nintendo DS Game - Genre: Adventure - Publisher: Ubi Soft

Featured offer: £14.99 at Tesco Entertainment

3 offers from
£8.99
See all prices
Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: Explorers of Darkness (Nintendo DS)
8 offers from
£9.95
See all prices

Reviews

Review summary for the Professor Layton and the Unwound Future (DS)

alaTest has collected and analysed 1783 reviews from magazines and websites. Reviewers are impressed by the gameplay. The value for money also gets good reviews. Some have doubts about the controls.

Conclusion:

We analysed user and expert ratings, product age and more factors. Compared to other Nintendo DS Games the Professor Layton and the Unwound Future (DS) is awarded an overall alaScore™ of 96/100 = Excellent quality.

en
96.0

Review: Professor Layton and the Last Specter is an Awful Lot of Game

en
83.0

Kirby Super Star Ultra (DS) Review

en
90.0
important pricing information
All prices include VAT. Offer information is provided by the corresponding merchant and is updated automatically. Discrepancies may occur in some cases as updates are not executed in real-time.
Top Products

Blog: Pokemon Mystery Dungeon: ...

Old Dates: Buildabear Workshop

I remember the days when taking your girlfriend to the build-a-bear factory was considered to be a good date. Now, you can play buildabear workshop on your Nintendo DS. I suppose that I am starting to sound a lot like my grandparents. They were always telling tales about how they used to have nothing more than sticks for toys and how they actually had to use their imagination. The classic tell tale of “back in my day . . .” Maybe they have a point though. It seems like the majority of... Continue Reading »

Advertisement