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March 22nd, 2013

Multi-page update! Start back at page 94~

Heart Containers header

“The Legend of Zelda” by Ben Hatke
I think the original Legend of Zelda is a perfect game. With it’s 8 bit graphics, midi-symphonic music, and gold casing, it’s everything I’ve ever wanted in a video game, and even though it’s the only Zelda game I’ve ever played (I don’t play a lot of video games), I can see why it spawned so many sequels.

I recently spent an afternoon at a friend house just to watch my old college roommate play through Legend of Zelda. When that title screen came up, with the questing music and the waterfall and the Triforce, I was, just like every time, transported back to the first time I saw this game (at my aunt’s house where my lucky cousins had their own Nintendo).

Zelda gold NES
But my love for Link is more than nostalgia! Link’s first quest had great gameplay, but I think it also has two important things going for it.

The first is that the game struck that balance of design and story information that I think does the best job of engaging a player. Calista Brill has mentioned this balance with Doctor Who and storytelling. Jerzy Drozd mentioned the same thing in regards to Battle Beasts and other 80’s toylines. There seems to be a magic amount of visual and story information, a sweet spot, always with a certain amount withheld, a little vagueness around the edges, that invites the reader/player to participate -to make the story his own.

Zelda Screenshot
The second secret to the game’s success is that, like all good stories, it was based to some extent on the real boyhood adventures of the game’s creative director, Shigeru Miyamoto, who tried to recreate the feeling he experienced as a boy wandering through fields and woods.

We were all Link, slaying Octoroks and looking for hearts. And we all had our own vision of Link.

Mine looked like this:

Legend of Zelda by Ben Hatke
(and when he runs around, this song plays)

Life Meter 3 cover

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Ben Hatke is the creator of the Zita the Spacegirl graphic novels and a contributor to the Flight Anthologies. Ben learned painting through studying the Italian Masters and by training at the Charles Cecil Studios in Florence. He also contributed the amazing cover to Life Meter 3 (seen above).

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Read more LOVE LETTERS & HEART CONTAINERS blog entries:
“Videogames” by Dave Roman

“Doctor Who” by Calista Brill

“Buying Books from Bookstores” by Dave Roman

“Manga I’d Recommend to People Who Think They Don’t Like Manga” by Dave Roman

“Yars’ Revenge” by John Green

“Battle Beasts” by Jerzy Drozd

“Pokémon” by Patrick Woodruff

“Harry Potter” by Megan Brennan

“Muppet Babies, Spaceballs & Parody Films” by Dave Roman

“They Might Be Giants” by Dave Roman

“Space Exploration” by Alison Wilgus

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5 Responses

  1. Tjackson20 says:

    Yeah, the DEFINITELY know what’s good for their students!

  2. Santiago says:

    “Stupid acronyms” = Comedy gold!

  3. Tjackson20 says:

    I love ‘Is that legal?’

  4. piggywiggy says:

    not sure if it even is legal…i think the first amendment protects it…?

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