Showing posts with label Link. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Link. Show all posts

7.18.2012

Zelda II: the Adventure of Link


Links' Adventure


When Nintendo made this the sequel to the smash hit The Legend of Zelda, it was as if they didn't know what they were doing. What sequels did they make up until that point? Mario 2? Not that Mario 2. It was just like the first. Donkey Kong Jr? Completely different from the first. Zelda 2 was also completely different from the formula that made the original game a success: Different development team than the first. Different ideas. Shigeru Miyamoto explains that development was on schedule. Nintendo was better at making games by then (1987), and even if development was streamlined, why did they make a game so drastically different? I wasn't able to really come to any solid conclusions.

Platforming rpgs were just big around that time and that may have just been the reason. Metroid, Castlevania, and other games being pushed out in Japan combined RPG elements and platforming to become the next huge thing in video games. That's what happened, and Zelda 2: The Adventure of Link is the result.



Look at the way Castlevania 2 turned out, and you'll swear you were playing Zelda 2.

There are some problems with Zelda series. I don't absolutely love it, but at the same time I enjoy the level of difficulty found in this particular game. Difficulty is something that has been eliminated entirely from the Zelda series, a game that started holding your hand from Ocarina of Time afterward. Something happened when developers began to believe that in order to enjoy Zelda games, you had to have lots of dialog, or in game explanations of items. We've been playing these games for 25 years. We don't need it*.

*See: Less talk more Rock by Superbrothers and Saving Zelda by Tevis Thompson.


I agree with almost everything described in those articles.

Zelda was great because you just played the game. There was no explanation. Zelda 2 deviates from this formula by introducing dialog and messages from villagers (Some of which was poorly translated from Japanese). Also gone are the bag of tricks and items which has been been replaced with a list of spells to get Link past several obstacles in the game. That was probably a good thing because of the platforming elements introduced to the game.

Japanese advertisement
Here's the Japanese commercial which features the older man and young girl duo found in other Famicom Disk System commercials. They usually yell at each other. This one seems pretty cool.


And here's the US commercial. Notice that Mattel was distributing Nintendo games in Canada and other parts of the English speaking world. 



So... It seems like I have a lot of complaints about Zelda 2, but I don't. I actually like the game. I like that the differences set it apart from every game in the series. If they were to make another Zelda game like Zelda 2, I would probably buy it immediately. Something so different would be good for the series... Now. Even the artistic approach with Windwaker and Phantom Hourglass was something I enjoyed, which was something that divided fans.



I've played Zelda 2 over and over... and for whatever reason, I just can't finish the game. I get to the second to last temple and just burn out from just the difficulty. Survivability is what made the first two games amazing... not endless, repetative puzzles.



The concept art for Zelda 2 was done by Katsuya Terada. His work seems to have influence the way link is portrayed in later games. He did some art for Zelda 3 and lots of art for Links Awakening as well... Though I think most of it was from Nintendo Power. Look at the sword and shield design. Was that ever implemented before Zelda 2's release? It seems like afterwards, that sheild design and sword style shows up in most of the Zelda releases. I wonder if Terada gets credit for that, though it seems like most of his work is part of the forgotten early issues of Nintendo Power- though I believe that his work is found extensively in other issues as well, and a special edition Dragon Warrior Strategy Guide with an amazing cover.

Art

 Famicom Disk System Spine Card

FDS cover

North American box with cartridge window
With the release of the Hyrule Historia  Zelda encyclopedia book thing, we find that Zelda 2 is the last game in the chronology of the failure timeline, if Link doesn't defeat Ganon in Ocarina of Time. I'm not sure how people feel about it, but I was surprised when I saw there were three concurrent timeline possibilities. Zelda 2 doesn't play like its predecessor, but it is one of the most direct sequels of any Zelda game, (Ocarina and Majora included).


I wonder when the timeline thing went into effect? After Ocarina of Time? Because that game seems to be the deciding point for the next three possible time lines. If it was known early on, did it have an influence on the design of each of the Zelda games? I doubt it. The Hyrule Historia timelines were created by the current director Eiji Aonuma, but a different, albeit brief, timeline exists from a 1998 inteview with Zelda creator Miyamoto. The Miyamoto timeline is disputed because of the very nature of the man, and his disinterest in the story, rather than the game play. Almost every Zelda game is its own little thing.

Development

Development for Zelda 2 was the responsibility of a different team than the first game. It was later seen as a "failure" by Miyamoto because it didn't capture the overall feel of the first game and later Zeldas. That retrospective opinion makes me wonder about some other Nintendo games...  It was more of a side story than an actual sequel to the first game. Perhaps this was one of the first games used to capitalize on sucessfule existing franchise, and bolster sales of the Famicom Disk System. Either way, it was popular in Japan, and when it was finally released in North America, it was snapped up by everyone who now had a Nintendo.

The FDS version and the NES version have some differences in level color pallets, and notably the sound design. Once again the Famicom Disk version utilized that extra sound chip that added some sound effects and added layers of music to the game which was not possible to replicate on the NES. Some sprite changes and a revamp of the leveling system were made for the US release as well.

I wish I could find actual Japanese literature from the time this game was released. With all the Zelda stuff on the net, it becomes difficult to dig up the actual stuff from the bottom. I'm sure someone must have scans of Famitsu magazine somewhere.

Results

I remember being so lost when I played the game. You have to avoid badguys on the overworld screen, and then talk to everyone in town. Sooner or later you discover that by going through a dark tunnel, it will lead to the desert palace.

The palaces are mazes. They all look the same to me. They involve long horizontal passages and vertical elevators... much like Metroid. Some of the Palaces are really big, and the distance required to reach the end boss is often hilarious, because you will die over and over along the way. Flying enemies that knock you into pits are the main frustration throughout the game. Kind of a cheap shot at the player, much like in Castlevania.


Playing the game brought me back to the my initial experience with it. The differences aside, I liked this game growing up. Getting past the first two or three levels is challenging due to the distance you have to travel and the inevitable encounters you face. Once you get a few items like the candle and hammer, things start to open  up around the world. It seems from the start that there are lots of locked away places to explore and you require the necessary item or spell to get past most of these obstacles throughout the game. Back tracking is key.



Then there's the leveling system. Link doesn't seem like much of a hero until you gain a few levels and find some heart containers. After getting the fireball spell, I just sat in one place and killed monsters over and over until I maxed out my levels. Handy if there are still two or three palaces remaining. So yeah, the game is straightforward: level up, collect items and spells, place the crystals in all the palaces, beat the bosses and win the game.

And yet...

I couldn't beat this game. I found myself dreading the long walk to the final palace, and dying over and over. The difficulty required to get the the last level sucked the fun out of it for me.. and that's where I've left off this game time and time again. Last level.. Burnt out of Zelda platforming and falling to my death over and over. I'll revisit this game at a later time.



Failure!

Statistics: 
Deaths: 57 Saves: 8 Continues: 19 Temples: 6 P bags: 26 Boss Deaths: 7 Faeries: 10 1 Ups: 3

8.26.2011

The Legend of Zelda (Second Quest)


The Legend of Zelda is one of my favorite games of all time. I've played many Zeldas, but the first one has a special place in my heart. I don't know if it was the open world style game play, or all the items and monsters. It was a great game because it wasn't burdened with endless dialog or plot lines. You just went around and collected the Triforce. That was it. It has a simplicity that was inevitably lost in later games of the series. It stands the test of time because it is a freaking awesome game.

The game was first released in 1986 on the Famicom Disk System in Japan, and ported to the NES in 1987. It was developed during the same time as the original Super Mario Bros. by Shigeru Miyamoto to be this non-linear adventure type game. The very opposite of what Mario was.

I will attempt to complete the Second Quest. I've never finished it before.

Once you press start, if you enter your name as "ZELDA", you can immediately skip to the Second Quest, which is a much harder version of the Legend of Zelda, and something I've attempted but never finished before. The other way of getting there is by beating the first quest, and I don't want to do that again. So I'm skipping ahead!

What makes the Second Quest hard? Everything gets switched around. Things aren't where they should be... items, labyrinth locations, and enemies. For the most part, its the same game, just a little harder. I've beaten the original game over and over before (maybe twice), but trying to beat the Second Quest is almost cruel. Death is a certainty.

The Art

Once again the box art is different between the Japanese and North American releases. I like the later Famicom reissue box. It gives better detail to the Hyrule Landscape. Inside of the manual we find anime style cartoons describing the game and items, etc.

     Famicom Disk System                       NES                   1994 Famicom reissue

And then there was the gold cartridge. Nintendo made a few of these gold cartridges for various games, but the Zelda series has always had them. Kinda awesome, considering that other games in the US was made of the same gray plastic. Famicom games were multicolored but they never brought that idea over here. Weird.



The manual came with this cool fold out map... it showed most of the world with some areas for the player to draw in when they got explored. I like the low resolution television photos for each item and the monsters.



Here's a Commercial:

I remember watching this commercial. It amazes me that it probably helped sell copies of the game in North America. Let's put a guy in a dark room and have him wig out on hallucinogenics and scream "Zelda!" over and over. To this day if I mention the game Zelda, my mom instinctively says "ZELDA!" with the same tone and inflection as the man in this video.



The Music:

The music was composed by Nintendo sound master Koji Kondo. He's the guy that did Super Mario Bros. and many others for Nintendo. His strength in composition lies in his ability to make repeatable tunes that aren't annoying after they've been looped three thousand times. The music for the game is good, but there are really only five tunes in the entire game. Two of which, the overworld theme, and the labyrinth music that are really played over and over and over.

There are noted differences in sound between the Famicom Disk version and the NES version. The FDS version was able to utilized additional sound chips, making it sound... better. The NES wasn't able to do that, so North American audiences didn't get to hear the full range of sound effects, and other minor sound details that were in the Japanese version. There are millions of remixes, remakes, and symphonic renditions.

The Results:

I started the game and as I entered the first Labyrinth I was surprised. I totally forgot that I was playing the 2nd Quest. Two screens later I was dead. Game over one minute and forty three seconds into the game... Death number one. Some of the early levels pack monsters in there than can kill in two hits. I leave piles of dead Links all over levels one and two.


 My complaint halfway through the game is that it requires more time spent hunting for money because I have to play defensively. I had to spend time gathering up money for the ring, a shield or two, and other items just to be able to survive levels two and three. Not only that, there aren't enough keys in the game, so I come to a locked door and have to shell out another 100 rupees to get past it. That equates to me mindlessly murdering the monsters of Hyrule so I can plunder their corpses.


By level four I've finally started to use maps because my foggy memory can't remember where the levels are and where some important items are located. Even with the use of maps, levels 5-7 were difficult. I changed my strategy from trying to clear room after room, and just relying on avoidance to save my health for the boss fights.

Unbelievably (or not), I am forced to stop what I'm doing and pay the extortion price of a stupid old man, or to feed the appetite of a monster. I have to leave the level I'm working on and go kill more helpless, innocent   monsters for cash. Then I have to battle back to the point I was at just to pay the toll. Totally lame... and kinda funny at the same time.


The final level number nine is the last obstacle. It is a maze of doors that lock behind you, secret passages, and hard enemies. If you can get through that mess and defeat Ganon... you win.


The fight with Ganon is tough because he turns invisible and you have to blindly stab with your sword in the hopes that you'll connect. After doing that a few times he turns awesome brown, which means you have to finish him off with a silver arrow. BAM! He then crumbles to dust and you can pick up the Triforce and go to the next room and rescue Princess Zelda. Victory was mine!




VICTORY

Epilogue: 

I thought that the hardest part in the game was around levels 2 through 5. With the lack of hearts and items there's a strong difficulty curve that you have to get over, and then it tapers off. After I had enough life, the rest of the game became easier because I could literally avoid monsters and walk pretty much to the boss of every level. I did have to use a few maps to get around... so I cheated a little, but I still ended up dying 5 times on the last level. This tactic of avoidance made it almost seem easier than the First Quest, because the levels were smaller. Most of my time was spent killing things for money, which sucked. You get penalized around every corner for not having enough keys, bombs, or money to proceed. I won!


Statistics: 

Deaths: 19 Continues: 17 Saves: 2  Game Overs: 19 Time: Approx 6 hours (whew!)



The Legend of Zelda®, and all associated video games, music, characters, etc. are owned by Nintendo - all rights reserved.