Naruto: Ninja Destiny

Naruto: Ninja Destiny is the first 3D Naruto game to come to the Nintendo DS.

Gameplay
It has sixteen characters ranging from Gaara and Rock Lee to one-tailed Naruto and Level 2 Cursed Seal form Sasuke. The player can battle against the computer, play against your friends wirelessly, enjoy a single player story mode, or single player mode where you fight several computer-controlled opponents. The story mode goes from the Neji/Naruto fight in the Chūnin Exams until the dispute between the three Sannin. Two sequels to this game were later released.

Stages

 * Hokage Rock
 * Sasuke's Training Grounds
 * Chunin Exams Finals
 * Forest of Death
 * Three-Way Deadlock
 * Tanzaku Quarters
 * Hidden Sand Village
 * Leaf Village Forest
 * The Final Valley (US and Japanese version only)

Trivia

 * In the US and European version, Sasuke's outfit is his black outfit from the Chūnin Exams Finals, but in the Japanese version, he's in his casual blue shirt and white shorts.
 * Gaara and Temari also have their outfits from the Sasuke Retrieval Mission in the Japanese version, but in the US and European versions, they have their outfits from the Chūnin Exams.
 * Sasuke, Gaara and Temari would later have their outfits from the Japanese version in all versions of the sequel.
 * The location "Sasuke's training grounds" is misspelled "Sauke's training grounds".
 * Even though the game takes place during the Chūnin Exams, Shikamaru has his flak jacket in all versions despite him not getting it until he became a Chūnin.
 * Naruto is the only character in the game with more than one jutsu.
 * In 2006, before the US version of the game came out, low-budget video game company Tommo, Inc. had exclusive distribution rights to sell this game (along with the Japanese versions of Ninja Council 2 European Version, Ninja Council 3, Ultimate Ninja Heroes, Jump Super Stars and Jump Ultimate Stars) in North America through retailers such as Best Buy, GameStop and Fry's Electronics. Many small business also received minimal stock of these games. Tommo, Inc. took it upon themselves to sell the games to major retailers with a sticker stating that Japanese is the native language. It is possible that Tommo did this through gray marketing.