The newest entry in one of the other game series around with a 30 year legacy:
[video=youtube;zw47_q9wbBE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zw47_q9wbBE[/video]
I've always been a bit of a Nintendo fan with a soft spot for the Zelda games ever since playing Ocarina of Time on christmas 1998. No other game in the series has since managed to turn me into a young teen again and I personally never got quiet warm with the 2D entries, having started playing games in the N64 era, but this entry personally excites me for a couple of reasons. It's the first time Nintendo seems to break out of the abstract game template cemented by the SNES and N64 Zelda entries for good, going from a trigger based puzzle game to a far more game-physics determined model for its mechanics. It's the first time they go from a "room" and setpiece based game world interconnected by hub areas and corridors to an actual open world. It's the first time they have voice overs (quality remains to be seen). It's the first time they have more elaborate character health and equipment based mechanics, than mowing down grass for hearts, magic potions and rupees, introducing basic survival and hunting mechanics and a slew of different clothing and weaponry.
It feels like the series is making a 20 year leap from sometime in the early ninties to today.
The usual caveats apply for Nintendo. Technically, they're about 10 years behind the curve, seeing as that's about what the Wii U and Switch can do, the Switch being a pretty beefy handheld (but still a handheld) and the Wii U a pretty weak console. Image quality and raw texture resolution suffer, but the general style alleviates the issues a bit. While playing the Switch demo, I noticed inconsistent framreate however, which is a bit of a pity with 30fps as baseline. I'll be playing on the Wii U, as I'm not shelling out the 330€ launch price for the Switch for one game. At least there's the cemu Wii U emulator, which might be a good way to relive Nintendo classics years down the line with clean image quality, if it continues to develop as impressively as the dolphin Wii/GC emulator.
Anybody else going to play BotW?
[video=youtube;zw47_q9wbBE]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zw47_q9wbBE[/video]
I've always been a bit of a Nintendo fan with a soft spot for the Zelda games ever since playing Ocarina of Time on christmas 1998. No other game in the series has since managed to turn me into a young teen again and I personally never got quiet warm with the 2D entries, having started playing games in the N64 era, but this entry personally excites me for a couple of reasons. It's the first time Nintendo seems to break out of the abstract game template cemented by the SNES and N64 Zelda entries for good, going from a trigger based puzzle game to a far more game-physics determined model for its mechanics. It's the first time they go from a "room" and setpiece based game world interconnected by hub areas and corridors to an actual open world. It's the first time they have voice overs (quality remains to be seen). It's the first time they have more elaborate character health and equipment based mechanics, than mowing down grass for hearts, magic potions and rupees, introducing basic survival and hunting mechanics and a slew of different clothing and weaponry.
It feels like the series is making a 20 year leap from sometime in the early ninties to today.
The usual caveats apply for Nintendo. Technically, they're about 10 years behind the curve, seeing as that's about what the Wii U and Switch can do, the Switch being a pretty beefy handheld (but still a handheld) and the Wii U a pretty weak console. Image quality and raw texture resolution suffer, but the general style alleviates the issues a bit. While playing the Switch demo, I noticed inconsistent framreate however, which is a bit of a pity with 30fps as baseline. I'll be playing on the Wii U, as I'm not shelling out the 330€ launch price for the Switch for one game. At least there's the cemu Wii U emulator, which might be a good way to relive Nintendo classics years down the line with clean image quality, if it continues to develop as impressively as the dolphin Wii/GC emulator.
Anybody else going to play BotW?
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