This is a pretty cool quest actually, especially for how old it is. I don't think I've seen any quest with a concept like this where you have a major choice halfway through the quest that changes how the rest of the quest plays out. I went for the Wizard route and honestly I'm glad I did that instead of the Knight lol. The quest is pretty nicely made, the overworld is designed well and I do like how it's designed around the Wand or the Hammer. Dungeons are pretty fun too and I also like how they are designed around either item.
The only major criticism I have is the difficulty kinda feels all over the place. I knew going in it was going to be tough (even on the "Easy" mode), but I do feel the balance isn't really all there. For example, some of the early dungeons had some tough enemies for its placement and later in the quest you find rooms of enemies that felt easier than where they should be, so in the end it varied a lot between fairly easy to decent to crazy hard, back to easy again. The final dungeon was cool but the 2nd part of it was kinda nuts with it essentially being a boss spam, although this was kind of the standard of 2.10 quests back in the day to do this lol.
Either way, this quest holds up fairly well, I suspect with the recent update too it's helped a bit. Difficulty balance is what brings this down for me but overall it gets a solid 4/5 from me, simply because the concept is really well done.
LoZ: Link's Decision
Overview
Feature Quest
Creator:
obake-san
Genre: Dungeon Romper
Added: 23 Aug 2007
Updated: 25 May 2024
ZC Version: 2.10
Downloads: 541
Rating[?]:
|
Download Quest (1.81 MB) |
Information
This is the first quest (I think) with two separate classes. About a third of the way through the game, you choose to be either a knight or a wizard. Each path will have different items, and some different dungeons.
Aside from that, it is a pretty straightforward quest, but if you're stuck there's an online walkthrough with maps. Uses 8-bit graphics, with 49 songs from various NES games. 18 dungeons total on 1 overworld map. Very difficult ("easy" is merely hard).
Aside from that, it is a pretty straightforward quest, but if you're stuck there's an online walkthrough with maps. Uses 8-bit graphics, with 49 songs from various NES games. 18 dungeons total on 1 overworld map. Very difficult ("easy" is merely hard).






