

You could probably accomplish it at a lower level and with possibly fewer dragons, but if you want a mostly guaranteed victory, this is about the way to do it.

Of course, you probably don't need to go all the way to 10 level 9999 dragons. Don't forget to pass the Weaker Enemy bills to drop his level back down. and good equipment (even if not leveled completely through the Item World), you should be able to take down a level 4000 Baal without too much problem. So, using a combination of Stronger Enemy bills and throwing dragons into each other, capture progressively badder dragons until you eventually capture a level 9999 dragon. I've never personally tried this strategy, so I don't remember the general threshold that you should be shooting for - I seem to recall it being around 500-1000 levels higher as being safe. Provided you weaken the target a bit, it's possible to capture a stronger dragon with a weaker dragon. You have some at level 4500, and you have access to the Beauty Palace stage which has big dragons.

So to do this in the quickest fashion will probably involve just getting bigger and badder dragons until you get the biggest and baddest dragons. Of course, you don't have such right now. The fastest way that is least time consuming is to just use extremely levelled characters. All PS3 models work with most PS1 games (although WipEout 3 does seem to have issues), and they upscale them to run in resolutions suitable for monitors, but again you'll need a component to VGA adapter. It might be an overkill but if you don't have a PC capable of emulating it might be cheaper than upgrading to a new PC. I believe this will get you the best looking results.Ī more expensive one is getting a PS3. You won't need a too powerful PC to emulate PS1, and the only hardware you might want to get is a DualShock-like PC controller or a PS1/PS2 DualShock and a USB adapter. The cheaper one would be to emulate the game on a PC. You can try using converters from composite/s-video to VGA but this will look even worse on a PC monitor. While converting component signal to VGA is possible through adapters (with varying results), you'd have to keep in mind only the PS2 supports component output, and you may encounter some issues when trying to play PS1 games through it. On either console, you'd need a PS1 memory cards to save game progress.Ĭonnecting to a PC monitor is a separate issue. Looking over this compatibility list it looks like you'd be OK with playing them on a PS2. PS1 Compatibility with PS2 is almost flawless, with the exception of some games. Picking between PS1 and PS2 will ultimately come down to whatever it costs you to buy either, while the PS2 has some filters to make PS1 look smoother and load a bit faster, it won't make too much of a difference, in my opinion.
