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Virtual Console Mondays: June 4, 2007

by Steven Rodriguez - June 5, 2007, 5:02 pm
Total comments: 56

Zelda II headlines the arrival of Virtual Console's 100th game. How does it and the others released this week stack up?

It's been almost seven months since Nintendo launched the Wii and the Virtual Console service, and this week sees the 100th game available for the service. That's impressive compared to the competition: Xbox Live Arcade—which has been around for a year and a half—sports around 60 titles, and the PS3's PlayStation Network service has less than 30.

So what about the four games released this week on VC? That's news in and of itself. It's been a while since Nintendo let loose more than three games. It may have released the fourth just to get to the 100 mark, so there's no telling if we'll go back to the usual triple play next week.

Here are our recommendations for the centennial set.



Zelda II: The Adventure of Link

SystemVirtual Console - Nintendo Entertainment System

Cost500 Points
Players1
ControllersWii Remote,Wii Nunchuk,GameCube
ESRB RatingEveryone
ReleasedSep 1988

Zelda II: The Adventure of Link on the NES veers far from the first game's roots. Presented primarily from a side-scrolling perspective, the sequel is decidedly more action-oriented with rudimentary swordplay mechanics, platforming, and more upgradeable statistics. Players venture through a fairly linear overworld to reach side-scrolling temples (dungeons), caves, and towns to claim the Triforce of Courage.

This game was very much an experiment for Nintendo back in the day, and it yielded as many successes as failures. The unbalanced points system and semi-random battles impose mindless grinding, and the series quickly reverted to item and rupee-based upgrades. Since battles take place solely in the side-scrolling mode, the overworld feels largely detached from the game's core. The game design provides considerable challenge, but level design devolves to cruelty in the cave sequences approaching the final dungeon (although players can exploit a bug in the overworld to counteract this). Zelda II's broken save file, which does not remember Link's score, is curbed by VC's save state feature—use it!

As much as some Nintendo fans hate to admit, though, Zelda II also has many notable qualities. In the first Zelda game players explored a vast but desolate world with nothing more than scraps of information from a thin instruction booklet. Zelda II introduced the busy towns and non-player character interactions now so familiar. Zelda II's quicker pacing, more epic bosses, and deliberate swordplay has been quietly reprised in recent games such as Twilight Princess, Four Swords Adventures, and Super Smash Bros. And while the interesting but ultimately superfluous magic system was redesigned on the SNES, Zelda II provided its foundation. The Adventure of Link may be the "black sheep" of the series, but enjoyable dungeons and satisfying controls make it a fun, if flawed, Virtual Console game.

Recommended for Fans

Milon's Secret Castle

SystemVirtual Console - Nintendo Entertainment System

Cost500 Points
Players1
ControllersWii Remote,Wii Nunchuk,GameCube
ESRB RatingEveryone
ReleasedSep 01, 1988

This somewhat obscure and totally weird NES game may best be described as "Metroid on LSD". You play as Milon, a young wizard who shoots bubbles at enemies. The game is basically a platformer with shooting elements, but the level designs are very tricky and require careful exploration. You also find and/or purchase new abilities throughout the game which unlock new areas...so you can see where the Metroid comparison originates. Fans of New Super Mario Bros. may recognize Milon's influence on that game, as some levels have secret areas that can only be accessed by shrinking yourself and squeezing through tight spaces.

Milon's Secret Castle is a colorful and incredibly strange game with famously awful Engrish provided by the shopkeepers. The many levels are intricate but wholly illogical -- the best strategy is to shoot EVERYTHING, including the walls and floors, to find secret doors and bonus money. Due to the high degree of challenge, sluggish controls, and sheer insanity saturating the game, casual players may quickly grow frustrated. However, the castle holds many secrets for loyal explorers, and the game is so unusual that it really deserves to be played by fans of Metroid, M.C. Kids, and even Mario experts. Pro Tip: There is no in-game save or password system, so use the Virtual Console save state in conjunction with the secret continue code (hold left and Start on the title screen after a Game Over) for a fighting chance at completing this tough game.

Recommended for Fans

- Jonathan Metts



Dead Moon

SystemVirtual Console - TurboGrafx-16

Cost600 Points
Players1
ControllersWii Remote,Wii Nunchuk,GameCube
ESRB Rating
ReleasedYear 1991

Yup, it's another shoot-'em-up. It seems like there are enough out there for one to be released every week, and in this case the TG-16's got us covered with Dead Moon, a horizontal shooter. Wave after wave of enemies will attack, but you can grab one of four different weapon types. These weapons are stackable up to four times to increase your firepower. Bombs and option-type ship support are also at your disposal. Being powered-up will give you a defensive edge as well as an offensive one; if you're hit with a souped-up gun it'll get downgraded a level. If you're hit while using a basic weapon, you're dead.

Dead Moon is another of many shmups available on the service, and it's another that fans of the genre will enjoy. However, we may be getting to a point where the shoot-'em-up arena is getting too crowded for its own good. Yeah, this game is good, but so are a lot of others. Are you really going to buy them all when so many of them are similar to one another?

Recommended for Fans

- Steven Rodriguez



ToeJam & Earl in Panic on Funkotron

SystemVirtual Console - Genesis

Cost800 Points
Players2
ControllersWii Remote,Wii Nunchuk,GameCube
ESRB Rating
ReleasedDec 31, 1993

The funky-fresh alien pair make their VC return in Panic on Funkotron. Unlike the original TJ&E game, where levels were all randomly generated, the sequel is a more traditional adventure platformer. Earthlings have somehow invaded planet Funkotron, and it's up to you to get them off using the power of funk. You can play the game alone as either ToeJam or Earl, but the game really shines when two play cooperatively.

Panic on Funkotron is in many ways better than the original, because of it better fitting the mold of an actual game. You can still scan areas like in the first game, but the main goal this time around is to jar those pesky humans and send them back from whence they came. And of course, the world's bizarre style makes it a fun ride for all from start to finish.

Recommended for Everyone

- Steven Rodriguez


Thanks to VG Museum again for letting us borrow some of their screenshots. They've got a lot of them over there, you know.

Talkback

ArtimusJune 05, 2007

I'll say it because it needs to be said and we might as well get it out of the way:

Zelda II is for fans but Kid Icarus is for everyone? WHAT. THE. HELL.

Now we can move on.

Karl Castaneda #2June 05, 2007

Artimus, I agree with you 100%. I really like Zelda II. I guess TYP just didn't feel the same way.

that Baby guyJune 05, 2007

I think TYP's biggest problem with it is that it isn't Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance.

SarailJune 05, 2007

I'm one of the few that actually adores Zelda II. I love the game. I think its battle system is great, and I love the magic casting, too. I wish current, modern Zeldas took upon this style of Zelda gameplay, too. And with Twilight Princess, we're starting to get a bit of that style. Who knows, the next Zelda is going to be so dramatically changed, according to Miyamoto, that we may very well see something so far beyond what Zelda II did for the Zelda series on the NES. I can't wait!

BloodworthDaniel Bloodworth, Staff AlumnusJune 05, 2007

Zelda II is awesome. First Zelda game I got into. Still can't believe I actually beat it in Jr. High.

Smoke39June 05, 2007

Is Milon's Secret Castle really so Metroid-like? ¬_¬

IceColdJune 05, 2007

Quote

In the first Zelda game players explored a vast but desolate world with nothing more than scraps of information from a thin instruction booklet. Zelda II introduced the busy towns and non-player character interactions now so familiar.
Which is why I believe the original Zelda is the purest of all of them. I may be biased because it's the first one I played, but Miyamoto created Zelda out of his memories exploring a barren cave. The solitude from the first Zelda has been carried forward, of course, but not to the same extent. LttP and OoT may be the most fleshed out and most technically sound Zelda games with the NPCs and all, but I think they stray away from Miyamoto's original intent. Link's Awakening (not directed by Miyamoto) really strayed the most as far as I'm concerned.

Interestingly enough, Gunpei Yokoi's Metroid has remained closer with the solitude thing.

Please stop bringing up Kid Icarus. I think that game is horrible too, and it is very important to understand that these impressions are written by individual staff members. Seriously, that "free point" simply cannot be applied to my writeup.

I would like to go on record, as I have said before, saying I really enjoy playing Zelda II. Imagine that--recommended for fans actually means some will like the game?! And gamers can enjoy games with a review score of 7? WOW! I am one of the fans the game is recommended for, but I assure you some will not enjoy grinding, or they will not enjoy discovering in Dungeon 6 that they should have been grinding in Dungeon 1. Perhaps some others on staff or in the forums have a different interpretation of "Recommended for Everyone," but I see RfE and RfF ratings as audience, and not quality, assessments.

KhushrenadaJune 05, 2007

Hey TYP, moving away from the defense of NWR reviews again, I was just wondering what happened to last week's trivia podcast? Was it cancelled or delayed to this week?

It's off-topic but I will respond. I was on business travel and could not organize a recording session in time. T'was my lack of planning. This week should be live radio trivia.

that Baby guyJune 05, 2007

My take on the opinionated ratings: It works. Just read the talkback thread, and you'll be able to see which games are borderline for several of the games. So far, I have not seen a game that was not heavily talked about in talkback that I didn't 100% agree with the rating about.

I think Kid Icarus is done with. We've heard enough about that. On the Zelda 2 side, I think that there are very mixed opinions. Personally, I think the game is a little too difficult and a little too frustrating to receive the "For Everyone" tag, so I have to agree with TYP on this one. In this case, fans would be anyone who enjoys Zelda or Sidescrollers, which is a pretty broad category. TYP's review implies this to the audience, and gives great reasoning for why it isn't for everyone. Of course, you still should tell what you think about it here, for the readers who might not be familiar with it. Extra perspective never hurts.

What, no games recommended for me?!?!?!

Quote

Originally posted by: Smoke39
Is Milon's Secret Castle really so Metroid-like? ¬_¬


The gameplay is very, very much like the original NES Metroid. Of course, Metroid evolved over the life of the series, while Milon's Secret Castle hasn't really had that opportunity. There's more talk of this on RFN, too.

Smoke39June 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: Jonnyboy117
There's more talk of this on RFN, too.

No thank you. I prefer reading to listening to people ramble.

SarailJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: Smoke39
Quote

Originally posted by: Jonnyboy117
There's more talk of this on RFN, too.

No thank you. I prefer reading to listening to people ramble.

Awww. you're missing out on a really great podcast then. RFN is good stuff to be had. I couldn't go through a week without it. ^_^

Smoke39June 06, 2007

I've listened to a few episodes and didn't find it particularly interesting.

PaleMike Gamin, Contributing EditorJune 06, 2007

Gosh, I never thought I'd get mocked EVERY subsequent VC Mondays article for actually liking Kid Icarus...

/sigh.

UncleBobRichard Cook, Guest ContributorJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: IceCold
Quote

Link's Awakening (not directed by Miyamoto) really strayed the most as far as I'm concerned.


Still the best game ever made.

UltimatePartyBearJune 06, 2007

Grinding in Zelda II isn't as bad as. . . well, pretty much every other game I've ever played that uses experience points. When I was a kid, for reasons I will never be able to explain, I was a total pansy when it came to risking my virtual life in games, and so I leveled up by fighting the absolute weakest enemies that gave experience, two points each, for days' worth of play time. Since then, I've grown a pair and found an easier way. I go through the first temple a few times until I can handle the boss, and then I just go through the game without bothering to grind until I get to the third temple, which is the first to feature an Ironknuckle statue that can spawn an Ironknuckle or a red magic bottle. The Ironknuckle gives plenty of experience points, and the magic bottle means you can use Life magic as much as you need. I still don't max out every stat here, because it's not necessary at this point in the game, and clearing a temple guarantees a level up.

I'm in the level-up-while-it's-cheap camp. Kill them bubbles in the first or second temple. There's a room in the first with four of 'em every time you enter the room.

planetidiotJune 06, 2007

I love Zelda 2... the best way to level up is to not put back any of the gem things after you beat a boss. Wait until you are around experience level 6, then return to the old dungeons and get free level ups. No sense in wasting the free level up on exp. level 2. Wait until you need a ton of exp. points!

Also: what overworld exploit bug?

CalibanJune 06, 2007

I agree with the rating for Zelda II (Recommended for fans), you're either a wuss or you've got balls...of fire. I don't do much grinding at all in this game, maybe it's because I've played this game so many times that I don't think it's dificult anymore.

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: Caliban
I agree with the rating for Zelda II (Recommended for fans), you're either a wuss or you've got balls...of fire. I don't do much grinding at all in this game, maybe it's because I've played this game so many times that I don't think it's dificult anymore.


And there is that thing about Miyamoto giving it the failure label (Which I don't believe he has ever given one of his games), many of the most important team members not working on it, a year development time, and the whole experiment thing. So I think the recommended for fans is justified, not because it is hard, but that the game is extremely flawed and tried to do way too much with a lot of it not working (Random battles should NEVER be in an action RPG).

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: Pale
Gosh, I never thought I'd get mocked EVERY subsequent VC Mondays article for actually liking Kid Icarus...

/sigh.


Thank you for noticing my mocking hehe. Oh yeah, Zelda 2 is still better than Kid Icarus in both design and gameplay!

UltimatePartyBearJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenix
Quote

Originally posted by: Caliban
I agree with the rating for Zelda II (Recommended for fans), you're either a wuss or you've got balls...of fire. I don't do much grinding at all in this game, maybe it's because I've played this game so many times that I don't think it's dificult anymore.


And there is that thing about Miyamoto giving it the failure label (Which I don't believe he has ever given one of his games), many of the most important team members not working on it, a year development time, and the whole experiment thing. So I think the recommended for fans is justified, not because it is hard, but that the game is extremely flawed and tried to do way too much with a lot of it not working (Random battles should NEVER be in an action RPG).


Miyamoto calling the game a failure doesn't diminish my enjoyment of it any more than George Lucas's insistence that the latest mucking up of Star Wars is his "true vision" makes me want to give up my copies of the old version. It has nothing whatsoever to do with the game's value to people who aren't Miyamoto.

Worse than that, though, you criticize the game for being an experiment! Where would we be today if game developers didn't experiment? My guess is there'd be hundreds of versions of Pong, there'd be no Hollywood-rivaling global video game industry, and Shigeru Miyamoto would be painting new designs on playing cards.

krillin1986June 06, 2007

i too would like to know about the overworld bug... also about the grinding.. what is that?

CericJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: IceCold
Quote

In the first Zelda game players explored a vast but desolate world with nothing more than scraps of information from a thin instruction booklet. Zelda II introduced the busy towns and non-player character interactions now so familiar.
Which is why I believe the original Zelda is the purest of all of them. I may be biased because it's the first one I played, but Miyamoto created Zelda out of his memories exploring a barren cave. The solitude from the first Zelda has been carried forward, of course, but not to the same extent. LttP and OoT may be the most fleshed out and most technically sound Zelda games with the NPCs and all, but I think they stray away from Miyamoto's original intent. Link's Awakening (not directed by Miyamoto) really strayed the most as far as I'm concerned.

Interestingly enough, Gunpei Yokoi's Metroid has remained closer with the solitude thing.


I agree.

Though I really do enjoy Zelda 2 in a way different then any other game. Though I do have to say that going back to it I now think its pretty cheap to not have all the monster give you at least 1 point and the text is annoyingly slow.

cartman414June 06, 2007

The combat system is anything but rudimentary. The high/low parry mechanics add a lot to the game. And while there are random encounters for better or worse, at least they are visible. And there are games that are a LOT worse about grinding (see: Final Fantasy 1 and the Pokemon games). And while it may have its blemishes, so did other games of its era, especially Metroid. Considering how awesome Super Metroid was, is that reason enough for there never again to be another game of its kind?

Anyways, Zelda II is one of my favorites in the series, only eclipsed by Link's Awakening and the Oracle games.

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: PartyBear
Quote

Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenix
Quote

Originally posted by: Caliban
I agree with the rating for Zelda II (Recommended for fans), you're either a wuss or you've got balls...of fire. I don't do much grinding at all in this game, maybe it's because I've played this game so many times that I don't think it's dificult anymore.


And there is that thing about Miyamoto giving it the failure label (Which I don't believe he has ever given one of his games), many of the most important team members not working on it, a year development time, and the whole experiment thing. So I think the recommended for fans is justified, not because it is hard, but that the game is extremely flawed and tried to do way too much with a lot of it not working (Random battles should NEVER be in an action RPG).


Miyamoto calling the game a failure doesn't diminish my enjoyment of it any more than George Lucas's insistence that the latest mucking up of Star Wars is his "true vision" makes me want to give up my copies of the old version. It has nothing whatsoever to do with the game's value to people who aren't Miyamoto.

Worse than that, though, you criticize the game for being an experiment! Where would we be today if game developers didn't experiment? My guess is there'd be hundreds of versions of Pong, there'd be no Hollywood-rivaling global video game industry, and Shigeru Miyamoto would be painting new designs on playing cards.


OK how about a severely flawed experiment where much of it did not work? My point is that I think this "love" for Zelda 2 is nothing more than overinflated praise to go against the grain and to make yourselves feel like the in crowd. I don't doubt some of you love the game, but then again most games that are decent have a few who love them, doesn't make them masterpieces though. I am just saying that there is more pointing towards Zelda 2 being a flawed, and dissapointing game then pointing towards it as being a great game. Not to mention this also a defence against the elites out there that think the reason why most dislike the game is because it is "hard" which is a load of crap and stupid elitist argument everytime it is used for a game.

CalibanJune 06, 2007

*Throws some ice-cold water at GoldenPhoenix*

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: Caliban
*Throws some ice-cold water at GoldenPhoenix*


*Throws boiling water on Caliban* Take that you Zelda II lover.

cartman414June 06, 2007

Ho boy. Zelda II may have had blemishes, but so did other games of that era, Zelda I and Metroid included. Zelda II still does a bunch of things right, including a great combat system, magic and experience systems, and challenging adversaries. It's also one of those games that rewards personal skill. Not to mention that there's still nothing else like it right now.

And a lot of people out there do dislike the game for being too "hard".

Not to mention that practically all games by definition are flawed. Personally I think Ocarina of Time has a few serious ones, and most people regard it as one of the most definitive games ever.

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: cartman414
Ho boy. Zelda II may have had blemishes, but so did other games of that era, Zelda I and Metroid included. Zelda II still does a bunch of things right, including a great combat system, magic and experience systems, and challenging adversaries. It's also one of those games that rewards personal skill. Not to mention that there's still nothing else like it right now.

And a lot of people out there do dislike the game for being too "hard".

Not to mention that practically all games by definition are flawed. Personally I think Ocarina of Time has a few serious ones, and most people regard it as one of the most definitive games ever.


Except OOT was never referred to as a failure but the creator, and was a mishmash of different genres, alot of which was dumped in later installations. There are legitimate design flaws in Zelda II that cause people to dislike it, and yes some of it makes the game artificially hard and cheap (I'd say Metroid 1 shares a similar flaw, it does not hold up well). Also I wouldn't consider there being nothing like it out there being like it a praise, that usually means there is a reason why it was never imitated.

cartman414June 06, 2007

Quote

Except OOT was never referred to as a failure but the creator, and was a mishmash of different genres, alot of which was dumped in later installations.


You're going on a bit of a tangent there. I said that OoT had flaws of its own.

Anyways, I believe Miyamoto regarded it as a failure in how the design process went, which is somewhat understandable given the changes that were made from the Japanese version over to the English version (i. e. the stat levels originally resetting to whatever the lowest level was). And it was pretty successful as a genre mashup.

Quote

There are legitimate design flaws in Zelda II that cause people to dislike it, and yes some of it makes the game artificially hard and cheap


Many of which were reminiscent of that era of gaming. Beyond that, care to elaborate upon any so that I may respond on a piece by piece basis? There were things here and there that could have been changed, but it's still no harder than say, Ninja Gaiden, and definitely not any of the G'n'G games.

Quote

Also I wouldn't consider there being nothing like it out there being like it a praise, that usually means there is a reason why it was never imitated.


Only fathomable reason was because they wrongly assumed it was not worth revisiting, which it very much was. The potential for evolution was huge, and yet wasted.

GoldenPhoenixJune 06, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: cartman414
Quote

Except OOT was never referred to as a failure but the creator, and was a mishmash of different genres, alot of which was dumped in later installations.


You're going on a bit of a tangent there. I said that OoT had flaws of its own.

Anyways, I believe Miyamoto regarded it as a failure in how the design process went, which is somewhat understandable given the changes that were made from the Japanese version over to the English version (i. e. the stat levels originally resetting to whatever the lowest level was). And it was pretty successful as a genre mashup.

Quote

There are legitimate design flaws in Zelda II that cause people to dislike it, and yes some of it makes the game artificially hard and cheap


Many of which were reminiscent of that era of gaming. Beyond that, care to elaborate upon any so that I may respond on a piece by piece basis? There were things here and there that could have been changed, but it's still no harder than say, Ninja Gaiden, and definitely not any of the G'n'G games.

Quote

Also I wouldn't consider there being nothing like it out there being like it a praise, that usually means there is a reason why it was never imitated.


Only fathomable reason was because they wrongly assumed it was not worth revisiting, which it very much was. The potential for evolution was huge, and yet wasted.


Actually I didn't say it was in comparison to NG or G n G games (Personally I don't care much for either series and I do think many NES games had lazy design flaws to make them cheap so I don't disagree with that either), regardless my focus is not on how hard it was but flaws that made it hard, there is a difference. Take for example Ninja Gaiden for Xbox 360, the game is quite challenging yet it is well designed (well except for that nasty camera). Hardness should not be the focus but how the game is designed. Zelda II felt like an experiment,one that fell into the nasty void of not knowing what it wanted to be, it had tedious random battles, mixed with leveling, mixed with platforming, mixed with lives. The reason why the game was not revisited is because it wasn't that popular and was not that well received by fans of the original game.

So you love the game? Great for you, but realize the majority do not agree with you, there is much more evidence pointing towards the game being flawed in design, and more importantly its reception since it had a great game in the series before it. You can defend the game all you want, and perhaps you like the stuff that annoys others and disappointed the designer, but the fact remains that your opinion, though you have to fair, with accepting the fact that others may have some good reasons for not liking the game besides it being hard. Perhaps it isn't as clear as I thought, but the one year development time gives an indication that the game was rushed out the door, especially since it was basically a whole new engine. Regardless, I think Miyamoto handled the game fine, he took elements that actually worked and trashed the rest, that is all Zelda fans needed. If the game was so brilliantly designed someone else would have mimicked the design, yet no one really did, the game died and led the way to a brilliant title in LTTP.

BTW just for reference purposes here is Miyamotos exact quote (At the very least it indicates that they were going through the motions when creating the game)

Quote

It was my idea, but the actual game was developed by another team, different people to those that made the first game. Compared to Legend of Zelda, Zelda II went exactly what we expected... All games I make usually gets better in the development process, since good ideas keep coming, but Zelda II was sort of a failure...


Quote

Originally posted by: krillin1986
i too would like to know about the overworld bug... also about the grinding.. what is that?


"Grinding" is a term often used to describe killing lots of enemies to gain experience points in an RPG so that you're strong enough to progress through the game. The overworld bug is fairly simple. As you walk around random baddies appear and try to intercept you. The map is divided into squares. If you are between Square A and Square B when you intercept a baddie, you will always return on Square B after the generic battle area. Now, Square B can be an "event" square--a square that actually triggers a side-scrolling sequence that is usually unavoidable due to map design. These events are more difficult than the generic battle areas. If you intercept a baddie when walking onto such an event square, you'll enter a generic baddie sequence instead of the more intricate and difficult event. When the battle is over, you will be on Square B and can continue to Square C without entering Square B's event.

cartman414June 07, 2007

Quote

Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenix
Quote

Originally posted by: cartman414
Quote

Except OOT was never referred to as a failure but the creator, and was a mishmash of different genres, alot of which was dumped in later installations.


You're going on a bit of a tangent there. I said that OoT had flaws of its own.

Anyways, I believe Miyamoto regarded it as a failure in how the design process went, which is somewhat understandable given the changes that were made from the Japanese version over to the English version (i. e. the stat levels originally resetting to whatever the lowest level was). And it was pretty successful as a genre mashup.

Quote

There are legitimate design flaws in Zelda II that cause people to dislike it, and yes some of it makes the game artificially hard and cheap


Many of which were reminiscent of that era of gaming. Beyond that, care to elaborate upon any so that I may respond on a piece by piece basis? There were things here and there that could have been changed, but it's still no harder than say, Ninja Gaiden, and definitely not any of the G'n'G games.

Quote

Also I wouldn't consider there being nothing like it out there being like it a praise, that usually means there is a reason why it was never imitated.


Only fathomable reason was because they wrongly assumed it was not worth revisiting, which it very much was. The potential for evolution was huge, and yet wasted.


Actually I didn't say it was in comparison to NG or G n G games (Personally I don't care much for either series and I do think many NES games had lazy design flaws to make them cheap so I don't disagree with that either), regardless my focus is not on how hard it was but flaws that made it hard, there is a difference. Take for example Ninja Gaiden for Xbox 360, the game is quite challenging yet it is well designed (well except for that nasty camera). Hardness should not be the focus but how the game is designed. Zelda II felt like an experiment,one that fell into the nasty void of not knowing what it wanted to be, it had tedious random battles, mixed with leveling, mixed with platforming, mixed with lives. The reason why the game was not revisited is because it wasn't that popular and was not that well received by fans of the original game.

So you love the game? Great for you, but realize the majority do not agree with you, there is much more evidence pointing towards the game being flawed in design, and more importantly its reception since it had a great game in the series before it. You can defend the game all you want, and perhaps you like the stuff that annoys others and disappointed the designer, but the fact remains that your opinion, though you have to fair, with accepting the fact that others may have some good reasons for not liking the game besides it being hard. Perhaps it isn't as clear as I thought, but the one year development time gives an indication that the game was rushed out the door, especially since it was basically a whole new engine. Regardless, I think Miyamoto handled the game fine, he took elements that actually worked and trashed the rest, that is all Zelda fans needed. If the game was so brilliantly designed someone else would have mimicked the design, yet no one really did, the game died and led the way to a brilliant title in LTTP.

BTW just for reference purposes here is Miyamotos exact quote (At the very least it indicates that they were going through the motions when creating the game)

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It was my idea, but the actual game was developed by another team, different people to those that made the first game. Compared to Legend of Zelda, Zelda II went exactly what we expected... All games I make usually gets better in the development process, since good ideas keep coming, but Zelda II was sort of a failure...



Zelda II was not much different from Simon's Quest, Symphony of the Night, and other Metroidvanias, in that it was sort of a Metroid-esque experience with RPG elements. The only differences being you had the aforementioned random encounters (which were at least visible) an overhead map (which was also done in Commander Keen and the Japanese-only Konami Famicom release Getsufuu Maden, and those didn't have any RPG elements to begin with), and multiple lives. There are admittedly blemishes, such as pits of death, but that could be fixed by returning to either the room entrance Link was at or the last block of land he was on with a small life penalty, like in subsequent Zeldas. They could also flesh out exploration, item and NPC elements. So to say that the Zelda II concept couldn't be more greatly realized is a bald faced lie.

And if you considered the random battles, which you had a chance of avoiding at the very least, tedious, stay far, far away from the Pokemon games. At least Zelda II had a very engaging battle system.

That last quote suggests IMO is that Miyamoto wasn't really around to see it through the way he did for the predecessor. He said this, IIRC at a later date:

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Link's Adventure... if we were to just bring it out again, it wouldn't be enough fun. It's a little rough around the edges, isn't it? The Disk System had certain limitations and if we were using the cartridge format it would have been better. You know, the American version is improved. It would be great if we were to give the American version of Link's Adventure to Japan, but... . Even among our staff, they love Link's Adventure.


And I meant Ninja Gaiden for the NES, which as much as I loved, could also be considered cheap here and there. And you didn't really give any specific reasons why Zelda II is "difficult for the sake of being difficult".

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: cartman414
Link's Adventure... if we were to just bring it out again, it wouldn't be enough fun. It's a little rough around the edges, isn't it? The Disk System had certain limitations and if we were using the cartridge format it would have been better. You know, the American version is improved. It would be great if we were to give the American version of Link's Adventure to Japan, but... . Even among our staff, they love Link's Adventure.


And I meant Ninja Gaiden for the NES, which as much as I loved, could also be considered cheap here and there. And you didn't really give any specific reasons why Zelda II is "difficult for the sake of being difficult".


I don't believe I said Zelda II was difficult for the sake of being difficult, I think it is poorly designed which makes it difficult. Now what are these design flaws? Oh perhaps the random battles later on that throw a buttload of enemies at your, which will more than likely hit you. Could it also be the ridiculously poor sword distance? Or maybe it is the cheap "throw you back" when you get hit which I never liked in a game? Or perhaps it is the button smashing battles such as with Ironknuckle which weren't fun nor innovative. This may not be a difficulty flaw but what about the lame "cheap" glitches to kill some of the bosses, like the final one.

Not much different from CV or Metroid? You are kidding right? The design in those games alone beats this one with the ugly stick, not to mention that the "Metroidish" segments are only a part of the game, it has more in its goofy design including the thrown together "random" battles. In regards to random battles and Pokemon, that game is an RPG whose staple is random battles, Zelda II didn't know what it wanted to be, there is a difference.

Anyway I can say I was wrong about Zelda II, it isn't above average it is average to below average! The game is flat out terrible in places, I just played a couple hours of it and see little to nothing redeemable about it (now I know why I never liked it). Text conversations are snore inducing as you wait for them to finish, fighting is simple and stupid (As stated earlier the Iron knuckles are hilariously dumb to fight, down jab, up jab, down jab, up jab really fast), over world map is generic and cramped, level design is generic with little to no variety (Where are all the great puzzles? Where are the distinguishable landmarks? Above all else why does every room look the same in a dungeon?), it is a grind fest, random battles suck being more tedious than fun, item variety is pretty lame in comparison to other Zelda games, and the leveling system is ridiculous. So yeah I would say I have some legitimate reasons for not liking the game (I also found the music nauseating, you can tell it did not have Zelda's lead composer).

that Baby guyJune 07, 2007

Both of you! Stop quoting each other. You make my computer screen scream out with the pain!

Look, you're both arguing at each other. I don't even care to know what about, but it doesn't need a messes of quotes like that. Please, just stop it. Add your 2 cents in each message, but don't show us the dollar you're adding to.

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenix
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Originally posted by: cartman414
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Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenix
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Originally posted by: cartman414
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Except OOT was never referred to as a failure but the creator, and was a mishmash of different genres, alot of which was dumped in later installations.


You're going on a bit of a tangent there. I said that OoT had flaws of its own.

Anyways, I believe Miyamoto regarded it as a failure in how the design process went, which is somewhat understandable given the changes that were made from the Japanese version over to the English version (i. e. the stat levels originally resetting to whatever the lowest level was). And it was pretty successful as a genre mashup.

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There are legitimate design flaws in Zelda II that cause people to dislike it, and yes some of it makes the game artificially hard and cheap


Many of which were reminiscent of that era of gaming. Beyond that, care to elaborate upon any so that I may respond on a piece by piece basis? There were things here and there that could have been changed, but it's still no harder than say, Ninja Gaiden, and definitely not any of the G'n'G games.

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Also I wouldn't consider there being nothing like it out there being like it a praise, that usually means there is a reason why it was never imitated.


Only fathomable reason was because they wrongly assumed it was not worth revisiting, which it very much was. The potential for evolution was huge, and yet wasted.


Actually I didn't say it was in comparison to NG or G n G games (Personally I don't care much for either series and I do think many NES games had lazy design flaws to make them cheap so I don't disagree with that either), regardless my focus is not on how hard it was but flaws that made it hard, there is a difference. Take for example Ninja Gaiden for Xbox 360, the game is quite challenging yet it is well designed (well except for that nasty camera). Hardness should not be the focus but how the game is designed. Zelda II felt like an experiment,one that fell into the nasty void of not knowing what it wanted to be, it had tedious random battles, mixed with leveling, mixed with platforming, mixed with lives. The reason why the game was not revisited is because it wasn't that popular and was not that well received by fans of the original game.

So you love the game? Great for you, but realize the majority do not agree with you, there is much more evidence pointing towards the game being flawed in design, and more importantly its reception since it had a great game in the series before it. You can defend the game all you want, and perhaps you like the stuff that annoys others and disappointed the designer, but the fact remains that your opinion, though you have to fair, with accepting the fact that others may have some good reasons for not liking the game besides it being hard. Perhaps it isn't as clear as I thought, but the one year development time gives an indication that the game was rushed out the door, especially since it was basically a whole new engine. Regardless, I think Miyamoto handled the game fine, he took elements that actually worked and trashed the rest, that is all Zelda fans needed. If the game was so brilliantly designed someone else would have mimicked the design, yet no one really did, the game died and led the way to a brilliant title in LTTP.

BTW just for reference purposes here is Miyamotos exact quote (At the very least it indicates that they were going through the motions when creating the game)

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It was my idea, but the actual game was developed by another team, different people to those that made the first game. Compared to Legend of Zelda, Zelda II went exactly what we expected... All games I make usually gets better in the development process, since good ideas keep coming, but Zelda II was sort of a failure...



Zelda II was not much different from Simon's Quest, Symphony of the Night, and other Metroidvanias, in that it was sort of a Metroid-esque experience with RPG elements. The only differences being you had the aforementioned random encounters (which were at least visible) an overhead map (which was also done in Commander Keen and the Japanese-only Konami Famicom release Getsufuu Maden, and those didn't have any RPG elements to begin with), and multiple lives. There are admittedly blemishes, such as pits of death, but that could be fixed by returning to either the room entrance Link was at or the last block of land he was on with a small life penalty, like in subsequent Zeldas. They could also flesh out exploration, item and NPC elements. So to say that the Zelda II concept couldn't be more greatly realized is a bald faced lie.

And if you considered the random battles, which you had a chance of avoiding at the very least, tedious, stay far, far away from the Pokemon games. At least Zelda II had a very engaging battle system.

That last quote suggests IMO is that Miyamoto wasn't really around to see it through the way he did for the predecessor. He said this, IIRC at a later date:

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Link's Adventure... if we were to just bring it out again, it wouldn't be enough fun. It's a little rough around the edges, isn't it? The Disk System had certain limitations and if we were using the cartridge format it would have been better. You know, the American version is improved. It would be great if we were to give the American version of Link's Adventure to Japan, but... . Even among our staff, they love Link's Adventure.


And I meant Ninja Gaiden for the NES, which as much as I loved, could also be considered cheap here and there. And you didn't really give any specific reasons why Zelda II is "difficult for the sake of being difficult".


I don't believe I said Zelda II was difficult for the sake of being difficult, I think it is poorly designed which makes it difficult. Now what are these design flaws? Oh perhaps the random battles later on that throw a buttload of enemies at your, which will more than likely hit you. Could it also be the ridiculously poor sword distance? Or maybe it is the cheap "throw you back" when you get hit which I never liked in a game? Or perhaps it is the button smashing battles such as with Ironknuckle which weren't fun nor innovative. This may not be a difficulty flaw but what about the lame "cheap" glitches to kill some of the bosses, like the final one.

Not much different from CV or Metroid? You are kidding right? The design in those games alone beats this one with the ugly stick, not to mention that the "Metroidish" segments are only a part of the game, it has more in its goofy design including the thrown together "random" battles. In regards to random battles and Pokemon, that game is an RPG whose staple is random battles, Zelda II didn't know what it wanted to be, there is a difference.

Anyway I can say I was wrong about Zelda II, it isn't above average it is average to below average! The game is flat out terrible in places, I just played a couple hours of it and see little to nothing redeemable about it (now I know why I never liked it). Text conversations are snore inducing as you wait for them to finish, fighting is simple and stupid (As stated earlier the Iron knuckles are hilariously dumb to fight, down jab, up jab, down jab, up jab really fast), over world map is generic and cramped, level design is generic with little to no variety (Where are all the great puzzles? Where are the distinguishable landmarks? Above all else why does every room look the same in a dungeon?), it is a grind fest, random battles suck being more tedious than fun, item variety is pretty lame in comparison to other Zelda games, and the leveling system is ridiculous. So yeah I would say I have some legitimate reasons for not liking the game (I also found the music nauseating, you can tell it did not have Zelda's lead composer).


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Originally posted by: thatguy
Both of you! Stop quoting each other. You make my computer screen scream out with the pain!

Look, you're both arguing at each other. I don't even care to know what about, but it doesn't need a messes of quotes like that. Please, just stop it. Add your 2 cents in each message, but don't show us the dollar you're adding to.


What did you say?

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Originally posted by: thatguy
Please, just stop it. Add your 2 cents in each message, but don't show us the dollar you're adding to.


That's awesome. I must remember that quote.

cartman414June 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: GoldenPhoenixI don't believe I said Zelda II was difficult for the sake of being difficult, I think it is poorly designed which makes it difficult. Now what are these design flaws? Oh perhaps the random battles later on that throw a buttload of enemies at your, which will more than likely hit you. Could it also be the ridiculously poor sword distance? Or maybe it is the cheap "throw you back" when you get hit which I never liked in a game? Or perhaps it is the button smashing battles such as with Ironknuckle which weren't fun nor innovative. This may not be a difficulty flaw but what about the lame "cheap" glitches to kill some of the bosses, like the final one.


The enemy recoil, while at times annoying, wasn't unique to Zelda II, and could be certainly as annoying elsewhere. I do agree about the short sword distance, though it can be overcome to a good extent by mastering the combat. Im' sure there's a saying something along the lines of the weapon not always being everything. And the Ironknuckles were more than "button smashing", which I'll get to in a bit. And the only exploitable glitch involved the final boss.

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Not much different from CV or Metroid? You are kidding right? The design in those games alone beats this one with the ugly stick, not to mention that the "Metroidish" segments are only a part of the game, it has more in its goofy design including the thrown together "random" battles.


Zelda II came at an early age, where memory constraints limited design. This was also the case with Metroid 1. Heck, it wasn't until Super Metroid that they really got it right on that series. And even if Zelda II was simpler in its design, at least it wasn't half as laden in terms of needed backtracking, something which still to an extent is present in the exploration based Castlevanias. (Though it has been fixed in 2d Metroids thanks to nifty shortcuts and high speed powerups such as the Dash Boots.)

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In regards to random battles and Pokemon, that game is an RPG whose staple is random battles, Zelda II didn't know what it wanted to be, there is a difference.


So just because a random encounter results in a non-turn based battle system encounter, that means the game is genre-confused? What about Star Ocean or the "Tales of..." games? Getsufuu Maden, a non-RPG, also had a few visible encounters in one area.

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Anyway I can say I was wrong about Zelda II, it isn't above average it is average to below average! The game is flat out terrible in places, I just played a couple hours of it and see little to nothing redeemable about it (now I know why I never liked it). Text conversations are snore inducing as you wait for them to finish, fighting is simple and stupid (As stated earlier the Iron knuckles are hilariously dumb to fight, down jab, up jab, down jab, up jab really fast), over world map is generic and cramped, level design is generic with little to no variety (Where are all the great puzzles? Where are the distinguishable landmarks? Above all else why does every room look the same in a dungeon?), it is a grind fest, random battles suck being more tedious than fun, item variety is pretty lame in comparison to other Zelda games, and the leveling system is ridiculous. So yeah I would say I have some legitimate reasons for not liking the game (I also found the music nauseating, you can tell it did not have Zelda's lead composer).


Text conversations? You're complaining about single, small blocks of text that you can mostly skip with the push of a button. And from the sound of it, you didn't learn to use the shield properly, or watch their shields, because the Iron Knuckles aren't that bad. It's all about timing and reflexes. I'm not sure I know what you mean by the overworld map being cramped. Zelda I and Metroid were just as repetitive about level design, the latter case a more critical shortcoming given the bigger single area construct. I do understand the gripe about there being a lack of puzzles, though it beat having obtuse and/or badly conceived puzzles (see: Simon's Quest), and the combat kept things interesting for me. As for grind fests with often tedious random battles, let me point you to Pokemon and the first two Final Fantasies, aka Dawn of Souls (GBA) and Origins (PS1). And the leveling system worked pretty well aside from the loss of all present level experience at game over. And the music was fantastic. (If any early Zelda track became nauseating, it was the dungeon music from Zelda 1.)

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

Let me say it again, I don't care what flaws were common in that day and age, they still are flaws and they hamper gameplay (the recoil was a flaw I've always despised in the NES days). In regards to Metroid, I don't think the game has held up very well, so I would never think of arguing that it is a good example of how to do things. I know how to use the shield, and I know about the Ironknuckles timing, but still it is a button smash battle, not to mention they are only a small example of the game basically being a button smasher. Like I said there are little to no puzzles, the level designs are quite repetitive with no personality, the game ruined what made other Zelda games great, which was fun items/weapons to use, this game they are pretty generic, and the overworld map feels too small and looks like they pasted blah looking textures all over it. Please don't make me repeat this again, Zelda II was genre confused in a bad way, there are some games that blend it well and IMO Zelda II did not.

cartman414June 07, 2007

Zelda II was only the second game in the series. How could it have necessarily ruined what was early in development, namely the Zelda series? Zelda I and II were different entities. And the only Ironknuckles that gave the sort of problems you speak of were the blue ones. Still beats a room full of blue Darknuts in Zelda I IMO. And again, Zelda I was also pretty repetitive with the dungeon designs, yet people don't seem to mind it there. As far as items go, the spells could be counted as de facto usables. And the overworld this time around was less central to the overall action this time around.

You may think Zelda II wasn't a successful hybrid, which is fine. I personally found it to be a better cross-genre game than many others.

While I'm not defending every little thing Zelda II did, to say there should never be another game in its vein is kind of like saying there should have never been another top-down Zelda. Refinements happen, you know.

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: cartman414
Zelda II was only the second game in the series. How could it have necessarily ruined what was early in development, namely the Zelda series? Zelda I and II were different entities. And the only Ironknuckles that gave the sort of problems you speak of were the blue ones. Still beats a room full of blue Darknuts in Zelda I IMO. And again, Zelda I was also pretty repetitive with the dungeon designs, yet people don't seem to mind it there. As far as items go, the spells could be counted as de facto usables. And the overworld this time around was less central to the overall action this time around.

You may think Zelda II wasn't a successful hybrid, which is fine. I personally found it to be a better cross-genre game than many others.

While I'm not defending every little thing Zelda II did, to say there should never be another game in its vein is kind of like saying there should have never been another top-down Zelda. Refinements happen, you know.


Actually Miyamoto said the reason why they went back to the over-head was because of how much better it worked, not to mention people actually gave it a lot of praise (Zelda II never had a good reception even when it was new). In regards to map design, Zelda 1 felt designed, Zelda II's dungeons felt like they were randomly generated or at the very least, rushed. In Zelda 1 you could tell the difference between rooms for the most part (why they ditched the map is another weird thing in Zelda II). Zelda II shared a lot of the same issues Metroid had, which was the repetitive textures, making it hard to tell where you actually were. In regards to my comment on Zelda II ruining things that made Zelda games I was referencing things that have made the series a great series, and what worked to make Zelda I the phenomena it was.

ANYWAY, this is pretty pointless, my only reason for debating this is to defend those of us who dislike Zelda II for reasons other than it is hard. I am sure you can agree that there are some legitimate reasons for not liking the game besides it being hard, and that is all I am trying to show. Personally I put Zelda in the same category as a game I actually loved, which was Rygar, I really enjoyed that game but I can understand why people may hate it because of its gameplay flaws. Personally if I were review a game like Rygar, I'd probably give it no higher than a 6 even if it was one of my favorites, because I can see where it is liking. If I were to review Zelda II I would probably give it a 5 or 6.

cartman414June 07, 2007

From what I remember, Zelda II had a rather good reception when it debuted. And again, how can you say it ruined what there was after only ONE game? Zelda II went in a different direction, one that was more combat oriented. Personally, after Zelda II, I anticipated a consolidation of both styles of gameplay, which they did to a marginal extent with the side-scrolling segments of Link's Awakening.

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: cartman414
From what I remember, Zelda II had a rather good reception when it debuted. And again, how can you say it ruined what there was after only ONE game? Zelda II went in a different direction, one that was more combat oriented. Personally, after Zelda II, I anticipated a consolidation of both styles of gameplay, which they did to a marginal extent with the side-scrolling segments of Link's Awakening.


It did not receive a good reception, which is why Miyamoto went back to the overhead view.

cartman414June 07, 2007

It didn't necessarily receive a bad reception, just not as good as that of the original.

GoldenPhoenixJune 07, 2007

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Originally posted by: cartman414
It didn't necessarily receive a bad reception, just not as good as that of the original.


Well it was bad enough to scrap things and go back to the original formula. Really I think Zelda II was created in a period where Nintendo was trying to cash out on their hit titles with quick releases, Lost Levels comes to mind when it comes to a game that looks rushed out the door (Well at least they had the sense to reuse something that wasn't broke).

cartman414June 07, 2007

Failure or not, Zelda II had enough novel ideas in my book to warrant a spinoff series or something. And hey, if the first time was rushed and sent off to an alternate team, then why not try again proper?

Personally I think SMB: the Lost Levels could only be guilty of being too punishing at times. I liked a couple of things, such as warp pipes that sent you backwards. Clearly they were testing the mettle of the more experienced player. And this time, no levels were recycled.

vuduJune 08, 2007

Christ Almighty. GP - When you respond to a post directly above yours, there's absolutely no reason to quote the whole thing. If you want to quote a small portion of a larger message, that's fine (encouraged, even), but don't quote the whole Goddamn thing. There seems to be an interesting conversation going on here, but I'll never know because I can't stand sorting through this crap.

GoldenPhoenixJune 08, 2007

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Originally posted by: vudu
Christ Almighty. GP - When you respond to a post directly above yours, there's absolutely no reason to quote the whole thing. If you want to quote a small portion of a larger message, that's fine (encouraged, even), but don't quote the whole Goddamn thing. There seems to be an interesting conversation going on here, but I'll never know because I can't stand sorting through this crap.


That last time was a joke face-icon-small-smile.gif

vuduJune 09, 2007

What about the five hundred times before that? face-icon-small-smile.gif

krillin1986June 10, 2007

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Originally posted by: TheYoungerPlumber
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Originally posted by: krillin1986
i too would like to know about the overworld bug... also about the grinding.. what is that?


"Grinding" is a term often used to describe killing lots of enemies to gain experience points in an RPG so that you're strong enough to progress through the game. The overworld bug is fairly simple. As you walk around random baddies appear and try to intercept you. The map is divided into squares. If you are between Square A and Square B when you intercept a baddie, you will always return on Square B after the generic battle area. Now, Square B can be an "event" square--a square that actually triggers a side-scrolling sequence that is usually unavoidable due to map design. These events are more difficult than the generic battle areas. If you intercept a baddie when walking onto such an event square, you'll enter a generic baddie sequence instead of the more intricate and difficult event. When the battle is over, you will be on Square B and can continue to Square C without entering Square B's event.


Gotcha, thanks a lot!

AVJanuary 28, 2009

Milon's Secret Castle as reviewed by The Angry Video Game Nerd

http://www.gametrailers.com/player/44794.html

vuduJanuary 28, 2009

WTF Frankenbump

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