DX Jinsei Game (The Game of Life) (PlayStation the Best for Family)
DX人生ゲーム(デラックスじんせいゲーム)-
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A multiplayer digital board game where two to four players progress through life stages while encountering events, earning or losing money, and playing mini‑games. An adaptation of the classic board game The Game of Life (known in Japan as Jinsei Game).
Description
DX Jinsei Game is a digital version of The Game of Life boardgames, and is part of a long‑running series of Jinsei Game in Japan that has seen adaptations across nearly every major console. The “DX” (Deluxe) branding signalled an expanded, more feature‑rich version compared to earlier 16‑bit entries. The game features various modes, including a single-player campaign, a multiplayer mode, and a mini-game mode. It also includes customisation options for characters and avatars, as well as a wide range of events and challenges that players must overcome to succeed in the game. This is the reprint of SLPS-00155, which was released one year earlier, several months after the initial Saturn release.
Gameplay follows the familiar Game of Life structure: players spin a roulette wheel to move across a branching board, with each space triggering an event. These events can alter a player’s finances, stats, or life path — such as entering university, landing a job, getting married, or raising a family. Unlike the physical board game, the digital version adds mini‑games tied to certain events, injecting variety and interactivity beyond simple dice rolls.
Both the Saturn and PlayStation versions supported up to four players, either human or CPU‑controlled, making it a party‑style experience. The game offered multiple board layouts or “courses,” each divided into themed sections, ensuring replayability. The PlayStation release included an additional mode called Unsei Game (“Game of Fortune”), which featured six standalone mini‑games separate from the main board. This gave the package more variety and positioned it as both a board game simulation and a light party game. Visually, DX Jinsei Game presented colourful, cartoon‑like graphics, with exaggerated character avatars and whimsical board designs. The tone was lighthearted, reflecting the family‑friendly nature of the franchise.
In Japan, the Jinsei Game adaptations were popular as casual multiplayer titles. This was one of the more polished 32‑bit entries, bridging the traditional board game with the interactive possibilities. The series ended up having multiple sequels, being a popular party game before more modern, stylised party titles, like Mario Party became dominant.
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