Fortune Street

Fortune Street (also known as Boom Street in Europe and Australia) is a Wii game developed by Square Enix. It is a follow-up to the Nintendo DS game Itadaki Street DS and is the first Itadaki Street title that was released outside of Japan.

Gameplay
Four players (excluding the play system in Tutorial mode, where only three characters play) go around the board and buy shops. Some squares involve special attributes, such as Take-a-break squares (when a character lands there, all of his or her shops will close until the player's next turn) and Venture (like a Chance space in Monopoly) squares. Players also have the ability to invest money in their own shops when they land on them. If the player manages to get all four suits (heart, spade, diamond, and club), and return to the Bank (also the starting space) they can get a promotion. When a player gets a promotion, they get money for their salary, a shop bonus which is based off of how much their shops are worth, and how many they own, as well as a promotional bonus (extra money given to the player that increases as they level up). The player's level also goes up when they get a promotion. There are two different ways to play, the Easy rules and the Standard rules. In the Standard rules, there are districts on the board and a simplified stock market. If the player has more than one shop in a district, both shops will expand, meaning the shop's value, prices, and Max. Capital (the amount of money that can be invested into a shop) will all increase. In Easy mode, there are no stocks and no districts (shops will expand if the player owns multiple shops next to each other), making the game more accessible for new players.

Characters
All twenty-five characters from Itadaki Street DS return, with the addition of four new characters for a grand total of twenty-nine. Players can also use and customize their Miis in the game.

Miis are the only playable characters in single-player mode. In multiplayer, players can only choose between the Mario and Dragon Quest characters. Each computer character is ranked from S, A, B, C, D in terms of difficulty (S being the highest, and D being the lowest) which means each computer character has a predetermined difficulty.

Other

 * Mii

Non-Playable

 * Heal Slime
 * Dancing Jewels
 * She-Slime
 * Metal Slime


 * Lakitu
 * 8-bit Goomba
 * 8-bit Koopa
 * 8-bit Buzzy Beetle
 * Toads
 * Yoshis
 * Shy Guy
 * Pianta
 * Noki
 * Boo
 * Bob-omb
 * Bullet Bill
 * Chain Chomp
 * Luma (species)
 * Dry Bones (species)
 * Thwomp

Mario series

 * Mario Stadium
 * Starship Mario
 * Mario Circuit
 * Yoshi's Island
 * Delfino Plaza
 * Peach's Castle
 * Super Mario Bros World 1-1 (unlockable)
 * Bowser's Castle (unlockable)
 * Good Egg Galaxy (unlockable)

Dragon Quest series

 * Castle Trodain
 * The Observatory
 * Ghost Ship
 * Slimenia
 * Mt Magmageddon
 * The Robbin' Hood Ruins
 * Alefgard (unlockable)
 * The Colossuss (unlockable)
 * Alltrades Abbey (unlockable)

Minigames

 * Round The Blocks - This is essentially a game of slots. The player can get three 7s in a row and get 500 gold coins (the game's currency, shortened as gold or simply g ) times their level, get three warp pipes or wings (depending on the board, Mario or Dragon Quest) in a row to warp, three stock icons to get a set amount of stocks in one district if playing standard mode, three Suit Yourself Cards (these are like wild cards; they can act as any suit the player does not have. Owning one Suit Yourself Card means the player could only collect three suits and still get promoted) in a row to get one of the afore-mentioned cards, or get 3 mushrooms or Slimes (depending on the board) to get 50g times the players level.
 * Memory Block - The player chooses from a number of boxes to get either a 1-Up mushroom, a card with a coin which gives the player gold, a Suit Yourself Card, 5 stocks in a district or a card with Bowser's face on it which makes their shops shrink by a standardized percentage.
 * Dart of Gold - The player throws a dart at a wheel that has different items that can help the player(s) or hurt them. Once the player throws the dart and hits an item (a treasure chest containing lots of gold, a gold coin worth less gold, stocks, a Suit Yourself Card), throw another dart at a diferent wheel that has all the player's faces on it, as well as a space that has everyone's faces on it. If the dart hits one player's space then they get the prize/punishment but if the dart hits the space with all the faces, then everyone gets the prize/punishment.
 * Slurpodome - Players chose different colored Slimes to see which one will make it to the end first. Whoever gets their first wins the most money (100g times their level), however since players collect coins along they way, any players with surviving Slimes will get some money (never more than about 50 g each)

References to Other Games

 * Super Mario Bros.: The World 1-1 stage is based off the same level from this game. Additionally, the main theme of this board is a remix of the overworld theme of this game.
 * Super Mario Bros. 3: During the score tallying screens, a remix of the original Toad's House theme can be heard. A remix of the Pipe Maze map theme also plays in the stock menu.
 * Super Mario World: A remix of the final boss theme is available. Remixes of the athletic theme are heard in a variety of the available mini-games.
 * Super Mario Kart: The Mario Circuit board stage's theme is a remixed version of SNES Mario Circuit.
 * Super Mario World 2: Yoshi's Island: A remix of the title screen music for this game plays as the main theme for the Yoshi's Island board.
 * Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars: The main theme of the Peach's Castle board is a remix of the Peach's Castle theme from this game.
 * Super Mario Sunshine: Delfino Plaza returns as a Mario series board. A remix of its original theme is the main theme of this board.
 * Wario World: Wario mentions the Black Jewel in one of his quotes, who was the main antagonist of that game.
 * Mario Superstar Baseball: The Mario Stadium returns as one of the Mario series boards.
 * New Super Mario Bros.: A remix of the Bowser's Castle theme can be heard at certain boards. Gaining a level with a Mario series character causes a remix of the level complete theme from New Super Mario Bros. to be played.
 * Super Mario Galaxy: The Good Egg Galaxy returns as a Mario series board.
 * Mario Party DS: If a player draws venture card #88, all other players swap positions. This is a reference to the Happening Space in Kamek's Library that will occasionally cause Kamek to cast "Kamek Spell No. 88", which has the same effect.
 * Mario Kart Wii: The Mario Circuit board resembles the Mario Circuit from this game.
 * New Super Mario Bros. Wii: The Toad House mini-games feature a remix of the Toad House theme from this game.
 * Super Mario Galaxy 2: Starship Mario returns as a Mario series board.
 * Mario Sports Mix: The victory animations for the Mario series characters resemble the animations from this game.