Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow

Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow is a 2005 action role-playing game developed and published by Konami. It is part of Konami's Castlevania video game series and the first Castlevania game released on the Nintendo DS. The game is the sequel to Castlevania: Aria of Sorrow and incorporates many elements from its predecessor. Dawn of Sorrow was commercially successful. It sold more than 15,000 units in its first week in Japan and 164,000 units in the United States during the three months after its initial release.

Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow
North American box art
Developer(s)Konami
Publisher(s)Konami
Director(s)Satoshi Kushibuchi
Producer(s)Koji Igarashi
Programmer(s)Shutaro Iida
Writer(s)Koji Igarashi
Composer(s)Masahiko Kimura
Michiru Yamane
SeriesCastlevania
Platform(s)Nintendo DS, Mobile phone
Release
  • JP: August 25, 2005
  • EU: September 30, 2005
  • NA: October 4, 2005
  • AU: October 6, 2005
Genre(s)Platform-adventure, action role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Dawn of Sorrow continues the story of Aria of Sorrow: Dracula has been defeated, with his powers assumed by his reincarnation, Soma Cruz. With the help of his allies, Soma avoids becoming the new dark lord. A cult forms to bring forth a new one by killing Soma. Soma and his allies move to ensure that does not happen.

Dawn of Sorrow incorporates many features from earlier Castlevania games: the combination of elements from platform games and role-playing video games, the "Tactical Soul" system featured in Aria of Sorrow and a dark, gothic atmosphere. Dawn of Sorrow introduces gameplay elements, like the "Magic Seal" system, which requires the use of the DS stylus to draw a pattern to defeat powerful enemies, a distinctive anime character design, and a multiplayer mode, where two players compete for fastest times on a prerendered level. The game received high scores from many video game publications, and was considered one of the best games on the Nintendo DS for 2005. The game was re-released in Japan in June 2006, and later in North America during 2007 as part of the "Konami the Best" line.

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