![]() His wish is granted when he gets fired by none other than Hidemaru Ayanokiji, the chairman of Empire Group, the conglomerate that owns Empire Games and seemingly half of Japan. Yamada is a typical salaryman who works for Empire Games, a video game company, but is frustrated by his job and would like to make his own games instead of following orders. Smartphones may not seem the ideal home for Kimura’s usual elaborate universes, but he still managed to inject his trademark zaniness into this game. Labeled “The World’s First RPG (Romance Programming Game)”, Dandy Dungeon is the brainchild of Yoshiro Kimura, the weird mind behind games like Chulip or Little King’s Story. It also is another example of the resurgence of the Japanese gaming industry, which has fallen out of favor with the gamers between the 2000s and 2010s, but is slowly making a comeback. The mobile game market is often considered a cesspool full of allegedly free games plagued with ads and microtransactions, rip-offs of clones of ancient titles and other useless stuff, but every now and then a genuinely interesting game like Dandy Dungeon comes out.
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