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==Other sugoroku games== Many e-sugoroku-based video games were released, including: ''[[Kiteretsu Daihyakka: Chōjikū Sugoroku]]'', ''Sugoroku Ginga Senki'', ''[[Battle Hunter]]'', ''[[Ganbare Goemon: Mononoke Sugoroku]]'', ''[[Culdcept]]'', ''Dokodemo Hamster 4: Doki Doki Sugoroku Daibouken!'', ''Hello Kitty: Minna de Sugoroku'', ''[[Hello Kitty|Gotouchi Hello Kitty Sugoroku Monogatari]]'', ''[[List of Yu-Gi-Oh! video games|Yu-Gi-Oh! Sugoroku's Board Game]]'', ''[[Family Pirate Party]]'', ''[[Hidamari Sketch|Hidamari Sketch: Doko Demo Sugoroku x 365]]'', and ''[[PictureBook Games: Pop-Up Pursuit]]''. The video game ''[[Samurai Warriors 2]]'' features a mini-game named Sugoroku, but it bears very little resemblance to traditional Sugoroku. Instead, it plays very much like ''[[Itadaki Street]]'', ''[[Wily & Right no RockBoard: That's Paradise]]'', or a simplified version of ''[[Monopoly (game)|Monopoly]]'': players take turns in moving around a board, the spaces of which are designated as different territories of Japan. By landing on an unoccupied space, the player is able to buy that space for a set amount of money. If one player lands on a space purchased by another, they must pay a fee to that player, or else can choose to challenge the player for control of that space (utilising the main ''Samurai Warriors 2'' game engine for special challenge games). Also present on the board are "Shrine" spaces, which are roughly analogous to ''Monopoly'''s Chance and Community Chest spaces. The ''[[Mario Party]]'' series can be seen with heavy influences from sugoroku, especially e-sugoroku. The video game ''[[Eternal Melody (video game)|Eternal Melody]]'' is primarily a [[Simulation video game|simulation game]] with [[Role-playing video game|RPG]] elements, including dungeons. Dungeon exploration plays out as a game of Sugoroku.<ref>{{cite magazine|title=Coming Soon Soft|magazine=[[Sega Saturn Magazine (Japan)|Sega Saturn Magazine]]|issue=1996–18 |publisher=[[SoftBank]]|date=March 1996|page=41}}</ref> The [[survival horror]] game ''[[Kuon]]'' features ''ban-sugoroku'' as a minigame that can be unlocked. Several of the ''[[Dragon Quest (series)|Dragon Quest]]'' games feature a minigame called sugoroku (known as ''Treasures n' Trapdoors'' or ''Pachisi'' in English localizations) that has players moving along a board with spaces after rolling a 6-sided die.
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