

If the Digimon fell asleep and the light was never turned off, its overall condition (an unviewable stat) would decrease, and its chances of a high-power evolution would decrease. The sixth icon (second on the bottom row) toggled the light. Leaving droppings uncleaned for too long would cause the Digimon to become ill. The fifth Icon (the first on the bottom row) cleaned up the Digimon's droppings. Battling too many times in one day could "kill" a Digimon (see Digimon Mainframe below). Whether the Digimon won or lost, it was still susceptible to acquiring an injury during battle. The one who fired the double attack on the fourth turn dodged the other Digimon's attack and was declared the winner. The two Digimon would exchange blows three times, then one would fire a double attack the other Digimon would fire a single attack. Once activated, the owner could link up to another owner's Digimon and begin a battle. If it didn't make this quota, the Digimon would only lose a pound and not regain any strength. If the owner's Digimon hit three out of five, it would lose one pound and its strength would increase. The shadow Digimon would attempt to block, either upwards or downwards. The owner would then push either the top or middle buttons, and the Digimon would fire an attack either upwards or downwards, respectively. In shadow boxing, the owner's Digimon would appear on the right, and a duplicate "shadow" would appear on the left.

Digimon can eat an unlimited number of vitamins. Once the Digimon reaches the Rookie stage, it will be able to eat far more than its hunger level requires before getting full. However, feeding the pet either of these would increase the Digimon's weight, affecting digivolution possibilities and battle outcomes. The meat decreased the pet's hunger, and the vitamin increased its strength and energy. If a Digimon had no energy in its energy bar, it would be unable to link up and battle. The user can check the pet's age, weight, strength, hunger, and energy stats here. The Digimon had several functions that allowed the owner to take care of the pet.

#Digimon v pet ver 5 manual#
I doubt that there is a colored manual for version 2 and, if it does exist, I highly doubt that we will ever see it U.UĪnyway, thank you both very much for helping me invest this. So I deduce that my version is not only the European one, but also a specific edition was made for Spain (possibly it would be the European version adding the colored manual).Ģ- Version 2 arrived in Spain, but only version 1 contained the colored manual. However, the other one, the color manual, is only in Spanish (I'm from Spain). It's funny, because the typical instruction manual (the purple one, which in version 2 is black) for my Digital Monster is in several languages, I imagine the same as yours.
#Digimon v pet ver 5 update#
If so, I will have to update my other thread: ( ) Versions 1, 2, 3, 4 and 5 were released in America. Versions 3, 4 and 5 were not released in Europe. I'm pretty sure the ones I bought in shops in the UK only had the purple manual and not the coloured one.īottom-left: HK version 5 (written in Chinese+English) (Maybe the weak version is more recent, the shop sold out of strong grey before yellow, and had restocked the grey already.) Mine was grey (weak) and his was yellow (strong), but then the yellow one I bought months later was a weak one. IIRC, me and my brother bought our very first ones in the same UK shop at the same time, and we somehow got one of each. Unfortunately, the "strong English" and "weak English" ver1 both appeared in both the US and Europe. I'm not sure which versions appeared in the US. But some of them had Japanese menus, I think versions 4-5, while the US and Australian ones all had English menus. Versions 1-5 appeared in wider Asia with the same chain as the US (short chain with two large rings) and the same cardboard box as the US. Yes, the original Digital Monster in Europe (fully sealed plastic pack, and the long chain with one large ring) was only versions 1 and 2.
