Compare Dokapon Kingdom: Connect prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Idea Factory. Published by Idea Factory International. Released on 9/7/2023. Available on PC. Genres: Action, Casual, RPG, Strategy.

The party game that weaponizes friendship: Dokapon Kingdom Connect is a slow-burn board-RPG hybrid that genuinely rewards the kind of people who enjoy holding a grudge across multiple sessions.

I came into Dokapon Kingdom: Connect fully prepared to write it off. A board game with RPG stats dressed up as a party title is not my usual territory, and the PS2-era visuals do nothing to sell it on a first pass. But here is the thing: once you are sitting across from three real humans and someone steals your deed to a town you spent six turns earning, this game gets its hooks in and refuses to let go. The structure is straightforward enough on paper. You spin a roulette to determine movement, traverse a node-based map across seven continents, fight monsters in turn-based combat, secure town deeds, collect taxes, and try to end the game wealthier than everyone else. There are five game modes to choose from: Normal, Story, Shopping Race, Kill Race, and Town Race, which gives the group some flexibility on session length and win conditions. Character creation lets you pick from three starter classes - Warrior, Magician, and Thief - each with distinct stat profiles and playstyles, and there are eight additional advanced job classes to unlock through leveling your job rank. Warriors get strength boosts, Thieves can rob items from players they pass, and Magicians fire off two field spells per turn outside of combat. The job system is the actual strategic layer here and it rewards players who think about class synergy rather than just grinding levels. Where it gets complicated is the RNG. The spinner is unforgiving, and some early sessions can feel like you are getting deleted off the board before you have any agency. The AI in single-player mode is well-documented to cheat at a fairly aggressive level, and the rubber-banding mechanics get worse with smaller player counts, making solo play a rough experience. The honest recommendation is that this game needs three to four real humans to function properly. The online mode, added specifically for this Connect release, is the most important feature of the whole package. Games can be saved mid-session and resumed later, and if someone disconnects, an auto-room is created so players can rejoin - which matters because these sessions can run long, sometimes days across multiple sittings in Story Mode. The online player pool is not massive, but a dedicated Discord community has organized regular lobbies, so finding a game is doable with some effort. The community on Steam has responded warmly, with the game sitting at a Very Positive rating across hundreds of reviews, which tells you the audience that found it is genuinely enthusiastic. Critics were more split: the complaint you will hear consistently is that the pacing drags and that the onboarding is too steep for a casual couch gaming night. Both are fair. This is not a title you fire up when people show up unannounced. It rewards planning a session with people who are actually invested, willing to read the UI, and not going to rage-quit after one bad spinner roll. If that sounds like your friend group, the combination of class-based strategy, property economics, and deliberate PvP sabotage creates genuinely memorable moments that most party games never come close to. The visuals are dated, the AI is best avoided, and the pacing will test your patience if you are used to tight, fast competitive loops. But Dokapon Kingdom: Connect fills a niche that almost nothing else on PC does, and the people who get it really get it. Fred, Scout Team

Dokapon Kingdom: Connect
ActionCasualRPGStrategy

Dokapon Kingdom: Connect

Sep 7, 2023Idea FactoryIdea Factory International
GamerScout Says

The party game that weaponizes friendship: Dokapon Kingdom Connect is a slow-burn board-RPG hybrid that genuinely rewards the kind of people who enjoy holding a grudge across multiple sessions.

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Screenshots & Media

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About Dokapon Kingdom: Connect

I came into Dokapon Kingdom: Connect fully prepared to write it off. A board game with RPG stats dressed up as a party title is not my usual territory, and the PS2-era visuals do nothing to sell it on a first pass. But here is the thing: once you are sitting across from three real humans and someone steals your deed to a town you spent six turns earning, this game gets its hooks in and refuses to let go. The structure is straightforward enough on paper. You spin a roulette to determine movement, traverse a node-based map across seven continents, fight monsters in turn-based combat, secure town deeds, collect taxes, and try to end the game wealthier than everyone else. There are five game modes to choose from: Normal, Story, Shopping Race, Kill Race, and Town Race, which gives the group some flexibility on session length and win conditions. Character creation lets you pick from three starter classes - Warrior, Magician, and Thief - each with distinct stat profiles and playstyles, and there are eight additional advanced job classes to unlock through leveling your job rank. Warriors get strength boosts, Thieves can rob items from players they pass, and Magicians fire off two field spells per turn outside of combat. The job system is the actual strategic layer here and it rewards players who think about class synergy rather than just grinding levels. Where it gets complicated is the RNG. The spinner is unforgiving, and some early sessions can feel like you are getting deleted off the board before you have any agency. The AI in single-player mode is well-documented to cheat at a fairly aggressive level, and the rubber-banding mechanics get worse with smaller player counts, making solo play a rough experience. The honest recommendation is that this game needs three to four real humans to function properly. The online mode, added specifically for this Connect release, is the most important feature of the whole package. Games can be saved mid-session and resumed later, and if someone disconnects, an auto-room is created so players can rejoin - which matters because these sessions can run long, sometimes days across multiple sittings in Story Mode. The online player pool is not massive, but a dedicated Discord community has organized regular lobbies, so finding a game is doable with some effort. The community on Steam has responded warmly, with the game sitting at a Very Positive rating across hundreds of reviews, which tells you the audience that found it is genuinely enthusiastic. Critics were more split: the complaint you will hear consistently is that the pacing drags and that the onboarding is too steep for a casual couch gaming night. Both are fair. This is not a title you fire up when people show up unannounced. It rewards planning a session with people who are actually invested, willing to read the UI, and not going to rage-quit after one bad spinner roll. If that sounds like your friend group, the combination of class-based strategy, property economics, and deliberate PvP sabotage creates genuinely memorable moments that most party games never come close to. The visuals are dated, the AI is best avoided, and the pacing will test your patience if you are used to tight, fast competitive loops. But Dokapon Kingdom: Connect fills a niche that almost nothing else on PC does, and the people who get it really get it. Fred, Scout Team

Tags

singleplayermultiplayerpvponline-pvplocal-multiplayerlocal-coopachievementscontroller-supporttrading-cardscloud-savestier:indieBoard Game RPGProperty ManagementJob Class SystemSession-BasedRNG-HeavyDeliberate PvPDiscord-CommunityCouch Co-op AlternativeLong-Session

System Requirements

Minimum

OS
Windows 8 (64-bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
Dedicated GPU with 2GB of VRAM
Processor
Intel i5 2.3GHz or AMD A9 2.9GHz
Sound Card
DirectSound (DirectX) compatible sound card

Recommended

OS
Windows 10 (64-bit) / Windows 11 (64-bit)
Memory
4 GB RAM
Graphics
GeForce GTX 970 or AMD RX 560 2GB equivalent
Processor
Intel CPU Core i7 3770 or above
Sound Card
DirectSound (DirectX) compatible sound card

Reviews & Ratings

No ratings available

Game Info

Developer
Idea Factory
Publisher
Idea Factory International
Release Date
Sep 7, 2023

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