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i finally passed it!

Started by raymundo, January 13, 2007, 10:26:54 PM

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raymundo

i started on Dec 31,2006 at 2:34pm
and finished on Jan 13,2007 at 5:20pm
i spent 54 hours passing it.

chicknumber2


raymundo

thanks,i only need to pass
Majora´s Mask ,OOT Master Quest and PH.
and theni am done passing all Zelda Games!

bgrugby

Well have you also played and beaten the Zelda games on the Philips system, cause unless you have done that (which few people probably have) then technically you haven't beaten all of them  ;D

Harashi

Those are like the retarded parasitic twins of Zelda and even Nintendo rejects them completely, and besides they're almost impossible to get.

raymundo


Zelda Veteran

If you're talking about the CD-I games, they werent endorced by Nintendo. Now, you're GANON-BANNED!!! Just read rule number 13 at Gannon-Banned.com. The CD-I games are sad, really.




My real Poison team in BW2. They all have perfect natures and EV's. I went the extra distance and bred the right IV's into them. Come at me bro.

bgrugby

#7
Quote from: Zelda Veteran on January 14, 2007, 03:56:15 PM
If you're talking about the CD-I games, they werent endorced by Nintendo. Now, you're GANON-BANNED!!! Just read rule number 13 at Gannon-Banned.com. The CD-I games are sad, really.

Actually rule 13 is "Claiming Soul Caliber II/CD-I games are part of the timeline. I never said that, I just said you have to beat those to actually claim to beat all Zelda games...in which I was kidding anyways, I do not think anyone played through all those games completely and didn't kill themselves or have their head explode.

Nice site though, never seen it before, I can't believe though that some would actually think Zelda and Link are brother and sister.

Zelda Veteran

I didnt say you said they were part of the timeline. I just linked you to it, so you would see that they werent endorced by Nintendo, and that it dosent count. A Zelda Veteran has to know these things. :D

My real Poison team in BW2. They all have perfect natures and EV's. I went the extra distance and bred the right IV's into them. Come at me bro.

Evahn

GANNON-BANNED!!!!!!!


TP took me like 60 hours, but I was playing really slow.

bgrugby

#10
Wow 60 hours is alot. Also this whole stupid Gannon-Banned thing has got me wondering? The first rule of it is against spelling Ganon "Gannon" yet the website and the whole thing is called Gannon-Banned...either I am crazy or the site is contridicting itself or I am missing something.

raymundo


chicknumber2

i'm not even finished tp and i have done over 57 hours (which is very bad) cause i get stuck in the temples and then when i get past the bit i'm stuck at i just say to my self that i'm really stupid and wack my self in the haed cause it was sooo easy wat i missed

TP Zelda

Quote from: Kirby on January 14, 2007, 09:23:24 AM
thanks,i only need to pass
Majora´s Mask ,OOT Master Quest and PH.
and theni am done passing all Zelda Games!

No, I'll tell you all the games you need to pass to have beaten all.

The Legend of Zelda
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask
The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons
The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages
The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker
The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures
The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap

The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass

Unless you have beaten some of those, then I'm mistaken. There were some computer games but I don't remember what they're called...

Here are the the descriptions

The Legend of Zelda (NES, Famicom, GBA, Virtual Console) (1986)
This was the first game released in the series, though most of the games released since then seem to take place in earlier time periods. In this game, Ganon is already in his pig-like beast form. According to the instruction manual and the official website (though the reliability of the official website is in question), shortly before the beginning of the game, Ganon broke free from the Dark World [11] and his army attacked Hyrule, stole the Triforce of Power and captured the ruling Princess Zelda, but not before she had time to break up and hide the Triforce of Wisdom.[12]
Zelda II: The Adventure of Link (NES, Famicom, GBA, Virtual Console) (1987)
The second Zelda game is a clear sequel to the first one. According to its instruction manual, it takes place "several seasons" after the first game and features the same Link but a different Zelda. Moreover, the story references Link's defeat of Ganon in the first game. The game's backstory also references an old legend of Hyrule. According to it, long ago, a prince of Hyrule should have inherited the Triforce after the king's death, but he only obtained part of it. Indeed, his sister, Princess Zelda, let him keep the Triforce of Power and the Triforce of Wisdom, but the late King hid the Triforce of Courage. The prince and a magician questioned Zelda, but she refused to reveal the location of the last piece of the Triforce. In anger, the magician cast an eternal sleeping spell on Zelda, before dying himself. In grief, the prince ordered that all future girls of the royal family be named Zelda.[13] This Zelda is still asleep at the beginning of the game and is awakened by Link after he retrieves the Triforce of Courage at the end of the game. The events of this legend were never witnessed or mentioned in another game.
The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (SNES, GBA, Virtual Console) (1991)
This is the first of many Zelda games to have Hyrule's history told within the game. It is also the first game in which Ganon is referred to as "Ganondorf". By the time of this game, Ganon is in his pig-like form and sealed in the Golden Land with the Triforce. The game's instruction manual tells how the Triforce (all three pieces of it) was originally hidden in the Golden Land. One day long ago, it was found by Ganondorf the Thief, and it granted his evil wish for a monstrous army to attack Hyrule. While the Knights of Hyrule defended the land, the Seven Sages created a magic seal to lock off the Golden Land.[14] The game itself revolves around Ganon's ultimately successful attempt to break the Sages' seal. Princess Zelda alerts Link to this and Link goes on to find the Master Sword (its first named appearance in the series), then to defeat Ganon and reclaim the Triforce.
The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening (GB, GBC) (1993)
This game occurs soon after the events of A Link to the Past, according to the game's instruction manual. It states that Link left Hyrule on a journey of enlightenment after defeating Ganon.[15]
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time (N64, GC) (1998), Virtual Console)
After its release, this game was confirmed by Shigeru Miyamoto as the first in the series' continuity.[16] At the beginning of the game, Ganondorf is the Gerudo king and has not gained the Triforce. As the game progresses, Ganondorf finds his way into the Sacred Realm and finds the Triforce, but because his heart is not balanced, he causes the Triforce to become divided in three pieces - the Triforce of Power, the Triforce of Wisdom, and the Triforce of Courage. Ganondorf uses the Triforce of Power to lead an invasion of Hyrule, but Link stops him and the Seven Sages seal him in the Sacred Realm.
The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask (N64, GC) (2000)
This game takes place months after the events of Ocarina of Time, and stars the same Link after returning to his youth, according to the in-game story. While traveling through the Lost Woods, he is attacked by the Skull Kid wearing a sinister mask, and while trying to get his stolen horse and ocarina back, accidentally falls into a parallel world called Termina, which is going to be destroyed by a falling moon in three days. Link must relive the same three days over and over again while trying to undo the chaos created by the Skull Kid through the power of Majora's Mask, and find a way to stop the impending apocalypse.
The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons and The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages (GBC) (2001)
These games are connected via a password system and one takes place immediately after the other. They can be played and regarded in either order. Dialogue suggests that this particular Link and Princess Zelda featured in these games meet for the first time during the adventure. The Twinrova sisters from Ocarina of Time appear in these games and plot to resurrect Ganon.
The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords (GBA) (2002)
The versions of Link and Princess Zelda featured in this game are childhood friends.
The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker (GC) (2002)
This game takes place hundreds of years after Ocarina of Time. Hyrule has been lost for hundreds of years and now all that remains of its civilization are a few scattered islands on the Great Sea. Half way through The Wind Waker, the Link and Zelda from this game discover they are the reincarnations (or descendants) of their counterparts in the old kingdom. It is revealed in dialogue between survivors of Hyrule that the Link of The Wind Waker is not related to the Hero of Time, who is the Link from Ocarina of Time.
The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures (GC) (2004)
This game takes place about one hundred years[17] after the events of Four Swords. It includes some background information about Ganon. Early in the game, he is called Ganondorf (and has his human form) before obtaining his trident and becoming the pig-like beast Ganon. Zelda calls Ganon an "ancient demon reborn."
The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap (GBA) (2004)
This game takes place long before Four Swords and Four Swords Adventures. It involves the origins of the namesake weapon of the aforementioned games, the Four Sword, as well as Vaati, their primary antagonist. No mention of Ganon is made but Link and Zelda are childhood friends as well. This game is considered first chronologically by many fans because of Link not having his trademark hat and the only game other than Majora's Mask to not mention Ganon.
The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess (Wii, GC) (2006)
This game takes place about one hundred years[18] after Ocarina of Time. After becoming the dark beast Ganon, Ganondorf returns to his Gerudo form.
The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass (DS) (2007)
This game has yet to be released, but Nintendo has confirmed that it takes place directly after The Wind Waker and will star the same Link.
The Legend of Zelda (Wii) (TBA)
This is the tentative name for the upcoming entry in the series, developed exclusively for the Wii. In an interview at E³ 2005, The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess director Eiji Aonuma stated that he was assigned by Nintendo president Satoru Iwata to create a Zelda game for the upcoming platform.[1] It was later reported in the "Loose Talk" gossip column in the December 2006 issue of Game Informer that the next installment after Twilight Princess had been in deep development for approximately a year

The Legend of Zelda
.Zelda II: The Adventure of Link
..The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
...The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening
....The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
.....The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask
......The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons
.......The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages
......The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords
.....The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker
....The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures
...The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap
..The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess
.The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass
Hehehe need another one. :p

Mysterious F.

Wow, that was pointless, I'm sure that Kirby new what games were left.