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Amazon.com: The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - US Version : Nintendo of America: Video Games

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    Amazon.com: The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild - US Version : Nintendo of America: Video Games

    Avaliações de produtos 4

    Foto tirada pelo comprador 0

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    Kam

    I recently purchased Zelda: Breath of the Wild and I am absolutely loving it! The game is visually stunning and the open-world gameplay provides endless hours of exploration and adventure. The puzzles and challenges are engaging and require strategic thinking, which keeps the gameplay fresh and exciting. I also appreciate the attention to detail in the game, from the various environments to the intricate character designs.Overall, I highly recommend Zelda: Breath of the Wild to any fans of the Zelda franchise or open-world games in general. It's a must-have for any Nintendo Switch owner and has quickly become one of my all-time favorite games.

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    Andrew D. Lossing

    This is a fantastic game, as is probably evident to you, the reader, given the praise lauded on it here and elsewhere. Many game review outlets gave this a 10/10 or similar, tippy-top, score. And it's deserved. Nintendo upended the Zelda franchise, which is a good thing since I could never really get into them despite their high quality. Zelda titles just rely on too many mechanical conceits which are difficult to learn, and at odds with the loosey-goosey Western RPG play style. This entry, by contrast, doubles down on the easygoing play and creates a massive, filled-out sandbox in which to do it. It has been compared many times to Skyrim, and it does have elements that feel like an Elder Scrolls game. But, since you play as Link the Hylian, there isn't the same level of character customization - in fact, there's none at all. Instead you simply find orbs to increase Link's health and stamina, and of course gather equipment to better your chances in battles. But the core concept of what Link can and cannot do doesn't change at all.Nearly every piece of equipment in the game deteriorates with use, which is a mechanic both frustrating and rewarding. Enemies which use weapons will drop them when they die, meaning you can use them. Some are much more desirable than others, but even the most grunt-level of implements serves a purpose, should you have room in your inventory for them, as they keep your favorite gear from wearing out. It's a fun method of resource management that keeps you more invested in finding and conserving the better gear.In this game, there are no real health potions. Instead there's food! Both raw ingredients and cooked meals can be found in the world, but the real fun is cooking the raw foods into meals which offer various benefits. Few games implement cooking mechanics, and perhaps none do it as well as this game. it's pure joy coming up with new concoctions, although everything else pales in comparison to climbing to the top of high things and parasailing off of them.Story is parceled out in this title in between the sandbox sessions, almost entirely dependent on when the player wishes to engage it (another similarity to an Elder Scrolls title). Here are plenty of the silly noises that are typical of Zelda characters, but sometimes there is a real cutscene with real voice acting, and those times feel valuable and exciting, since they are some of the few times you really feel connected to the story. But this title is at its best when the larger thread of story only sometimes intersperses the narrative created by the player in the world. In fact, nearly everything you can think of doing is not only possible, but is something the designers wanted you to try, and will reward you for doing.

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    Yam

    It’s BOTW, what more do you need.

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    Amazon Customer

    So I am about 3 years late in playing this game. I just bought a Switch primarily to play this game during quarantine, and it has been so so worth it. Zelda is my all-time favorite gaming series by leaps and bounds. I am one of those people who has said for 20 years that Ocarina of Time is the best game ever created and cannot be dethroned. Now, I'm not so sure.Look, while overall this game has clearly been very highly reviewed, I know it has been polarizing in the Zelda community, and I do understand why. This game breaks from classic Zelda formula many huge ways: a true open world, a non-linear story, degradable weapons (everything except one weapon can and will break, usually quickly), some voice acting (!), and most notably, the lack of "proper" dungeons. There are 120 mini dungeons, some of which contain elaborate puzzles, and others being simple (you fight an enemy or two, and that's it). There are 4 or 5 (depending if you get the DLC, which you should) bigger dungeons, but those are all quite small compared to what longtime Zelda fans are used to. But it doesn't matter. If anything, I was happy to spend less time in dungeons, and more time exploring the sprawling, beautiful, majestic open world, where there are countless things to find and do. The attention to detail is amazing - double rainbows, grass sparkling as the sun rises, enemies that actually act realistic (such as hunting wild animals, eating food, sleeping, and fighting you like they actually have a brain). The combat in the game is super fun and engaging. That was one complaint I always had about OoT, MM, and to a lesser extent, TP and WW: so much of the combat in those games was basically just waiting around for the opponent to expose their obviously vulnerable parts to you.This game is not like other Zelda's, which to me, even as a longtime fan, was incredibly exciting, and proved to be a breath of fresh air. Yet it IS undeniably a Zelda game. When solving puzzles, fighting bosses, or of course, finding a certain item hidden deep within a forest, that familiar yet exciting sense of "damn, I LOVE Zelda" is always present. Unlike some other fanboys, I believe Breath of the Wild found a perfect balance between integrating so much of what I have always deeply loved about these games, while leaping into new territory.There are some small issues I did take with the game. I found the main story to feel just a little flat - not that the plot is bad, I just would have liked to see it fleshed out a bit more. I also found the ending to be very unsatisfying, which was disappointing given the hours I'd put in to the game. Also, while I was happy that Nintendo finally included voice acting in a Zelda game, some of it - especially the male characters - felt a bit like overkill and made me cringe a bit. (Zelda's voice is perfect, though).So ultimately, did BOTW dethrone OoT for me? It's hard to say. They are very different games, but what I do know is that as I replayed OoT shortly before buying this game, I found myself...well, bored. Times have changed. OoT's once vast world now feels small. The enemies are predictable and kind of boring to fight. I found myself playing mostly just to try and recapture a sense of nostalgia. None of that is to say OoT is anything less than a masterpiece - 20 years ago, it was revolutionary. Unlike BOTW, OoT's ending still sends chills up my spine. The final boss battle is incredible. What I do know, though, is that once I picked up BoTW, I felt the awe, the joy, the excitement, the sense of adventure that OoT had initially inspired in me decades earlier. Again, hard to compare apples to oranges, but in terms of sheer enjoyment, Breath of the Wild has bested any game I've played since I was a kid. And that's what games are all about.Kudos to you if you read all this.

    4.8 / 5
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