
Nintendo 3DS Pokemon Japanese Import Game
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Nintendo 3DS, Japanese import, Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Magnagate and the Infinity Labyrinth. This is the domestic Japan release, not the North American localization, which means all text is original Japanese and the cartridge is region-coded for Japanese hardware. The cover art shows Pikachu and a crew of Pokémon against a swirling blue portal, and that image is the version Japan got first before any Western marketing touched it.
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon as a series had been running since the mid-2000s, starting with Red and Blue Rescue Team on Game Boy Advance and DS in 2005 and 2006. By the time Magnagate arrived in late 2012, the formula was well-established: roguelike dungeon crawling, player-as-Pokémon narrative, procedurally generated floors. What made this entry different was the 3DS hardware itself. The camera feature let players scan real-world circular objects to generate dungeon gates, which was a mechanic that only worked in the 3DS build. It never appeared in a mainline Pokémon dungeon title before or after. The North American release followed in 2013 under the title Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Gates to Infinity, dropping some of the Japanese text density. Collectors tracking the import version have always been working with a narrower pool than the domestic US cartridge.
The Japanese cart preserves the original tone before localization softened the Bittercold's existential weight.
This copy comes with the case and the cartridge. The Japanese packaging is intact and the case insert carries the original domestic Japan artwork and CERO rating label, not a retrofit or reproduction sleeve. For play, you need a Japanese 3DS or a region-unlocked unit. The cartridge slot connector on the 3DS card is standard size, but the software lock is hard. Worth confirming the system you have before checkout. Look at the cartridge label edge under good light and check that the print registration is clean with no ghosting on the Pikachu art. Reprints and bootlegs tend to show color bleed at the label border.
OWNER VERIFY: Confirm cartridge is the authentic Japanese domestic release (CERO-rated packaging, Nintendo HAL-stamped label) and not a reproduction.
The Japanese cart preserves the original tone before localization softened the Bittercold's existential weight.
The Nintendo Archive
This is part of Nintendo's 10s run, the era that built the shop's back wall. Nintendo shipped cartridges, plush, promotional oddities, and packaging that most buyers threw out on the way to the game. What survived, mostly by accident, ends up here. Every piece is cleaned, photographed, and listed one at a time. Nothing on the archive shelf is a duplicate.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
Inspected in Las Vegas on June 2026. Each piece is a single unit, sold as inspected.
KEEP IT CLASSIC
This nintendo 3ds pokemon japanese import game originates from the 10s era[01], represents Nintendo[02]'s output, . Each piece in the shop is a single unit, inspected by hand in Las Vegas before listing. The data manifest to the right records the fields on file for this lot; where a field is empty it has been omitted rather than guessed.
INSPECTED IN STORE / 707 E FREMONT, LAS VEGAS
- VENDOR
- Nintendo
- ERA
- 10s
We need a @flexluger_ shirt with the same design except it's him.
14 days from delivery. Buyer pays return shipping. In-store purchases are exchange or credit only.
Every piece in the shop is a single unit. Once it is gone, it is gone.
707 E Fremont Street, Suite 1170, ground floor, east side of Downtown Container Park.














