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submitted 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) by Thordros@hexbear.net to c/games@hexbear.net

Our Lord Ditto died for your sins so that His prophet, this regular ordinary human child, could rebuild a society for Our Blessed Trainers to return to.

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[-] AernaLingus@hexbear.net 1 points 2 days ago

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You don't have to slog through dozens of taken an arrow to the knee generic dialog just to find the nugget you need.

Yes, that's absolutely it! Each NPC adds their own flavor and nearly all of them point you towards something in game, all with just a scant few lines of text. Even the few that don't (or at least, that I haven't discovered the purpose of yet!) are still unique and don't wear on you. It really contributes to that strong sense of place that I feel when playing Ocarina—the vibe of the different locales and all the people in them.

I don't recall there being a trick [to the frog minigame], but I did only play it on Emulation or original hardware, not the Ship of Harkinian release. It's entirely possible it's a bug.

Man, I'm super curious...might actually dig into the code when the spirit moves me, although it'll take a bit of effort to parse through it.

[Lens of Truth]

Noted! I won't run around spamming it everywhere, then, although I have been using that quick toggle technique, and as far as potions go I just spring for the blue potion since my wallet's always bursting at the seams. For minigames, I actually got super lucky the very first time I did the chest minigame and got the Heart Piece on my first try! I was actually planning to use savestates to cheat it, since trying over and over again and farming rupees isn't my idea of fun, but I sailed straight through. I can't remember how many doors it was, but I think it might have been 5, making it a 1/32 ≈ 3% chance. I actually thought I had accidentally enabled a cheat in Ship of Harkinian, so I went back in and failed on the second door, at which point I also found out that the savestates break certain doors (and thought I had borked my game...wouldn't be the first time).

I treat Zelda much like Mario; they are all kinda the same (yeah I said it!)

capitaldcolon (fair though, even as a certified Mario Enjoyer)

so I (a) don't feel bad about skipping one or two titles, and (b) I approach each entry curious about their unique gameplay mechanics. I never beat the original NES Zelda, it took me over a decade to play Wind Waker, I didn't play Breath of the Wild until a couple of years ago, and I haven't yet played Skyward Sword or Tears of the Kingdom at all! That said I got my Zelda start on Link to the Past and Link's Awakening (OoT was my third), and both come with my strong recommendation.

Yeah, if I do go back and play NES Zelda, I may end up playing the PC port with some tweaks to make it easier, since I don't think NES difficulty is generally for me (outside of the aforementioned SMB1+3). But some frustration aside, I did enjoy what I've played of it. I can't remember if I mentioned it, but while I really enjoyed BotW I sorta bounced off of TotK...I just found the building mechanics too distracting, I guess. I wanna give it another shot eventually, but I'm more interested in playing the linear Zelda games first, which I think play more to my strengths.

Oh, and right around the time I made my last comment, v1.0 of a PC port based on the Twilight Princess was released which looks really promising. I'm not planning to tackle TP until after Majora's Mask, (finishing up) Wind Waker, A Link to the Past, and Link's Awakening, so by the time I get to it I'm sure it'll be even more polished. These are very exciting times to be playing old Nintendo games!

The dynamic day/night cycle was genuinely a revolutionary feature at the time. Few contemporary game had it, and it would take years for the industry to mainstream it.

It really does make a huge difference in immersion, and while a real-time clock isn't a good fit for a Zelda game it's a huge part of why Pokémon Gold/Silver/Crystal and the original Animal Crossing enraptured me so. I wonder if anyone's written a good article detailing the history of day/night and/or RTC systems in games.

Riffing on my gameplay curiosity, going back to old games is an interesting lesson in cultural archaeology to see how they adapted and converged on some mechanics and styles, and seeing what experimental ideas were tried that ultimately never made it out of the 90s.

A kindred spirit! It's one of the reasons that I love reading old video game magazines—even for the eras that I remember, I really didn't start thinking very critically about video games until well into adulthood, so there's a lot that I've forgotten or didn't pick up on. The Video Game History Foundation recently put out a video looking at the first FPS game to feature modern dual analog controls (which we now take for granted), and it's fascinating to see the wide range of reactions people had at the time. Can't remember if I brought them up before, but they have a free archive with fully searchable OCR'd magazines (as well as design docs and other developer materials), so it's really great for doing deep dives or even just quick fact checks.

If anything, I have to waste money or else I will open a chest with a purple rupee and a full wallet. :all-my-apes-gone: but for rupees

Me when I opened the chest I found in my first Stone of Agony secret hole to find a yellow rupee with my wallet full NOOOOO

Honestly yes. Nice job! It shows that sometimes not knowing the 'official' answer means you don't know it is hard.

Absolutely! Totally different scale, but I'm reading a book about the history of Blizzard Entertainment (Play Nice) and there's a bit where they talk about seeing this sick demo for a game at E3 and realizing they need to up their game for Starcraft, and later on they found out that it was a completely phony pre-rendered demo that the presenters were miming along to so that it'd look like they were playing it.

For the first one, try the Scarecrow song...

I went back and tried it and was like, "oooOOOOOHHH that's what it does!". Well, now I know what I need to do if there's a weird spot where it seems like I need a hookshot point! This is another mechanic which has me wondering if there's an in-game hint or not, because even with you encouraging me to learn it I'm not sure when I would have thought to actually bust out the Scarecrow Song.

Separately, I've been enjoying reading through issues of Nintendo Power from 1996-1998 (using this page as a reference to skip over the sparse earlier months) and seeing the hype building for Ocarina of Time (as well as Pokémon Red/Blue from May '98 onwards). It's also interesting to see things that changed (or were misreported) even as the game hurtled towards its release date, such as this description of the beginning of the game (all misspellings theirs):

Nintendo Power Issue 103 (December 1997)

Link Comes of Age

The outline of the story for Zelda 64 comes straight from EAD, the chief game development department at Nintendo Company Ltd. in Kyoto, Japan. Although EAD considers everything "tentative" until the final version of a game is completed, much of what you read here will be a part of Mr. Miyamoto's greatest epic.

Long ago, before Gannon stole the Triforce and kidnapped Zelda, Link set out to his coming-of-age ceremony in the Maze Woods. It was the custom of his tribe, the Kokiri family, that a young man would receive a guardian spirit or fairy who would stay beside him and guide him throughout his life. But as Link walked through the woods, he discovered that a monster had captured one such fairy. Gallantly, Link came to the rescue and defeated the monster, but the fairy was mortally wounded. In her dying breath, she warned Link not to allow Gannondorf to possess the Triforce and to seek out a wise man and his spiritual stone.

At the same time, Gannondorf, the king of the thieves, was searching for the legendary Triforce so that he could steal its power. In time, Gannondorf stumbled into the Maze Woods and neared the secret place where the Triforce was kept. Link went to Hyrule Castle for help. Princess Zelda knew of the Triforce's hiding place, but to reach it they would have to find three magical stones to unlock the secret. Thus begins the adventure.

Brings me back to being a kid and poring over those tiny screenshots to glean every last bit of information I could. The biggest difference now is that I can actually read the Japanese now! And I love seeing all the cute envelope illustrations that kids made. Nintendo Power has a good amount, but the Japanese equivalent (64Dream, later Nintendo Dream) is absolutely packed with them—here's an example from the May 1998 issue, which devotes two full-page spreads to reader illustrations (and has a little corner specifically for kids under 10!). That same issue has a nice feature on Ocarina of Time, which is basically the writer going, "God, these delays are agonizing but holy crap Ocarina of Time looks like the coolest game ever" and I'm like, "Buddy, you have no idea!". The piece is titled, "Is this really [my] final love letter"? since the game was (at time of printing) slated to release in late April 1998, but in the body of the article they're like, "Honestly, we think it's gonna get delayed again, but however long it takes, it'll be worth it" (right on both counts!).

[-] HexReplyBot@hexbear.net 1 points 2 days ago

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this post was submitted on 03 May 2026
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