Popular games for collection Itadaki Street

01.12.2011

Get on board, corner the market & make a fortune! Players become familiar characters from the Nintendo and Dragon Quest universes in a board game that challenges them to play the real estate and stock markets wisely to win. Players race around the board trying to accumulate wealth and hit a target value while buying, selling and trading property with friends and family to see who can be the first to cash out. What appears at first to be a simple property-buying board game offers multiple levels of money-maximizing opportunity.

19.10.2017

Square-Enix's flagship board game simulator celebrates 30 years of its two most influential RPG series.

23.01.2012

A free to play version of Fortune Street for the iPhone and iPad.

28.02.2002

The third sequential version of the popular Japanese board game from Enix.

26.02.1994

Following up on the original Itadaki Street, Itadaki Street 2 features more complex Monopoly-esque gameplay and new gambling elements. Released for the Super Famicom on Feb. 26, 1994 in Japan, and again on Sep. 26, 1997.

21.04.1991

Itadaki Street: Watashi no Oten ni Yottette is a Miscellaneous game, developed by Game Studio and published by ASCII Entertainment, which was released in Japan in 1991. A board game, similar to monopoly, with a large cast of characters released for the Famicom on March 21, 1991 in Japan.

01.01.1970

The sole release of Itadaki Street for the original PlayStation.

22.12.2004

The game is similar to Monopoly in that players roll one die to advance around a board, purchase an unowned property they land on and earn money when opponents land on the player's property. The game differs from Monopoly in that players can buy and sell stocks of a block, affecting the value of block's stock up by buying or down by selling that block's stock or by developing a player-owned property of that block which increases the value per share for that block's stock. Also unlike Monopoly, it is not necessary to own the entire block to develop a property, though controlling more than one property of a block allows the player to develop their properties into larger buildings to collect more from opponents when they land on them. Players must collect a set of four suits, heart, diamond, clover and spade, to level up and collect additional gold when the pass the starting position/bank. To win a player must make it back to the bank with the board's required amount, which includes the total value of the player's stocks, property value, and gold on hand.

25.05.2006

Itadaki Street Portable is a crossover party board video game in the long running Itadaki Street series, exclusive to Japan. Featuring characters from both Final Fantasy and Dragon Quest.

21.06.2007

Itadaki Street DS is a Monopoly-like game that has some Mario Party-esque elements added to it due to the appearance of several Mario characters (minigames, for example). Players move around the board, buying shops and collecting money from others who land on their shop spaces. Depending on circumstances, some players can forcibly take over another player's shop spaces, or make them inactive for a turn. Players can also hold shares of a block of spaces so that they get paid when someone lands on any space in that block, even if it is not their own.