Shiren the Wanderer

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

The flagship RPG series of Chunsoft, the Japanese publisher/developer who are most famous worldwide for Pokémon Mystery Dungeon. Shiren the Wanderer features roguelike gameplay, which is set against a fantasy version of feudal Japan. Most of the games have you control Shiren, a wandering adventurer who wears a distinct 'kasa' hat. Only two games in the series have been released to Western audiences.

The series so far:

  • Mystery Dungeon: Shiren the Wanderer (1995, SNES) (2006, Nintendo DS) (titled Mystery Dungeon 2 in Japan; Mystery Dungeon 1 was the Super Famicom game based around Torneko from Dragon Quest IV).
    • Shiren journeys to the Golden City on Table Mountain, where the Golden Condor resides.
  • Shiren the Wanderer 2: Oni Raid on Ft. Shiren! (2000, N64)
    • Natane Village keeps getting invaded by Onis, so the townfolk beseech Shiren to build them a fortress.
  • Shiren the Wanderer 3: The Sleeping Princess of Karakuri Mansion (2008, Wii)
  • Shiren the Wanderer 4: The Deity's Eye and the Devil's Navel (2010, Nintendo DS)
    • An island adventure, complete with monkeys and bananas and tiger people.
  • Shiren the Wanderer 5: Fortune Tower and the Dice of Fate (2010, Nintendo DS)
    • Utilizes the Shiren 4 engine.

Along with the main installments, there have been a few gaiden games:

  • BS Shiren the Wanderer: Save Surara (1996, Satellaview)
  • Shiren the Wanderer GB: The Monsters of Moonlight Village (1996, GB)
    • Shiren encounters the Dragon's Maw and a seemingly quaint village. The villagers transform into monsters at night.
  • Shiren the Wanderer GB2: The Bedeviled Castle (2000, GBC) (2008, Nintendo DS)
  • Shiren the Wanderer Gaiden: The Swordswoman Asuka! (2002, Dreamcast, PC)
    • Asuka, from "Shiren 2", and Koppa have their own little adventure in Tenrin County, where they encounter ninjas and some sort of plant demon. Also, there's a massive post-game. This is notable for being the only Shiren game where he isn't the player avatar.

One notable thing about Shiren The Wanderer is that it's the only Mystery Dungeon game that uses original Chunsoft characters, as opposed to characters from Dragon Quest or Pokémon.

For the first in the series, there is a SNES version (which was never released outside of Japan) and a DS version. Aeon Genesis has been kind enough to provide a translation patch for the SNES version. The lone Wii installment was most recent Shiren to be released outside Japan; don't hold your breath for more. Meanwhile, Shiren 5 had a December 2010 release, less than a year after the previous game. It was the first Shiren in a while to be published directly by Chunsoft themselves.

Masato Kato is the scenario writer for the third game and was also involved in the fourth.

Tropes used in Shiren the Wanderer include:
  • Action Bomb: Spike Bombs and their higher-level forms. If a Spike Bomb's health goes low enough, it explodes. Items adjacent to it are destroyed, and if you're next to it you'll be knocked down to 1 HP, unless you have a Blast Shield equipped. It doesn't even give you experience points if it blows up. In the case of regular Spike Bombs, they stop moving when they're down to 23 HP or less (out of 50), and they go boom at 10 HP or less.
  • Aerith and Bob: In the third game, one of the villagers' names is Catherine. Justified because her father was a foreigner. In the Tournament Arc it is also revealed that Eagle's name was Johnny, and he has a friend named Carl.
  • Anti-Grinding: A big gust of wind will blow you back to the starting town if you take too long to complete a floor, which is effectively the same as manually restarting to get back to the starting town.
    • The third game lets you keep your EXP levels outside of dungeons. There's still a heavy emphasis on customizing and powering up equipment, though.
  • Baleful Polymorph: If you step on a Riceball Trap or get breathed on by a Rice Boss, you'll turn into a riceball. In this form your equipment has no effect, you can't use items, and if you hit a Rotten Trap before it wears off, you're dead. You can do something similar to enemies by throwing meat at them. If you hit an enemy with meat from a certain type of enemy, it'll turn into that one. Quite handy if you're dealing with a particularly nasty enemy. In the first game, and the first game only, this works even on bosses.
    • The Change Staff does something similar: it transforms the target into a random monster on that floor. The Skull Wizard family can do this to you, but you can revert with the push of a button.
    • In Shiren 3, a shield with the "Chef" seal can turn an attacking enemy into a riceball!
  • Banana Peel: Bananas replace riceballs as food in "Shiren 4". When Shiren consumes a banana, it gets replaced by a banana peel in your inventory. Guess what you can do with them.
  • Big Damn Heroes: In the third game: Kaguya and her guardians.
  • Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism: Male moon people are Moon Rabbits, and the female are Playboy Bunnies.
  • Bonus Dungeon: Cave of the Food God, Cave Behind the Wall Scroll, and Fei's Final Problem. The DS version extends the main dungeon beyond the original 30 levels.
  • Chainmail Bikini: Oboro. While her body is quite covered, what she is wearing does a lot to show off her assets. Soboro, too.
  • The Chessmaster: In the third game, Jofuku.
  • Civil Warcraft: Sensei in the third game.
  • Continuing Is Painful: Everything except for the stuff you put into warehouses are lost once you return to the starting town, unless you fully complete the dungeon. Even then, your level, stats, and cash are reset.
    • Keep in mind, that this is considered NICE for the genre.
    • In "Shiren 3", there's an optional Easy mode that lets you backtrack to a recent save instead of losing everything. "Shiren 4" also introduces some kind of insurance system for gear and items.
  • Continuity Nod: Asuka and the Hyottoko Gang in the third game. Also, the bosses of previous games, Curas, (from Shiren GB 2) Ragoon, (from Asuka's Gaiden Game) and Tainted Insect, (from the original) all fight you at once in the Tournament Arc.
  • Dronejam: Dealt with in a simple way. You can hold the Run button and move towards an NPC to swap places with them. Very handy, but it causes problems when you have party members with you and you find an NPC plodding through a hallway.
    • Recent games don't even require you to hold a button to switch places with NPCs, and "Shiren 4" also solves the latter problem concerning partners.
  • Dual Boss: Many of them in the third game.
  • Dual-Wielding: In the third game, Shiren and Sensei can do this. Shiren would usually be better off equipping a shield, but Sensei is unable to do so.
  • Dummied Out: The Sending and Receiving Jar in the English release. In the Japanese versions, it was used to send and receive items to and from other players, but Atlus removed all Wi-Fi functionality things. The items' descriptions actually say, "Hacks! This item is not supposed to appear!"
  • Eleventh-Hour Superpower: Shiren is invincible during his first journey through Yomotsu Hirasaka in the third game.
  • Escort Mission: One sidequest requires you to locate a small girl and get her to the next resting point alive before you can use the warehouse there.
    • At the end of "Shiren GB", you have to escort a girl through the entire dungeon back to the starting village.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": An odd example in the third game: the bamboo harvester Taketori is always referred to by the townspeople as Old Man Taketori, but whenever you actually meet him, he is known as Bamboo Harvester.
  • Excuse Plot: All you need to know is that you have to get through 30 levels of dungeon to finish the first game. Complete mastery of the game is another matter...
  • Fire-Breathing Diner: Dragon Herbs will let you breath fire. Also, Dragon meats will allow you to turn into a dragon and breath fire on command.
  • Friend in the Black Market: Tao, the part-time guide in Shiren 5. If you have her in the party, whenever you find yourself in any kind of trouble (strength down, zero food meter, etc), talk to her and she'll sell you the proper recovery item. Just be prepared to shell out 3x-5x the standard price.
  • Fusion Dance: In the third game: Kotodama + Kodama = Kotodamakodama.
  • Fail O'Suckyname: Master X and Mobile Mamel ZZ, according to Koppa.
  • Fighting Your Friend: Asuka in the third game.
  • Goddamned Bats: Where to start? We have undead Radishes that throw status-inflicting herbs at you, those annoying archers/tanks that move away from you while firing projectiles, reapers that move twice as fast and hit hard, skeleton mages that throw all sorts of random effects at you...
    • Demonic Spiders: But the Ark Dragon outclasses the rest of the monsters in terms of cheapness. The Ark Dragon's special ability is firing a homing blast of fire that goes through walls, does 50 damage that can only be reduced if you have a Dragon shield, and can target you from anywhere on the floor, even if you're in another room. And they can use it indefinitely. The only way to survive that is to either use healing items or Invincible herbs until you can find and kill them, or be an Inferno. Seriously, using a Scroll of Removal against them is completely justified. Only in the first game can you use this same power after eating their meat. And their higher-level form, Hell Dragon, is even worse.
      • Good luck surviving the last half of Fay's Final Puzzle, as the Ark Dragon and the other most goddamned of the Goddamned Bats start appearing in droves.
  • Guide Dang It: In the first game, the scrolls of Sanctuary and Destruction can only be obtained by writing them on blank scrolls. Since you can't read them, the game gives you alternate methods of unlocking this ability. Sanctuary is simple enough, just free the Golden Condor. You don't know that it unlocks anything even after you've accomplished it, but it's something you're pretty much guaranteed to do eventually. But Destruction? You have to get from Canyon Hamlet to the Golden Condor's room without entering any storehouses, putting anything in a storehouse jar, or talking to any storehouse guys. You get one hint that accomplishing this does anything at all, in the form of an NPC proclaiming his intention to do it himself.
    • On a much larger scale, the entirety of Shiren 3 outside of Japan. There is literally no guide to this game on any website, and the only resource available only describes some of the equipment. Especially frustrating when fighting a Puzzle Boss.
  • Hammerspace: The treasures of Karakuri Palace's Treasury. Lampshaded by Sensei:

Sensei: When you've been a Wanderer for as long as I have, you learn some tricks.

  • Have a Nice Death: The game records your stats and what you had equipped at the time of your death, as well as the cause of death.
    • You can also earn "achievements" for dying in unique or stupid ways.
  • Heroic Mime: The reason why we have Koppa, who does all the talking.
    • Except in one part of "Shiren 3", but that's because a dragon god possesses Shiren and speaks through him. Later in Shiren 3, for the game-loading narration post-game, Koppa tries to get Shiren to talk, fails, and then pretends Shiren is talking and complimenting him.
  • Highly-Visible Ninja: However, Oboro makes up for it by transforming into someone you would never expect; like a shopkeeper. Of course, when she's not disguising herself, she is quite visible.
  • Hypocritical Humor: After Sensei lectures Koppa not to take any treasure from the Karakuri Treasury lest they become corrupted like Jurouta and the Hyottoko Gang, it is revealed at the end that both Sensei and Asuka took a bunch of treasure.
  • It's All Upstairs From Here: Subverted except for the final part of the main dungeon, where you're trying to scale Table Mountain.
  • Import Gaming: The only way you'll get to play any of the games besides the first and third if you're not Japanese. But it is surprisingly easier to import this particular game, as even if you understand Japanese, it's mostly just trial and error; and most of the games are on the region-free DS. (And there are translations on this website.)
  • Infinity+1 Sword: In the first game, there are two swords and a shield that must be upgraded to their maximum possible level before you can upgrade them AGAIN to create the better equipment. Only one of the swords is derived from a common weapon, and that one is the Penultimate Weapon. Also, there is a special pot that can combine items together to get a new item that has the properties of all the items put into it.
  • Izchaks Wrath: If you steal from the shopkeepers, you'll have supertough sheriffs and watchdogs down your back until you leave the floor. Even the shopkeepers themselves can kill you in one hit. You're not even safe at max level. And Escape Scrolls won't work after you've stolen.
  • Kabuki Sounds: They're everywhere!
  • Killer Rabbit / Lethal Joke Character / That One Boss: Mobile Mamel ZZ. It tells Incredibly Lame Puns until you fall asleep, then proceeds to fire nanoparticle cannons at you. It turns out to be a literal Killer Rabbit as it's really a Moon Rabbit in disguise.
  • Kunoichi: Oboro in the third game, as well as her older sister Soboro.
  • Level Drain: Bitter Herbs. The Staff of Misfortune. The Seed of Ill Luck only appears in the second half of the 99-floor Bonus Dungeon and drains all of your levels.
  • Loophole Abuse: The abovementioned Guide Dang It for unlocking the ability to write Scrolls of Destruction? You can circumvent it by grabbing your Infinity Plus One equipment from the storehouse, leaving Canyon Hamlet, and then going right back in before starting your no-storehouse run.
  • Monster Arena: In the third game.
  • Mook Promotion: Most monsters you will find have different-level versions. When they level up (either by killing another monster, throwing a Happy Herb/using a Happy Staff at them, or have a Ghost Musha/Dead Soldier possess them), they get promoted to a stronger variant. This might be useful if you're farming for monster meat.
  • Moon Rabbit: Usakichi.
  • Nerf: If removing something from the game entirely counts as a nerf, the pot that duplicates any item put into it and the scroll that enlarges pots were nerfed in the DS port of the first game, almost certainly because they could be used together (with two Extraction scrolls and a Melding Jar, which were left untouched) in an infinite Game Breaker loop.
    • Also, Bufu's Cleaver in the third game. It was nerfed to have a chance of breaking outside of Bufu Cave, which ends in Bonus Feature Failure after you meld it to your Infinity+1 Sword. (At least until you discover that the Sturdy seal from the Adamant Pickaxe and Iron Hammer can be used to fix this as well.) Several aspects of the game, like Gitan Mamel and Ultra Gaze's Gitan yields, were nerfed in the PSP version.
  • One-Winged Angel: In the third game, there's the fake Princess Kaguya, Jofuku and his dragon monster form Ikazuchikami, and Izanami Complete.
  • Painting the Fourth Wall: Tainted Insect in the third game says to "fire the insect translator" after being beaten. Koppa also notices when the music in Karakuri Inn changes.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: Master X. The only difference is a "ridiculous mask", as Koppa calls it, calling him drunk. Later it parodies it by making it actually be two different people, but even later, subverts that as the real Sensei that appeared then was someone that Sensei used a Change Staff on.
  • Peninsula of Power Leveling: In the third game, Sanuki Thicket and Ochimizu Pass get longer post-game, and have great items that you can now actually keep. The only downside is that you have to get to the end, but that can be easily circumvented if you befriend the Jizo, find him, and ask him to help you escape. Perhaps the best part is that you can access them as soon as you beat the game.
    • Floors with Dragon Orbs are designed to be these as they can upgrade your items and you can map floors with them. Not surprisingly, there is an entire post-game dungeon filled with Dragon Orbs: Dragon Veins. This is a real Peninsula of Power Leveling: in other levels you had to use Dragon Orbs sparingly because of hunger, the winds of Kron, and the fact that you had other things to do. Here, however, you can actually backtrack to earlier floors. The wisest strategy to use Dragon Orbs are rooms with as many exits as you have party members. This was so much of a Game Breaker that it was Nerfed in the PSP version so that the Winds of Kron blow sooner where there are Dragon Orbs.
  • Playboy Bunny: In the third game: Ichi-Bunny. She is the only reason that Sensei decided to help the Moon Rabbits. Apparently she can use "Bunny Wave Fist Motion"...
  • Puzzle Boss: The battle against Jurouta and co. at the top of Karakuri Mansion. Shiren must have all of the special tiles pressed, and one of them has to be pressed by a fainted Hyottoko Gang member. Jurouta will revive them with a Kiai Kick if he's close enough to them, however. The Karakuri Rose also looks like it would be one, but not really; you only have to attack it.
  • Rare Candy: Life Herbs, Power Herbs, Expansion Herbs, and Happy Herbs. You could also probably find some way to turn a Happy Staff on yourself, though this would require the assistance of certain monsters (specifically, Air Devils, invisible ghosts that reflect staff magic). Since this is a Roguelike, expect to see the negative versions as well.
  • Refuge in Audacity: If you break a Bottomless Jar in a dungeon shop, you can jump down the Pitfall Traps it creates to steal effortlessly. At no point will any shopkeeper attempt to stop you from doing this, or even yell at you for having done it in the past. The same goes for standing outside the shop and grabbing their merch with a Walrus Jar. The former no longer works as of the third game.
  • Revive Kills Zombie
  • Roguelike
  • Self-Destruct Mechanism: According to Usakichi, "A real man puts a self-destruct button on their inventions!" Including the Moon Recombobulator...
  • Simulation Game: Most of "Shiren 2" is spent gathering building materials from Shyuuten Mountain, to build a fortress. The fort also gets invaded periodically. Parts built from low-grade materials break easily during invasions.
  • Strong Family Resemblance: Shiren and his ancestor in the third game. Also, Oboro and her older sister Soboro look exactly alike. And they even wear the same Chainmail Bikini!
  • Take That: Koppa makes one to Mobile Suit Gundam: After beating Mobile Mamel ZZ he goes on to state that New Media Are Evil... despite the new media in question not even having been invented yet, and the fact that this is a video game...
  • Talking Animal: Koppa, a talking weasel/ferret.
  • Throwing Your Sword Always Works: It does the same amount of damage as swinging it, at the cost of destroying it forever. Best saved for extreme emergencies where you don't have a Scroll of Need. The Kappa enemies will abuse this if they find a sword on the ground.
    • In some games, you can meld your weapon with a "Throwing Sword". This prevents it from breaking when thrown/disarmed.
  • Time Travel: In the third game Shiren goes back in time and is his ancestor. Koppa is a raccoon, much to his chagrin. Turns out it's not really time travel, it's just the memories of the Karakuri Mansion. But post-game, Otsutsuki Village's well lets you actually time travel.
  • Tournament Arc: Post-game in the third game.
  • Unexpected Gameplay Change
    • Shiren 2: A lot of importers get thrown off by the fortress-building aspect.
    • Shiren 4: There's a day/night system. Weapons become practically useless at night, so you either have to rely on skills/magic or avoid mosters completely. One Famitsu reviewer described this mechanic as a "cat and mouse game."
  • Voluntary Shapeshifting: Various monster meat you can eat to turn into the monster that the meat comes from, gaining their special abilities.
  • We Buy Anything: Shopkeepers will take anything you leave in their rooms, but worthless items like Poison Herbs will sell for little cash. Even things that are cursed will still net you some cash.
  • Weasel Mascot: Koppa does most of Shiren's talking for him, and often narrates.
  • Weird Moon: In the third game, it is the Rock of Chibiki, and after the events of the game, it looks like it has a bite taken out of it. The Moon Rabbits are not pleased and have you embark on a sidequest to find 99 moon bits.
  • Wizard Needs Food Badly: If your satiation meter drops to 0%, you will lose a bit of health every turn.
  • You All Meet in An Inn: In the third game, it is revealed that in a random coincidence, Curas, Ragoon, and Tainted Insect met in a tea house in Yomi.