couple a questions about this game... can someone point me in a good location to find it and has it be translated to english? and isnt there a couple other zelda games like this?
i have not played these and i call myself a die hard zelda fan!
BS Zelda no Densetsu
- Bloodandbourbon
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BS Zelda no Densetsu
Hardcore Legend of Zelda Fan!
Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
I think that's the second Satelleview spin-off game?
It looks like the Emulation scene is your best bet and supposedly there has been multiple translations including English but I've never emulated the games so I can't say for sure. Sounds like the ROMS got pretty jazzed up and moved away from the original versions over the years though. This is from Wikipedia:
Emulation
Due to the short-lived nature of the game and the fact that the gameplay is intimately connected to the vocal SoundLink files that were broadcast into RAM and were thus incapable of digital preservation by receiving Satellaview-owners, the game cannot currently be played in its original form.[14] Despite this, however, a small subculture of collectors and enthusiasts devoted to the restoration of these games have successfully managed to dump the digital information originally downloaded to and saved on the Satellaview's 8M memory packs.[18] As temporally-limited games, the copies of BS Zelda that had been saved on 8M Memory Packs were initially intended by Nintendo and St.GIGA for gamers to over-write with later games. The fortuitous preservation of these 8M Memory Packs is responsible for all subsequent emulation efforts related to the games.
Since the last broadcasts of BS Zelda (in January 1997) and BS Zelda: MAP2 (in March 1996), restoration-minded fans have created numerous patches that have been applied to the original ROM dumps to alter the game by removing the game's download pauses and time limits, stringing together all four episodes into one, and providing a title screen and file selection screen, among others.[18] Some patches have also replaced the game's protagonist with Link, the hero of the original The Legend of Zelda in order to more closely mimic this game. Further altering the game, many modern emulation-based restoration projects have removed the "Listen closely" sign and replaced it with a display showing the text of the narration that originally accompanied the "Listen closely" sign. The game has been translated by fans into English, French, Spanish, and German.[43] The cumulative effects of all of these alterations has led to a great deal of confusion among fans as to the character of the original broadcasts and as modern hacked versions are often missing plot details initially present in missing vocal files, this has contributed to the misconception that the games were little more than 16-bit remakes of the original.
It looks like the Emulation scene is your best bet and supposedly there has been multiple translations including English but I've never emulated the games so I can't say for sure. Sounds like the ROMS got pretty jazzed up and moved away from the original versions over the years though. This is from Wikipedia:
Emulation
Due to the short-lived nature of the game and the fact that the gameplay is intimately connected to the vocal SoundLink files that were broadcast into RAM and were thus incapable of digital preservation by receiving Satellaview-owners, the game cannot currently be played in its original form.[14] Despite this, however, a small subculture of collectors and enthusiasts devoted to the restoration of these games have successfully managed to dump the digital information originally downloaded to and saved on the Satellaview's 8M memory packs.[18] As temporally-limited games, the copies of BS Zelda that had been saved on 8M Memory Packs were initially intended by Nintendo and St.GIGA for gamers to over-write with later games. The fortuitous preservation of these 8M Memory Packs is responsible for all subsequent emulation efforts related to the games.
Since the last broadcasts of BS Zelda (in January 1997) and BS Zelda: MAP2 (in March 1996), restoration-minded fans have created numerous patches that have been applied to the original ROM dumps to alter the game by removing the game's download pauses and time limits, stringing together all four episodes into one, and providing a title screen and file selection screen, among others.[18] Some patches have also replaced the game's protagonist with Link, the hero of the original The Legend of Zelda in order to more closely mimic this game. Further altering the game, many modern emulation-based restoration projects have removed the "Listen closely" sign and replaced it with a display showing the text of the narration that originally accompanied the "Listen closely" sign. The game has been translated by fans into English, French, Spanish, and German.[43] The cumulative effects of all of these alterations has led to a great deal of confusion among fans as to the character of the original broadcasts and as modern hacked versions are often missing plot details initially present in missing vocal files, this has contributed to the misconception that the games were little more than 16-bit remakes of the original.
Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
All the information you need is here:
http://bszelda.zeldalegends.net/index.shtml
You can pick and choose which fixes and enhancements you want to apply to make it more like the original (BS kid, timer events etc) or more like a graphically enhanced remake of the NES game.
There's also The Ancient Stone Tablets, kind of a sequel to LTTP.
http://bszelda.zeldalegends.net/index.shtml
You can pick and choose which fixes and enhancements you want to apply to make it more like the original (BS kid, timer events etc) or more like a graphically enhanced remake of the NES game.
There's also The Ancient Stone Tablets, kind of a sequel to LTTP.
- YoshiEgg25
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Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
They should put this game on a cartridge.
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Nibbler (marathon): 251,169,160 / Nibbler (one life): 5,263,360 (WR)
Donkey Kong: 423,100 [L12-1] (150th place as of 2019-01-15)
Super Smash Bros. (N64): Ranked top 5 in Wisconsin from Q1 2016 to Q2 2017
Shrek SuperSlam: won largest tournament in game's history (Shrekfest 2018)
Speedrun.com Profile (contains multiple WRs)
Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
Awesome! I haven't had a chance to play these games either so I bookmarked this site right away.Anapan wrote:All the information you need is here:
http://bszelda.zeldalegends.net/index.shtml
You can pick and choose which fixes and enhancements you want to apply to make it more like the original (BS kid, timer events etc) or more like a graphically enhanced remake of the NES game.
There's also The Ancient Stone Tablets, kind of a sequel to LTTP.
Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
There's a review of these games, which I think covers pretty much everything. Hope that helps.
Collects promo gaming stuff, certain import games, hockey memorabilia, and other oddball things. (sig and avy under construction)
Re: BS Zelda no Densetsu
There has been repros made (tho I don't know if they've fixed saving on repro carts yet. I played through it on my Powerpak a while back using MottZilla's save/fix patch. The time-based stuff adds a neat twist to the game.YoshiEgg25 wrote:They should put this game on a cartridge.



