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Showing results for tags 'zelda'.
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I was just going to post this in the Greatest Youtube Videos thread, but I figured this was intriguing enough to warrant its own topic. A friend of mine linked me this Zelda animation the other day: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=it2sk2nzbnY&feature=youtu.be I've got to say, it's pretty impressive all around. The animation itself is a very strong showing of how well SFM can be used. While there are some noticeable limitations (in particular, the low-poly Castle Town area and the shopkeeper's character model clash with some of the others), the way the motions and expressions for Link and Illia in particular are animated is pretty spectacular and surprisingly detailed. The content of the animation is pretty awesome, too. The idea is simple, but the video takes it as far as it can, and the result is hilarious. It pokes fun at some of the franchise's quirks in a way that feels affectionate and sincere, and the use of music and various vocal clips makes it feel quite authentic. On the whole, it's probably one of the best Zelda videos I've seen and certainly one of the best SFM videos I've watched. So yeah. What do you guys think of this?
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Tomodachi Life [3DS] - "All Hail the Virtual Boy!", 6th June 2014
Doctor MK posted a topic in Video Games
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5lQIoUK4SLI Official Website: http://www.nintendo.co.uk/Games/Nintendo-3DS/Tomodachi-Life-871968.html Nintendo has just announced that 3DS title Tomodachi Life will be getting a European and North American release on 6th June 2014 by means a very special and very obscure mini Nintendo Direct. Warning! Contains Shigsy x Peach shipping, and everyone wants a piece of Zero Suit Samus. The game itself is a lifestyle simulator in which you can basically create anyone and make them do anything. The characters you create move in together and live together, with hilarious consequences that you get to laugh at as they pan out. This looks genuinely funny and definitely not just Animal Crossing with Miis. The Direct alone is enough to convince me that it's worth keeping an eye on, at the very least! Plus, with a Tomodachi Life stage already confirmed to be in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, it only makes sense that we see the game get a release beforehand to familiarise ourselves with the source material. What do you make of how the game looks? Even if you're not interested, what did you think of the Direct? I think there's something we can all agree on from the video though... ALL HAIL THE VIRTUAL BOY!- 77 replies
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Before you all attack me, I'm just gonna throw it out there; I own both Skyrim and Skyward Sword, and I happen to really like them both. I'm just making this topic simply for the sake of asking a question. Now, after playing both Skyrim and Skyward Sword, the differences are night and day. Yes, both games have heavy fantasy elements, involve sword and shield combat, etc. That's all well and good, but for the most part, they're pretty different games. Skyrim has a heavy focus on exploration and combat above all things, you're given a lot of choice of what you might want to. There's hundreds of dungeons and pieces of geography to explore, and you're never told where to go or what to do. Now, doesn't that sound like a game we're all too familiar with? Yes, of course I'm talking about Zelda I. You'd be kidding yourself if you don't think that the whole selling point of that game was its non-linearity, it was the whole reason Zelda became popular at all. You could conquer any dungeon in any order you wanted to, go anywhere you wanted to at your leisure, and take things at your own pace. No one told you what to do, what item to get, how to do, well, anything in the game. Also, yes, there were some puzzles in the game, but they were few and far between, and most of them simply involved you pushing a block in a room, that was it. The meat of the game had you overcoming enemies and obstacles, with a very small focus on puzzles. Now, on to Skyward Sword. An excellent game, yes, but a very linear one in comparison to Skyrim and even the original Zelda. Each dungeon must be conquered in the order the developers intended, no bones about it. They are full of puzzles, battles, and generally have a lot of variety to them, something the original Zelda and Skyrim can't tout as a feature. However, the joy of exploring and finding something new isn't there. I beat Skyward Sword twice already, and loved it both times. I loved the motion controls, fighting enemies was a thrill, the puzzles were brain bending and overall it was just a fantastic, polished, and fun game. However, what made Zelda famous, exploring things at your own will, and finding new places, weapons, items, and more, surprises, was missing. This is why I say Skyrim is more of an evolution of the concepts the series originally set out to behold. Currently, the Zelda and Elder Scrolls franchises couldn't be further apart. However, if Zelda was put on hold after the first game, and Nintendo wound up releasing Skyrim or a game very similar to it and calling it Zelda, I would not have raised an eye brow.