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Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter is a 2D platform video game developed by 5th Cell and published by THQ for the Nintendo DS, released in October 2009 in all regions except Japan. It is a sequel to the original Drawn to Life and a counterpart to the Wii version , although it has a different plot.
Shadow walkers appear, invading Jangala. After the Hero defeats them and saves Zsasha, the monkey king releases him and gives them a strange mask. Mari realizes Zsasha did not steal the items, leading her to suspect that Wilfre might be the thief. To make sure if Wilfre is alive, Mari sends the Hero (and Jowee) to Shadow City.
Drawn to Life is an action-adventure platform video game for the Nintendo DS developed by 5th Cell and published by THQ in 2007. [3] It was later published by Agatsuma Entertainment in Japan in 2008 under the name Drawn to Life: God's Marionette (ドローン トゥ ライフ 〜神様のマリオネット〜, Dorōn tu Raifu: 〜Kami-sama no Marionetto〜), and in Korea under the title ...
Drawn to Life: Two Realms is a 2D puzzle-platform game where the player draws their own hero to play as, similar to previous incarnations. Unlike previous games in the series, Two Realms uses isometric graphics for the villages outside of levels, and allows the player to explore the never-before-seen Human world.
Pages in category "Drawn to Life" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D. Drawn to Life;
I believe this article should be split. "Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter" is the title for two different games in the series; Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter for the Nintendo DS and Drawn to Life: The Next Chapter for the Wii. They are two entirely different games and thus should be split into two articles. Manfred 14:22, 1 May 2017 (UTC)
A boy with the power to bring his paintings to life paints a picture of a wizard. The wizard attempts to use the boy's power for his own ends. Players control another character who can make paintings come to life. They must solve puzzles to save the boy and stop the wizard. It includes a hint system, [1] and players can skip logic puzzles if ...
So far, with both Drawn to Life and Lock's Quest, I think our products have lined up with that vision. We've completely switched our company's focus to original titles now. We don't do licensed games or work for hire anymore. [3] On April 21, 2006, IGN revealed 5th Cell's first Nintendo DS game Drawn to Life, an original title. [4]