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Nintendo DS : Castlevania: Portrait Of Ruin Reviews

Gas Gauge: 84
Gas Gauge 84
Below are user reviews of Castlevania: Portrait Of Ruin and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Castlevania: Portrait Of Ruin. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.

Summary of Review Scores
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ReviewsScore
Game Spot 83
GamesRadar 90
IGN 88
GameSpy 80
GameZone 85
1UP 80






User Reviews (21 - 31 of 34)

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Symphony of the Night lover and I love this one too!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 1 / 3
Date: January 27, 2007
Author: Amazon User

I was a little skeptical about buying this game since the only Castlevania game I ever played was Symphony of the Night (and thats my fav of all time!). This was a very fun and awesome game! I love the portraits that you can warp into to make the game longer and all the weapons and especially Charlotte's spells!!! The only thing wrong with this game is that was easy to beat. I guess they give you some pretty powerful weapons and spells because the only boss I found difficult was the first one. I still recommend this game because it is a lot of fun and interesting!!!

Portrait of Disappointment

2 Rating: 2, Useful: 1 / 17
Date: December 16, 2006
Author: Amazon User

A disappointing outing for the Castlevania franchise, especially considering Dawn of Sorrow's more or less excellent offering. While the initial premise brings to mind far superior entries such as the classic Dracula X or Legacy of Darkness, this pales in comparison to those and, even more insultingly, taints the characters from a previous entry, Bloodlines, with their insulting inclusion in this extremely lacking and excessively dull Castlevania. While graphically superb and good sound-wise for the most part, pretty pictures and good music (with mostly good voice acting) do not excuse the terrible story, lacking gameplay, and outright frustrating attempts at accommodating the gimmicky insertions. After a point in the extremely predictable and groan-worthy story, I put it down permanently. Save your money and buy something more deserving of it instead.

Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 2
Date: January 16, 2007
Author: Amazon User

A wonderful addition to the castlevania series, recommended to anyone that enjoys rpg games.

It's good, but...

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 0 / 3
Date: January 18, 2007
Author: Amazon User

I loved the game. Really I did- even with the anime-esque approach they took to it. I just had to take points off for the fact that this game has its problems.

The freezing.

Dear god the freezing! Why Konami, WHY?

One of the Best

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 3
Date: January 20, 2007
Author: Amazon User

One of the best games money can buy. The co-op mode can get a little stale after awile, but the game is huge and once beaten you unlock two more sets of characters to tour the paintings with.

Great game.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 4
Date: January 20, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Extensive game. Lots of game timr. And, of course, lots of game extras.

A great castlevania game.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 1
Date: March 15, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Doesn't top the greats in the series: Castlevania III, Rondo, and Symphony. But it comes close with its storyline, lv.1 hard mode, and boss battles. Co-op should have been available through the entire game, but you cant have everything I guess.

The castle got a new paint job

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: January 02, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Just about 15 months ago I was whipped with Konami's Castlevania: Dawn of Sorrow, which was at the time and still is one of the best Nintendo DS games. With its only flaw being a severe lack in touch screen support, Dawn of Sorrow was a game that even the most jaded gamer would have trouble complaining about. Just weeks ago, Konami released their second DS Castlevania, Castlevania: Portrait of Ruin. Does this second attempt manage to replicate the same greatness of Dawn of Sorrow?

Jonathan, who's inherited the Belmont vampire hunting mumbo-jumbo, is joined by spellcaster Charlotte in yet another journey to explore Dracula's castle and defeat the bloodsucker himself. The pair finds out that Dracula isn't the big boy in charge, however-that would be the daunting Count Brauner, who's filled the castle with enchanted portraits that take Jonathan and Charlotte to different worlds. Jonathan and Charlotte have to stop Brauner and his minions. The story is very Castlevania-ish and won't surprise anyone who's played a game in the series before.

Two characters can be controlled at once on the game screen. Jonathan primarily attacks with weapons found throughout the castle, while Charlotte uses magic abilities that can be found randomly in the souls of defeated enemies. You have the option of playing with just one of the two characters or both at the same time, and both styles of play yield different benefits. Playing with two characters requires you to watch out for the health of the CPU-controlled second character, which is actually represented by the Mana bar that also limits your magic attacks or skills. If the Mana bar depletes, the second character disappears and you continue on normally with a single character. This system works but I felt at times that it made some battles too easy. Castlevania has, for years, been a game where even a single large enemy posed a huge threat. Now, with two characters attacking at the same time, that's not such the case.

Still, everything looks and feels just right. Both characters control very well and special attacks are done easily with a simple button combination. Throughout the game you'll find all sorts of special abilities that allow you to move around the environment even more than before-just like in every Castlevania, getting the double jump ability opens up a large amount of real estate, and it's quite exciting to find any new ability. I've always put Zelda, Metroid, and Castlevania in similar places for their adventurous progression; it isn't until you find a new item or ability that you can truly proceed or unlock every nook and cranny. I like this design, it's simple but still forces you to look around and play with everything.

Replay value is extended beyond the normal kill-the-boss-and-proceed progression of past Castlevanias. You can now accept mini-quests and side missions to earn special moves, weapons, and the like. Some of these side quests are very simple, but others aren't explained well and will have you searching high and low through every area of the castle just to complete. The rewards are well worth the trouble, making this distraction a worthy addition to the game.

Portrait of Ruin, like Dawn of Sorrow before it, has beautiful 2D visuals with a ton of detail. Enemy sprites seem to have several layers that react independently, making the animation that much better. Some of the 3D effects used are very, very nice, like 3D enemies and backgrounds. The only thing I'm starting to like less and less is the anime character style. What happened to the gothic style of Harmony of Dissonance, Circle of the Moon, and Symphony of the Night?

Overall, Portrait of Ruin is a good game that doesn't outdo its predecessor but definitely deserves some attention from action, adventure, and Castlevania fans. In future Castlevania games I'd like to see Konami tinker with more 3D effects and less anime-inspired art, and I'd also prefer if they'd stick to a more traditional design. The portrait idea was cool but just seems like a cheap way to introduce levels that are dramatically different than Drac's castle. So the final word: it's good, even great, but not as good as Dawn of Sorrow.

Stylish platformer!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: April 03, 2007
Author: Amazon User

Symphony of the Night was a masterpiece and it has set the standard for Castlevania games. Portrait of Ruin (PoR) is almost as good. The graphics and music are beautifully crafted, and the gameplay entices you to play just a little longer...

The only element missing from PoR is a likeable set of characters. Jonathan is no Alucard! But overall PoR is a superb effort and will be a worthy addition to your DS collection.

As enjoyable as Dawn Of Sorrow

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 0 / 0
Date: April 08, 2007
Author: Amazon User

If you liked Castlevania: Dawn Of Sorrow (or any other Castlevania game for that matter) you will find much to love about this one. And even if you've never played a Castlevania game before this is a great time to jump in. The hand drawn graphics are amazing, and the gameplay feels fresh from the constant upgrading of weapons. I must own.


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