
He can turn into a talwar, a curved sabre that was a little slow for my tastes, but had an excellent bleeding effect. One of the first weapons you meet, Sunder, is a gorgeous long-haired lothario, simultaneously emotionally needy and annoyingly distant. The variety of love interests is impressive (though, perhaps fewer gal pals than you'd like, but more non-binary friends than you'd expect), and the writing is thoughtful, smart and interesting. You can even have little breaks in the dunj where you can flirt or give a gift, which you can craft at home. They also get new combat abilities with each level, so there's an ongoing reason to go to the dunj (so you can go on dates with the weapons you like) and go on dates (so you can get better at the dunj).
#DUNGEON DATING SERIES#
Each weapon has a series of Love Ranks that you climb through by spending time with them in a dunj, with every new level gated off until you go on a date with that person. The two halves are intimately linked, of course, but the relationships have a bit more nuance to them than the combat. You use the former to smash your way through the latter.Īs a whole experience, Boyfriend Dungeon leans more into the dating than the dungeon clearing.

#DUNGEON DATING FULL#
At the same time, you start exploring dungeons that appear in town, mirror universe versions of normal locations that are full of monsters manifested by your subconcious. These are a variety of different, preturnaturally good looking people who can turn at will into offensive items you wouldn't get through airport security. He begins setting you up on dates, which mostly happen to be with weapons.

You're spending the summer with your cousin, and he and your mum are both concerned at your total lack of any discernable game (which, ouch).

Recently, however, I heard a woman refer to herself as a weapon, meaning "extremely attractive", a meaning that only makes sense in the world of Boyfriend Dungeon, a dungeon battler-meets-dating sim where your love interests are both extremely attractive and literally weapons. It was always my understanding that describing someone as a "weapon" was a (generally benign) insult: they behave in a manner that makes them a danger to themselves or others. This dating sim meets dungeon crawler has wonderful characters and great writing that delivers some really thrilling romances, but it's let down by the dungeoning side feeling a bit undercooked.
