Video Game Legacies

I started The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time last night on the Virtual Console and worked my way through the Great Deku Tree in under an hour. From creating my saved game through the first temple in under an hour. It was quick.

Great Deku Tree

Don’t worry, I’m not going to go into a day-by-day diary of my play through of Ocarina of Time because this is going to take a long time not because the game is long, but because I’m going to be taking huge breaks and probably playing through only when I have a spare hour and nothing I want to get into.

So, this is not Skyward Sword.

What I want to briefly bring up for discussion is a thought I had last night working through the first 3D Zelda.

Why did the game move so quickly at the start? Sure, Navi was an annoying distraction every time you would try and do something new, but you moved quickly from waking up to an annoying fairy to beating Ghoma in the Great Deku Tree and getting to the next part of your quest.

As another example, Skyward Sword took me close to five hours to get to what might be considered a comparable place. This isn’t a knock against Skyward Sword (still thinking it is my favorite Zelda game ever … but not enough time between beating the game yet), but an honest question about why Ocarina of Time is so much quicker than Skyward Sword.

What I came up with in the shower this morning was that Ocarina of Time had no legacy behind it which the game needed to “live up to”. A Link to the Past was decidedly a last-generation title (being 2D and all), but Ocarina of Time didn’t just usher in the first Zelda title on the N64, it was really the first true adventure game in 3D period and set the standard by which all other games would be judged (my opinion here).

Because of that, Ocarina of Time was freed to be the best game it could be without really needing to live up to the past because you couldn’t really compared the past to the present (1998).

However, ever since then, each Zelda game has carried the weight of Ocarina of Time with it, along with adding new legacies along the way.

That’s just off the top of my head. I didn’t even include Ocarina of Time because I really don’t have enough time (or patience) to list everything.

That’s a lot of legacy, and each one was under the pressure added from all of the past ones.

I think that can sometimes slow things down a little bit because you are pressured into trying to maybe squeeze in more than last time and yet incorporate all that has come before.

Just some thoughts I had this morning.

As a closing thought, the control scheme for Ocarina of Time and Majora’s Mask was definitely tailored toward the N64 controller. The Classic Controller Pro is an okay controller, even lacking rumble, but the location of the analog sticks are somewhat problematic. I don’t have the option of using a Gamecube controller on my Wii, but it would be an option to look into if only to have the analog stick in a better place.

Still a great game.

Categories
Life Technology

So … there’s This One Podcast

My friend Phil Wels and I recently recorded our first ever podcast and I just finished posted it tonight. You can head on over to the This One Podcast site and take a listen yourself.

We will be updating things on the site and also listing the podcast in iTunes soon as well.

I need to apologize for my audio quality, my headset that I was going to use was not loud enough so I defaulted to my iPhone headset which worked fine, but was muddy and also had some noise when it hit my shirt (which was often). I’m looking into getting my hands on a better microphone for next time.

Hope you all enjoy!

Categories
Life Technology

Only Good Thing at CES

This is the only good thing at CES (via Engadget).

Who wants to go in with me on one?

Categories
Life

Sidewalks

Patrick Rhone posted “Where Are The Sidewalks?” over at his blog. I recommend it, a very good read and some food for thought.

I grew up in the rural Minnesota, about five miles outside of town, and that’s really shaped me for the most part. Now, living in that town, I’ve grown quite fond of the sidewalks that we have here to get from place to place. Realistically, I get quite annoyed when I go somewhere (say, a new subdivision) and they do not have sidewalks there.

From where we currently live I have the following available within walking distance:

  • my kid’s future school – 5 blocks
  • library – 4 blocks
  • park w/kiddie pool – 4 blocks
  • downtown – 6 blocks
  • our church – 6 blocks
  • my work – 12+ blocks

That’s just off the top of my head. It doesn’t not include the many people who are around us or just the general beauty of the area because the city has made it a priority to have a lot of trees.

Realistically, everything is reachable by walking here. I used to run three times a week and I guess it would take less than a half-hour to walk to the nearest Target. Along the way you hit another park. This doesn’t even count the parks at the schools which are almost all within five minutes of our house.

All of that was really just to point out that New Ulm is a great city for walking. I’m hoping we get to do more next year as my youngest son ages past the point of me fearing having him outside too much. It will be good to get outside more.

I don’t really know where I’m going with this but I am reminded of a conversation I was having with my uncle not long ago. He was lamenting that more parents don’t know each other, even if their kids are of a similar age. That’s so true. Connections are made more by what your kids are doing outside of school than of who they spend time with in school. It’s tragic, really, that we don’t get to know more people.

However, it’s also tragic that we don’t just get out and get to know more people around us in the community. Growing up it was ridiculous not know every person who lived on our road between the turn off on the highway to the intersection with the next county road. Some of those people were even closer than our own family and they were spread out over more than two miles.

What does $200 get you?

So, Matias announced their Tactile One Keyboard and I would love to have one.

At $200, I can’t justify it.