Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess HD: completed!

Having bought Twilight Princess alongside my Wii on launch day in December 2006, but then being captivated by other games (and with a general desire to not play the game until Kieron and John were going to do so as well), I didn’t get around to actually playing it until 2011, after I finally gave up on my friends’ lackadaisical attitude to Zelda gaming.  As I was more active here at the time, you can read several posts about my progress then, where I completed the forest temple, was whisked away to the twilight, had trouble with controlling Wolf Link, met Midna, and scouted for the three parts of the Fused Shadow.  I seemingly got as far as the temple at the bottom of Lake Hylia, including defeating the boss, before giving up.

Giving up? I don’t think it was a conscious decision. Instead, Mario Kart 7 was released, I was also playing a Layton game, and other stuff just seemed to grab me instead. I always intended to go back, but I never did.

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Luigi's Mansion: completed!

Yes! After only twelve years, it’s done!  And people said it was a short game!

In fairness, it is a short game, and not overly difficult, but it’s actually significantly longer than, say, the single-player components of most Call of Duty games.  It’s infinitely more charming and fun.  Overall, the game took me about 9 hours to complete, and that was including a bit near the end where I ran around the whole house trying to find the last few boos.  I had collected most of them through normal play, but there were some hidden in Level 1 rooms which I had completed before acquiring the scanner.

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Aladdin: still amazing

I’ve been fiddling with the emulators on the Wii recently and have finally managed to get them in a state where they’re easy enough to use.  I’ve also been experimenting with ROMs I’ve picked up.

The joys of being an adult and being interested in retro games is that many of the cartridges you long after when you’re young can be had for a pittance when you’re older – and you have the money to spend on them as well.  The disadvantage is having space to store them and the machines.  I’ve been buying various cart games off eBay for years, but often these have sat unplayed because my Mega Drive, Master System Converter, Game Gear, and so on, are all in the loft.  This emulation gives me a handy way of playing the games – and, of course, adding features such as save states and allowing me to run it through my video capture box.  It’s not as good as using original hardware, due to the controllers, the lack of a clunk as the cartridge engages, and some emulation oddities, but it’ll do.

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Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess: barking mad

I went West.  Well, I went North first, and found Hyrule Field, which was surprisingly empty, and I ran around a bit and killed some enemies to get used to the controls again.  Then I went West, and entered the Twilight realm and turned into a wolf.  It’s a very dark game at times, with the shadows being very threatening.

I ran forward and found one of the kids’ swords.  Oh, yes, I’m meant to be rescuing some children, aren’t I?  I picked up the scent from that, and followed it to a clearing with three monsters.  When I killed two of them, the remaining one would revive them.  I died many times, trying to time my last blow on two of them to be simultaneous.  And then when playing with the controls I worked out that the B button creates an energy field around me which does that job for me.  I really ought to catch up with where I am before playing further …

I restored the bridge, at least.

Game memories: D

Doom (32X)
I played the PC game a fair bit, yes, but the 32X game is where I really learnt to love Doom (and the GBA conversion kept the affair running). It played brilliantly on the console, particularly with the MD’s sublime six-button controllers.

Doom RPG (N95)
A really clever adaptation of the game, set to a turn-based first-person RPG with all the enemies and weapons of the original. I’m not sure if there’s any way to play it now, short of buying an old phone.

Dr Kawashima’s Brain Training (DS)
I played this religiously every day for ages. I’m not sure it improved my mental capacity at all, but I had fun. I have the brain of a 20-year old, apparently. Maybe that explains why I still like S Club.

Drawn to Life (DS)
A surprisingly good platformer, in which you draw the characters (to an extent, within animation boundaries). Each time you find a new thing, you colour it in and it stays like that for the rest of the game. The only issue is that the game is a little too hard for its intended audience.

Disaster: Day of Crisis (Wii)
A great experience, but I don’t think it’s got a huge amount of replayable value to it. Having said that, I never did finish it, and I last played it ages ago, so I may well start from the beginning again.

Dead or Alive: Xtreme Beach Volleyball (Xbox)
Or “look at our boobs”. The volleyball game wasn’t as good as Beach Spikers (which I forgot, oops), and the ‘gifts’ section was awful. I paid £5 for it, and that was £10 too much.

Donkey Konga (Gamecube)
I was so excited about this. I bought the game and bongos in an HMV in Kingston because they were selling it the day before release day, and carried everything home across London during rush hour. The game didn’t disappoint; the highlight to me being Don’t Stop Me Now, which, whenever it comes on in a club or disco nowadays, causes Kieron, Matt and myself to exchange knowing glances.

Dancing Stage (PS)
I had a load of these. I wish I could play them on the PS3, but there’s nowhere to plug the dance mat into.