
The best way to elaborate on his personality is to take your average gutsy Japanese hero, give him triple espressos until he gets sick to his stomach, continue feeding them to him until he develops a tolerance, and let him loose on an unsuspecting world. He is, to put it bluntly, an absolute idiot. First of all, you have Marcus Damon, your main character. It would be remiss of anyone who reviews this game to not go over the characters. There are even a few plot twists that occur as you progress, making the plot undoubtedly one of the most refined elements of this game.

That's basically the gist of the story fortunately, it leaves a lot of room for the writers, as all manner of things can and does happen within that context. As you progress, you'll meet up with your friends and battle alongside them against your foes. As the game begins, a new invasion has begun, and you're sent on a quest to discover why this has happened and put an end to it by turning all of the renegade Digimon back into Digi-Eggs.

You're Marcus Damon, a Digimon tamer and a member of the DATS, a squad of enforcers that polices the real world for invasions from the Digital World, the place from which all Digimon originate. We can, however, blame them for the atrocious quality of the game. We can't really blame the creators of Digimon World: Data Squad for trying to spin off their popular series into a PlayStation 2 console game, so that you can spend your time in front of the television having fun with the characters you know and love. One stellar example is the Pokémon series you can buy action figures, lunchboxes, toothbrushes, watches - everything you could possibly need to surround yourself and inundate your life with the characters from the original video game series.

Whenever there's a hot property that kids are going for, the producers of that property are going to try to spin it off into as much merchandising as possible.
