---
product_id: 1542681
title: "Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked"
brand: "nintendo"
price: "902 kr"
currency: DKK
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
category: "Nintendo"
url: https://www.desertcart.dk/products/1542681-shin-megami-tensei-devil-survivor-overclocked
store_origin: DK
region: Denmark
---

# Tactical turn-based battles Exclusive 8th chapter added New voice-acted dialogue Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked

**Brand:** nintendo
**Price:** 902 kr
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🔥 Outsmart demons, outlast lockdown — Tokyo’s fate is in your hands! 🎲

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked by nintendo
- **How much does it cost?** 902 kr with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.dk](https://www.desertcart.dk/products/1542681-shin-megami-tensei-devil-survivor-overclocked)

## Best For

- nintendo enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted nintendo brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Immersive Storytelling:** Experience a gripping narrative with fresh voice-acted dialogue that brings characters to life.
- • **Master Tactical Combat:** Engage in deep, strategic turn-based battles that challenge your every move.
- • **Exclusive Content Unlock:** Dive into an all-new eighth chapter, expanding the original story and gameplay.
- • **Demon Fusion & Collection:** Customize your team by fusing and summoning demons, crafting unbeatable strategies.
- • **Dynamic Time-Driven Gameplay:** Navigate a 24-hour lockdown in Tokyo where every choice and timing shapes your fate.

## Overview

Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked is a critically acclaimed tactical JRPG for Nintendo 3DS featuring an expanded storyline with an exclusive eighth chapter, voice-acted dialogue, and challenging turn-based combat. Set in a demon-infested lockdown of Tokyo, players must strategically navigate time-sensitive choices, fuse demons, and battle to survive in a richly immersive, high-stakes environment.

## Description

Expanded and enhanced, SMT: Devil Survivor Overclocked for Nintendo 3DS builds upon what many considered one of the best RPGs of 2009. The player is presented with a novel premise: Tokyo is in full lockdown, the government's swift, coldblooded response to a surprise demon invasion. While you and your friends must solve the nature of the interdimensional rift through which the horrific creatures are entering your world, saving the world is not your highest priority; staying alive, on the other hand, is.

Review: "Peaceful days have died," so let's have a great time. - It's a great JRPG, a great SRPG, a great SMT game, and a lovely improvement over the original DS version! Most of the features from Devil Survivor 2 made their way into this upgrade of the first game (except DeSu2's Fate system, sadly) and it really helps. I used to think, before these recent remakes, that DeSu had the better story while DeSu2 had the better gameplay - this remake evens the playing field a bit. As such, this game combines great gameplay with useful features/additions and a great atmosphere-driven story with interesting characters. That said, since this is a Shin Megami Tensei spin-off, be warned: it's difficult. Patience is not only a virtue but a must with these games. Certain monsters can and will one-hit you, and some bosses will need to be repeated until you get your strategy down. That said, the game is really fun once you get over that learning curve, and the story and characters really help push you along in that regard. The game is set in a modern-day Tokyo, where you and your companions have just been trapped in a government lockdown/quarantine of the area. You quickly learn that this has to do with the demons you discover, and in fact acquire through strange portable electronic devices (called "COMPs," but clearly resemble a Nintendo DS/3DS) that are able to summon them. Communication is severed, demons start causing chaos, people start to panic, and your party finds themselves simply trying to survive day-to-day. This leads you to finding the cause of the lockdown, the origin of the demons, the COMPs, etc. and your decisions ultimately decide how, or even if, you try to fix things and end the lockdown or not. There are quite a few endings as a result that are, again in typical SMT fashion, often alignment-based (e.g. chaos, law/order, neutrality, etc.). You can even get a bad ending, but that's easy to avoid if you pay much attention at all. The gameplay is divided into two parts: non-combant and combat. Non-combat gameplay has a list of areas you can go to in the lockdown, with people you can talk to or events/battles to partake in. This all happens according to a 24-hour clock, meaning certain people can only be talked to at certain times and battles likewise can be time-limited. As such, you can leave characters to die if you know in advance they are in danger at a specific time and refuse to help them out. Your choices in this regard, i.e. who you talk to and such, will help shape and determine the course that your game takes and the final route and ending you get. So a general idea is to talk to plenty of people early on until you have an idea of who you agree with and ultimately want to help achieve their goals the most. And don't worry - you're not locked into a decision or anything until much later in the game, and it's black-and-white when you do finally decide what route you'll take. And also out of combat you get to buy demons (via "Auction" or the compendium of your past/current demons), fuse them (two demons become a third demon, with you losing the two you fused), changing up your teams/skills, etc. Combat gameplay takes place in individual skirmishes or fights that are made up of a local area, overlaid by a grid that determines movement. The flow is turn-based, with each player character (up to 4 at a time) and enemy character taking turns according to their speed. So you don't control all of your characters at once before ending your turn, and you don't get to choose which character of your goes when. This adds a need to strategize, of course. Once your character engages in combat with another, the gameplay momentarily departs from traditional grid-based SRPG games as it opens into a turn-based JRPG combat where you choose the actions for your character and their demons (up to two) and it happens at the same time as the enemy's actions - chronologically carried out by each individual's Agility stat. The actual fighting involves a very interesting (even if sometimes frustrating) system of elements, resistances, and "extra turns" (i.e. extra actions, usually gained through critical hits or hitting an enemy's elemental weakness). This is something you'll definitely have to get a handle on in order to get through the game without rage-quitting. While it's a game where you absolutely need to have patience and be willing to learn the ins-and-outs of combat, I would recommend it to anyone that likes RPGs, JRPGs, SRPGs, or even other SMT games.
Review: More refined RPG love from Atlus - As the title says, publisher and developer Atlus has once again created an entertaining, if not somewhat inaccessible, entry into the JRPG category. Shin Megami Tensei is synonymous with quality for the most part, and if you have experience with strategy and the series in general, there is a lot to appreciate here. If, on the other hand, you are planning on making this your introduction point, I would suggest Persona 3 FES, which is a little more forgiving than Devil Survivor. Strange words that mean "fire magic" or "heal magic" abound, and while the game does a decent job at describing all this ridiculous lingo, newer players might find themselves bogged down in the menus and jargon. Also, this is a remake (I hesitate to use the word port) of basically the same game that released on the original DS back in 2009. If you have played that, there isn't a lot more to see here. 3D isn't even fully utilized, and the voice acting that has been tacked on probably isn't going to win any awards. But if you didn't get a chance to play the first go-around and you enjoy challenging strategy JRPGs, I would certainly recommend this game to you.

## Features

- Includes an all-new eighth chapter
- Features new voice-acted dialogue
- Battle an assortment of demons in tactical, turn-based battles

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B002I09286 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #16,245 in Video Games ( See Top 100 in Video Games ) #127 in Nintendo 3DS & 2DS Games |
| Compatible Video Game Console Models | Nintendo 2DS, Nintendo 3DS, Nintendo 3DS XL, Nintendo DS, Nintendo DS Lite, Nintendo DSi, Nintendo DSi XL |
| Computer Platform | Nintendo 3DS |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (377) |
| Date First Available | January 26, 2011 |
| Department | All Ages |
| Genre | Role-Playing |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | Yes |
| Item Weight | 1.06 ounces |
| Item model number | DS-30000-6 |
| Language | English |
| Manufacturer | Atlus USA |
| Number of Players | 1 |
| Product Dimensions | 0.01 x 4.33 x 4.33 inches; 1.06 ounces |
| Publication Date | August 23, 2011 |
| Rated | Teen |
| Release date | August 23, 2011 |
| Type of item | Video Game |
| UPC | 730865300006 |

## Images

![Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/815uewDXaPL.jpg)
![Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51-6EzrpHoL.jpg)
![Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51f0Rh02DKL.jpg)
![Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51q0VCZ76gL.jpg)
![Shin Megami Tensei: Devil Survivor Overclocked - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/512LmkKmDJL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ "Peaceful days have died," so let's have a great time.
*by S***V on August 18, 2015*

It's a great JRPG, a great SRPG, a great SMT game, and a lovely improvement over the original DS version! Most of the features from Devil Survivor 2 made their way into this upgrade of the first game (except DeSu2's Fate system, sadly) and it really helps. I used to think, before these recent remakes, that DeSu had the better story while DeSu2 had the better gameplay - this remake evens the playing field a bit. As such, this game combines great gameplay with useful features/additions and a great atmosphere-driven story with interesting characters. That said, since this is a Shin Megami Tensei spin-off, be warned: it's difficult. Patience is not only a virtue but a must with these games. Certain monsters can and will one-hit you, and some bosses will need to be repeated until you get your strategy down. That said, the game is really fun once you get over that learning curve, and the story and characters really help push you along in that regard. The game is set in a modern-day Tokyo, where you and your companions have just been trapped in a government lockdown/quarantine of the area. You quickly learn that this has to do with the demons you discover, and in fact acquire through strange portable electronic devices (called "COMPs," but clearly resemble a Nintendo DS/3DS) that are able to summon them. Communication is severed, demons start causing chaos, people start to panic, and your party finds themselves simply trying to survive day-to-day. This leads you to finding the cause of the lockdown, the origin of the demons, the COMPs, etc. and your decisions ultimately decide how, or even if, you try to fix things and end the lockdown or not. There are quite a few endings as a result that are, again in typical SMT fashion, often alignment-based (e.g. chaos, law/order, neutrality, etc.). You can even get a bad ending, but that's easy to avoid if you pay much attention at all. The gameplay is divided into two parts: non-combant and combat. Non-combat gameplay has a list of areas you can go to in the lockdown, with people you can talk to or events/battles to partake in. This all happens according to a 24-hour clock, meaning certain people can only be talked to at certain times and battles likewise can be time-limited. As such, you can leave characters to die if you know in advance they are in danger at a specific time and refuse to help them out. Your choices in this regard, i.e. who you talk to and such, will help shape and determine the course that your game takes and the final route and ending you get. So a general idea is to talk to plenty of people early on until you have an idea of who you agree with and ultimately want to help achieve their goals the most. And don't worry - you're not locked into a decision or anything until much later in the game, and it's black-and-white when you do finally decide what route you'll take. And also out of combat you get to buy demons (via "Auction" or the compendium of your past/current demons), fuse them (two demons become a third demon, with you losing the two you fused), changing up your teams/skills, etc. Combat gameplay takes place in individual skirmishes or fights that are made up of a local area, overlaid by a grid that determines movement. The flow is turn-based, with each player character (up to 4 at a time) and enemy character taking turns according to their speed. So you don't control all of your characters at once before ending your turn, and you don't get to choose which character of your goes when. This adds a need to strategize, of course. Once your character engages in combat with another, the gameplay momentarily departs from traditional grid-based SRPG games as it opens into a turn-based JRPG combat where you choose the actions for your character and their demons (up to two) and it happens at the same time as the enemy's actions - chronologically carried out by each individual's Agility stat. The actual fighting involves a very interesting (even if sometimes frustrating) system of elements, resistances, and "extra turns" (i.e. extra actions, usually gained through critical hits or hitting an enemy's elemental weakness). This is something you'll definitely have to get a handle on in order to get through the game without rage-quitting. While it's a game where you absolutely need to have patience and be willing to learn the ins-and-outs of combat, I would recommend it to anyone that likes RPGs, JRPGs, SRPGs, or even other SMT games.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ More refined RPG love from Atlus
*by M***. on April 8, 2013*

As the title says, publisher and developer Atlus has once again created an entertaining, if not somewhat inaccessible, entry into the JRPG category. Shin Megami Tensei is synonymous with quality for the most part, and if you have experience with strategy and the series in general, there is a lot to appreciate here. If, on the other hand, you are planning on making this your introduction point, I would suggest Persona 3 FES, which is a little more forgiving than Devil Survivor. Strange words that mean "fire magic" or "heal magic" abound, and while the game does a decent job at describing all this ridiculous lingo, newer players might find themselves bogged down in the menus and jargon. Also, this is a remake (I hesitate to use the word port) of basically the same game that released on the original DS back in 2009. If you have played that, there isn't a lot more to see here. 3D isn't even fully utilized, and the voice acting that has been tacked on probably isn't going to win any awards. But if you didn't get a chance to play the first go-around and you enjoy challenging strategy JRPGs, I would certainly recommend this game to you.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Review From a Non-RPG Gamer
*by C***N on September 27, 2011*

This review is coming from a 32 year old woman who prefers simple side-scrollers like Mario. I usually don't like RPG's, but this game had such great reviews I decided to give it a try. Plus there were a limited number of 3DS games out there at the time and I wanted to expand my library. Firstly, you should know that this game barely utilizes the 3D function of the 3DS. It is only used in the opening scene and when you fuse demons. I found this very disappointing at first, but the sheer awesomeness of the game soon made me forget about the 3D. I don't play video games much now that I'm an adult and don't have a ton of free time, but this game has me ADDICTED! I haven't been this addicted since Pokemon first came out. The story is fantastic and keeps you engaged, they teach you the controls gradually so it's not too complicated to learn, and the demon auction and fusion keeps the 'addictive collector' in me satiated. The voice acting is terrific; usually you don't get this much dialogue in a game. I like that you don't have to read all of the dialogue if you don't want to; just sit back and let the characters talk. I will say there is a learning curve as with most games. After having to re-start 2 times already, I've learned to save my progress multiple times just in case I make a stupid decision when fusing demons or bought the wrong demons or something. It's a pain to start over after putting in 8 hours of gameplay. It can be easy to 'paint yourself into a corner' so to speak if you don't know what you're doing at first. So I hope my review helps you decide if you want to purchase this game. Really, I don't think you can go wrong with this one!

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*Product available on Desertcart Denmark*
*Store origin: DK*
*Last updated: 2026-05-31*