![]() There are meals that will boost your defense, give you extra hearts temporarily, refill your stamina meter, all sorts of things. A meal including hot peppers, for instance, will grant you time-limited resistance to the colder areas of Hyrule, which would otherwise be impossible to cross. Simple apples from trees grant you a little recovery when eaten, but you should really cook them up with other ingredients to get the benefits. Your primary source of healing comes from the abundance of items you’ll find. We’re not going to hold your hand or wipe your sorry butt for you like your mama. In Breath of the Wild, you earn those damn hearts. Who the hell needs that? That’s for sissies. In another departure, you won’t be finding hearts dropping from enemies, or magically appearing as you cut down grass. If you just recently bought the game, or just want to know more, settle in for our spoiler-free crash course: Understand all of Breath of the Wild in 15 Pictures.Īs we’ve already said, your cooking prowess is as important as your sword skills in this game. It’s a hell of a thing, is what I’m getting at. Without them arriving looking like they’d been thrown from the top of the Chrysler Building, either (what the hell’s that about? Does that ‘fragile’ sticker on the box mean nothing to you people?). It delivers like 10,000 UPS delivery dudes all delivering their deliveries simultaneously, actually at the time they said they would deliver their deliveries. Except we really didn’t at all.īreath of the Wild delivers in a big, big way. Sure, the scale of the thing was clear enough from the earliest trailers, but it’s a Zelda game after all. And the next.Īs such, you’re excused for not expecting anything too revolutionary from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Which is one of the biggest issues with gaming today this year’s annual installment of Call of Duty or FIFA can seem pretty much the same as the last. Namely, money, and who the hell wants to risk the chance of making themselves some major fan cash-tacular? Nobody, that’s who. Like a lot of AAA titles, they have too much to lose with screwing around with these winning formulas. The big Nintendo IPs are often criticized for their lack of evolution. Sadly, they seem to take the old 'If It Isn’t Broken, Don’t Fix It' adage a shade too seriously. From Mario to Zelda, the Big N have a monopoly on some of the most beloved and longest-lived names in gaming. One thing we can’t fault these guys on, though, is their first party IPs. They’re also known for their woefully inadequate approach to third-party support for their consoles. They’re known for their innovation, their balls-out, why-the-hell-not creative attitude (which has resulted in the Wii, the DS, the thundering ballache of a disaster that was the Virtual Boy, and many others). Whichever way you slice it, Nintendo developers are an enigmatic bunch.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |