The Legend Of Zelda: The Oracle of Seasons
Nov 5th, 2009 by cm1

Let’s say you’re Nintendo, and it’s late spring 2001. The Game Boy Color is still selling like hotcakes, but you’ve got your new portable unit, the Game Boy Advance, looming close on the horizon. How do you bridge the gap between new and old and unite a legion of devoted handheld gamers? The answer is an easy one: Zelda. Nintendo is sending the Game Boy Color out with a bang by releasing not just one but two new Game Boy Zelda titles–Oracle of Seasons and Oracle of Ages, both of which run just fine on the Game Boy Color, though playing the games on the upcoming Game Boy Advance will unlock a few new surprises, such as a new ring shop. Although Capcom’s Flagship team actually handled development on the two games, both of them pack in everything one expects from a good Zelda adventure.
The biggest difference between Seasons and Ages is that each focuses on a different aspect of the classic Zelda formula: Ages is puzzle-heavy while Seasons is action-oriented. That’s not to say that Ages skimps on the monster slaying or that Seasons won’t give you any puzzles to solve, but each game knows what it’s going for. Of course, true Zelda fans will want to play both games for reasons that will be detailed shortly, but it’s worth mentioning that Seasons and Ages are fully self-contained games that can be played and completed without each other.
Like the previous Game Boy Zelda game, Link’s Awakening, Oracle of Seasons strays outside the standard Ganon-Zelda-Triforce canon of the Zelda series to find its plot. The initial setup is simple enough: The Triforce tells Link that it has a quest for him and transports him to the land of Holodrum. Onox, the self-appointed “General of Darkness,” has kidnapped Din, the Oracle of Seasons, and made the hallowed Temple of Seasons disappear. Holodrum’s seasons are going haywire as a result, and it’s up to Link to fix everything. He’ll do this by–surprise, surprise–solving eight dungeons and retrieving the eight Essences of Season. But hey, we don’t play Zelda games for total originality in design, we play them for incredibly well-developed gameplay.
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