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10m copies in three days: Latest Zelda set to be another record-breaker for Nintendo

By Tim Biggs

In 2017, Nintendo reinvented its long-running Legend of Zelda franchise with Breath of the Wild, a game that became so popular — selling more than 30 million units — that the Japanese giant seemed unlikely to replicate the impact with a sequel. Yet by all appearances, this month’s The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom may end up even bigger.

In its first three days of availability, the game sold more than 10 million copies globally, according to Nintendo, blowing away multi-platform competitors like FIFA 23 and Hogwarts Legacy. The game has been topping charts since pre-orders opened, and has been trending solidly on social media since its release.

The Legend of Zelda has stuck closely to its themes over almost four decades, but it’s also been modernised into one of the most impressive open worlds in gaming.

The Legend of Zelda has stuck closely to its themes over almost four decades, but it’s also been modernised into one of the most impressive open worlds in gaming.

The latest instalment has had by far the most successful launch of a Zelda game in the series’ 38-year run, and is the fastest to reach this sales milestone of any previous Switch game.

And only part of the reason for all of this is that Nintendo currently operates the second most successful home video games platform of all time (the Switch has sold more than 125 million units to date, behind only Sony’s PlayStation 2). It’s also down to the fact that Nintendo has amassed an immense amount of trust, retaining its biggest talents and investing in software, while also being one of the few major publishers whose games tend to launch without any major bugs or technical issues. And from the critical reception, it seems that trust was well-placed: Tears of the Kingdom became the highest-rated game of all time on games review aggregator OpenCritic. Speaking for myself, after a week in the Kingdom, it is a singularly sublime game.

Taking place a few years after the last game, it sees a disastrous event called The Upheaval alter the landscape by opening up huge chasms in the ground and pulling ancient ruins from the heavens, some of which hit the earth and some of which stay suspended in the sky. The result is a game world that feels twice as big; there’s a refreshed and remixed surface with all new challenges and quests, plus an archipelago of beautiful sky islands and the terrifying gloom of the underground.

The game is a mix of elements familiar from Breath of the Wild, and all new features like the mysterious sky islands.

The game is a mix of elements familiar from Breath of the Wild, and all new features like the mysterious sky islands.

Breath of the Wild was so transformative because it didn’t approach open world design simply as a huge space full of objectives to satisfy; it set up the kingdom of Hyrule as a massive playground governed by certain systems and rules, with the player given an overwhelming amount of freedom. Series hero Link can climb practically anything and go practically anywhere from the very start, aided by his paraglider and a handful of powers. And the same is true of Tears of the Kingdom.

Story missions, side quests and activities give you some guidance on where to go, but on the way you’re bound to be distracted in every direction by monsters guarding treasure, suspicious landmarks and structures or opportunities for fun.

The entire game is built around four powers that Link gains very early on — which are distinct from but build on the powers he had in the last game — and they become a kind of language you use to manipulate the world around you. They’re all deceptively simple yet technologically very impressive, and while they serve as the solution to certain puzzles, they can also feel like wildly overpowered cheat codes that let you bend the world to your will.

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Link’s powers in Tears of the Kingdom

  • Recall: rewind time but only for a single object. If a rock falls from the sky, stand on top and reverse it. Or, if an enemy rolls an explosive barrel at you, just rewind it back up the hill.
  • Ultrahand: move any item telekinetically, and stick it to others. Useful for turning a tree into a bridge, but also for constructing incredibly elaborate structures, and even vehicles.
  • Fuse: make any object a functional part of your weapon, shield or arrows. A hive on a boomerang to emit bees, a monster eye on an arrow to heat-seek, a mushroom on a shield to puff out spores.
  • Ascend: shoot directly upwards anywhere there’s a roof or structure above, and swim intangibly to the surface. It’s an easy escape from caves, and a quick way to zoom up to the top of mountains.

It’s clear the designers were paying close attention to how many Breath of the Wild players used the tools at their disposal to push the limits of what they could build and create, and so leant hard on tools for creativity in the sequel. There’s a Minecraft vibe to spending hours crafting boats, cars, planes or structures from the resources you’ve found, yet at the same time there are many opportunities to solve problems or achieve goals (either dictated by the game or made up by the player) using the powers.

And there’s an innate joy in watching your crappily hacked-together designs barely managing to serve their purpose, battling against the indifferent physics system to stay on a rickety rail or keep from sinking just long enough. With few exceptions, the answer to “I wonder if I can do this?” is yes, and the game usually rewards you for it.

Using found materials, and the mysterious “Zonai devices” that have fallen from the sky, Link can build all sorts of structures, vehicles and machines.

Using found materials, and the mysterious “Zonai devices” that have fallen from the sky, Link can build all sorts of structures, vehicles and machines.

At the same time, Tears of the Kingdom has a level of accessibility that is lacking in many open systems-based games. Beyond the opening area, there are no strict requirements for where you should go or what you should do, meaning you can progress at your own pace or focus on the parts of the adventure you like, and still have many hours of fun.

And if you happen to go on Twitter and see some dedicated and intelligent gamer pulling off something incredible — for example, shooting a bundle of wood to a sky island on an arrow, waiting for it to fall, sticking a platform on top and then reversing time for the wood so it sends her to the sky island like a flying elevator — odds are you can replicate it. It’s coming up with imaginative and inventive ideas that help you do big things in this game, rather than having supernatural thumb-moving abilities.

The genius here is that, aside from expanding his hearts (the number of hits you can take), stamina (how far you can run, climb and float) and batteries (how long your creations can keep going), Link doesn’t really grow over the course of this adventure — you do. Even, or especially, when you fail. For example, your catastrophic attempt to put a spinning flamethrower on a horse-drawn carriage may teach you that it’s very easy to propagate fire in tall grass, and that the resulting updraft can lift you quite high if you escape on the paraglider. Or you might just learn that a horse will not stay put with such a contraption attached.

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Your ability to survive tough fights and solve complex situations relies primarily on your understanding of the world, which is especially true in this game compared to its predecessor, because you’ll be making your most powerful weapons and items rather than finding them.

It’s too early to tell whether Tears of the Kingdom will supplant Breath of the Wild as the most popular Zelda. On the one hand, it is a direct sequel, which could limit its appeal to those who played the original. But on the other, the time-travelling narrative doesn’t require much pre-existing knowledge, and it’s likely the ongoing conversation about everything you can do and see in this game will be much broader than before, and continue for a very long time.

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Original URL: https://www.smh.com.au/link/follow-20170101-p5d8p2