Daav from NoobFeed.com explores the world of Weyard, set 30 years after the Golden Sun event that has triggered an intricate chain of events. This time, it's the children of the Warriors of Vale that will need to step up and save the world. But is their adventure as thrilling as their parents' epic?
While most handheld games are faced with a lot of limitations, they can still deliver an amazing game play experience. And over the years, certain handheld games have proven to be so great that one can only imagine how much better these games would be if it was on the big screen. Here are 5 handheld games that should be played on the big screen.
"There was a time when I had wanted nothing more than a third entry into the Golden Sun series for any Nintendo platform. At a dire time as it is right now for the role-playing genre, I had always envisioned the follow-up to Camelot Software’s Golden Sun: The Lost Age (Game Boy Advanced, 2003) filling a void that has been growing increasingly larger the past half of a decade. The results for Golden Sun: Dark Dawn are as pleasurable as I imagined, even if it’s not as memorable as its predecessors."
Guide for Golden Sun Dark Dawn. It covers main quest at the moment but will be updated daily (djinn location, post game, etc) This guide will be useful for who haven't beat the game yet.
"Is Golden Sun: Dark Dawn a great game bogged down by ill-considered design choices, or is it a mediocre game being buoyed by superb production values and sharp localization? Let's consider the facts.
The first two Golden Sun games were instant fan-favorites on Game Boy Advance, but despite their popularity they were deeply flawed on several levels. They were painfully slow-paced, aesthetically unappealing, and plagued by some of the most mundane plotting and dialogue ever inflicted upon an..."
IGN UK take a look at the new RPG Golden Sun: Dark Dawn game for the Nintendo DS console. Although there are many interesting points about the game, fans of the series will feel the same, generic plot points and other trivia found in the previous two games. IGN try to look at the silver lining to the clouds but is this games a worthwhile buy? Is there enough to entice players new and old?
Golden Sun: Dark Dawn is the third installment in Camelot's series of handheld RPGs. The game will feature all of the elements that made the original great as well as a sleek touch screen interface for selecting characters, viewing stats, and setting up commands. Check out BrightHub's preview of the game for full details on this upcoming title.
Nintendo of America has announced today that their upcoming Camelot-developed DS RPG, Golden Sun: Dark Dawn, will be releasing in North America on November 29th.
Announced last year, Golden Sun DS was a game that didn't have much to go by. The game makes its return this year as Golden Sun: Dark Dawn, and utilizes the touch screen capabilities of the Nintendo DS.
Follow the news out of Nintendo's press conference by searching for [NIE32010]. Chat alongside us in the General Wii forum's E3 2010: Discussion and Predictions Thread.
It is the opinion of Neoseeker writer Lydia Sung that Nintendo has in recent years fallen a bit off the wagon, so to speak. Okay, a lot.
Citing her experiences at E3 this year, some of the company's contradictory statements and actions, and support of the mature audience (or lack thereof), she divulges on how Nintendo has missed the mark in a lot of ways, and touches on how they can fix it.
Have a read if you feel so inclined!
The newest installment in Camelot's Golden Sun RPGs made a splash when announced at Nintendo's E3 2009 Media Briefing. You can check out some gameplay footage here, and below you can view the game's E3 2009 trailer, featuring main characters who are descendents of the old protagonists.

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![Box shot of Golden Sun: Dark Dawn [North America]](http://i.neoseeker.com/boxshots/R2FtZXMvTmludGVuZG9fRFMvUm9sZS1QbGF5aW5nL0ZhbnRhc3k=/golden_sun_dark_dawn_frontcover_small_x02VmvZQySfioxG.jpg)