Leshacks faits sous Hyrule Magic (permettant de modifier "A Link to the Past") ne courent pas les rues. Et pour cause, ayant moi-même essayé le logiciel, je le trouvais bien trop limité. Pourtant, il arrive qu'on trouve des jeux dessus. Parallel Worlds
Welcome to the first installment of The Essentials, a new weekend feature celebrating the best that the digital medium has to offer. We’re curating this list to be a resource gamers can use similar to a "required reading" list. In our collection you’ll find titles from across generations and genres, along with our reasons for selecting them for this honor. As importantly, we’ll be including all of the platforms on which these games released, so you can find the best way to play them if you haven’t already. The Essentials begins with one of Nintendo’s finest efforts and, arguably, the best The Legend of Zelda series has to offer. The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past, the third title in the franchise excepting the Game & Watch entries, brings the series back to its top-down roots in its sole entry on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System. Release Year 1991Developer Nintendo EADPublisher NintendoReleased For Super Nintendo Entertainment System, Satellaview, Game Boy Advance, Virtual Console Wii, Wii U The introductory sequence. In many ways, The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past is a heavy coat of polish on the original entry in the series. The NES premiere featured a Hyrule wilderness that offered little guidance to the player and a difficulty curve weighted heavily toward the early game. While there is still much value in Link’s first adventure, as an entry point to the franchise, A Link to the Past is vastly superior. Thanks to the power of the Super NES, the team led by Shigeru Miyamoto and Takashi Tezuka was able to craft a more cohesive story without sacrificing mystery. The title is split into two distinct pieces, with the first serving as an extended, graceful tutorial. Once Link is able to unlock the Master Sword and face the wizard Agahnim, the real game begins. The hero is transported to the Dark World, a distorted reflection of Hyrule that corrupts and twists those who enter. There, Link must recover the crystals housing seven kidnapped princesses to defeat perennial villain Ganon, whose darkness transformed the pristine Sacred Realm into the game’s Dark World ages ago. A Link to the Past introduces a number of mechanics and features that have become staples of the franchise. Link learns his charged spin attack for the first time, giving him a way to create breathing room when surrounded. The wind-up right before the pitch. For the first time in a Zelda game, the Princess is featured as a bit more than a prop. In the initial title, she’s only seen after defeating Ganon. In The Legend of Zelda II Link’s Adventure, she is sleeping on a pedestal in the palace where Link starts his quest. While the Princess’ time as an active participant is brief, it’s a step toward the more active role she plays in Ocarina of Time, Wind Waker, and other entries. This entry also introduces the concept of “pieces of heart.” While The Legend of Zelda and Link’s Adventure allowed the hero to extend his life expectancy by collecting heart containers, it wasn’t until A Link to the Past that the process became more complicated thanks to these quarter-heart fragments. Other elements, including storing life-giving fairies in bottles cruel, we know, mini-games like digging for treasure, and swimming made easier with Zora’s flippers made their debut in the SNES entry. The Master Sword itself was introduced for the first time, though the concept of upgrading weapons and items existed in the original. The SNES allowed Nintendo to create three-dimensional environments within the confines of two-dimensional framework. Dungeon rooms have multiple surfaces on which to traverse within the same node on the mini-map. Link is able to leap down from some higher areas in the Overworld to reach hidden or out-of-reach items. The most important element introduced in Link to the Past though, is the concept of parallel worlds. The Dark World introduces a sense of foreboding that has accompanied many series entries. Pink rabbits aren't normally terrifying, but stripped of your powers in this decrepit world for the first time is impactful. Ocarina of Time, Twilight Princess, and A Link Between Worlds all include elements that twist Link’s reality. Majora’s Mask, widely regarded as the darkest entry in the series, takes place exclusively in a world facing the end of its existence. Link’s adventures are just as much to set the world or worlds right as they are to rescue Zelda. Because of its role in the genesis of so many series hallmarks and its evolution beyond its humble beginnings, A Link to the Past remains a strong entry point for the series. While there are certainly reasons to recommend Ocarina of Time, Majora’s Mask, The Wind Waker, and others, the SNES entry is by far the most accessible. It balances exploration with guidance and provides a thread for even neophyte gamers to follow. The minimap provides direction to the next goal, and the fast-travel systems are part of the puzzle solving without solutions being too obtuse. All of that is wrapped a combat system that is simple without being simplistic. Whether you enjoy it for the first time via the Wii U Virtual Console or dust off your SNES to play it again, The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past stands the test of time. It stands as one of the best in a series that already stands head and shoulders above so many others, making it one that’s essential to play. Trucset Astuces de A Link to the Past Objets Index des Trucs et Astuces • Solution complète Clique sur le nom de l'objet pour en savoir plus ! A Link to the Past : The Legend of Zelda A Link to the PastPublished on Aug 6, 2022The Legend of Zelda A Link to the PastAníbal Clemente
level1. yolopenox. · 5m. Link to the past is definitely easier to navigate. If you’re liking the beginning of the game, you’re gonna love the rest of it. Acquiring all upgrades and heart pieces requires using some imagination with no clear hints, but imo that’s how it should be. 8.
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Thesolution to the block puzzle is fairly straightforward. Push the right block on the bottom row right and the left block on the bottom row left, thus pushing it outside of the 4×4 grid. The block just above you can then be pushed up, and then the final block in front of the left chest can be pushed left to free it. The left chest will
Home 3DS Adventure The Legend Of Zelda Twilight Princess 30 years ago, a stubby elf dude in a green windbreaker was told it was dangerous to go alone. He picked up his sword, held it up high, and wandered out into the world, taking us with him. We never looked back. The Legend of Zelda has spent three decades defining adventure in video games, each entry in the series doubling as both a new quest and a definitive statement about the capabilities of the Nintendo hardware it appears living up to his name, ties the series together. He’s always there, jaunty green cap and sword in tow, ready to save the day. But just like the consoles his games appear on, Link has changed and grown in ways both subtle and dramatic. Here is how he's evolved from 1986 to Legend of ZeldaAs both a tiny sprite on the Famicom Disk System as well as the warm cover art adorning his debut, Link was indeed a nubby fellow. What he lacked in stature, he made up for in maneuverability and versatility. The original Link was fast for an action RPG hero, and his arsenal of items found in dungeons or purchased in shops gave him impressive reach. The boomerang extended his ability to grab errant rupees and hearts from across a screen, the bomb let him pound through walls, and the power bracelet let him move heavy objects just to name a few. He was nowhere near as expressive as he was nimble, but he had his signature move down pat whenever he found a new item or a piece of the Tri-force, he’d hold it straight up in the air like a champ. While most Links appear in multiple games, the design of the original has never popped back up. His diminutive size and brown shock of hair is most closely echoed in the 3DS’ Link Between Legend of Zelda 2 The Adventure of LinkLink grew up strong and he grew up right after all those mean Hyrule nights. Everything changed in Zelda 2. The overhead adventuring changed to a weird hybrid of map wandering, fetch questing for townsfolk, and sidescrolling, platforming action. Link himself grew as well, turning into a tall young man with a perpetual grin on his elfin face. Swordplay evolved even though Link’s reach was shortened. He could stab up or down while jumping, and even level up his health and attack power by gaining experience from downing the game’s insanely aggressive enemies. He also traded in his armory of attack items for a series of spells that granted physical abilities like increased defense or turning into a fairy. He also met a guy in the woods named Error. That’s pretty cool. This Link, along with the wild sidescrolling elements, disappeared after this Legend of Zelda A Link to the PastReturning to the seamless overhead structure of the original, A Link to the Past transformed Link from a largely unreadable avatar to a gloriously personable cartoon character. Gone were the blank stares of the Link in 1 and 2. This guy bobed up and down, jogging around Hyrule and Ganon’s Dark World, his little hat flopping around on a head of weirdly punk rock pink hair. Thanks to a massive upgrade to his item store, Link also had a variety of new moves. He could run thanks to a pair of snappy boots, swim thanks to some flippers, and even genuflect at a desert shrine after finding an ancient book. He also turns into a bunny at one point. A Link Between Worlds for 3DS may borrow Link’s look from the original NES, but it’s A Link to the Past that is the basis for most of his moves and his nearly identical Legend of Zelda Link’s AwakeningThe strangest thing about Link’s 1993 transition to the technologically inferior, black and white Game Boy was that it also gave us a look at the hero in multiple art styles for the first time in game. Zelda 2 let us see Link tiny in the overworld and big in action stages, but Link’s Awakening opens and closes with bonafide cutscenes depicting Link as a wide-eyed anime hero. That incarnation of the character would stick around for two more games on Game Boy Color, Oracle of Ages and Oracle of Seasons. Game Boy Link’s moveset wasn’t dissimilar to the one in A Link to the Past, but he did pick up the ability to play multiple instruments rather than just the usual one flute. This was also the first time that a predominantly overhead view Link gained the ability to jump. He also hangs out with an owl who is secretly the soul of a magic space Legend of Zelda The Ocarina of TimeThe Nintendo 64 brought Link into the third dimension, broadening his combat skills dramatically. Nintendo’s 90s-tastically named Z-targeting system locked Link’s perspective onto an enemy, letting him circle around like a proper sword fighter. The hero could dodge, roll, dive, and pull off a variety of swipes and stabs. More dramatic, though, was the ability to play as Link at two different stages of life. At the beginning, you play as an adolescent Link, short and able to use only a limited number of items. Later on, though, you play as Link as a young adult when he can wield heavier weapons and ride a horse. Travelling back and forth through time lent this Link a previously absent physicality, an intimate sense of how he related to the environment around him. This young Link appeared later in the deeply unsettling Majora’s Mask. His girlfriend is also a fish Legend of Zelda The Wind WakerWhen Zelda made the jump to Gamecube, it reimagined Link’s world as a primary-colored cartoon archipelago whose emotive inhabitants looked wholly unique. Squat and barely into his teens, Toon Link moves more swiftly than the Nintendo 64 Link as he sails from island to island above a long sunken Hyrule. While this Link grunts and yells like the newly vocal Ocarina Link, his face was even more communicative, the broad cartoon features expressing fear, doubt, impatience, determination, and real giddiness. For the first time he also teamed up with other characters, mentally directing friends Medli and Makar around dungeons using the titular Wind Waker baton. Toon Link popped back up in two Nintendo DS adventures, The Phantom Hourglass and Spirit Tracks. His mentor is also a boat possessed by an old Legend of Zelda The Four SwordsWhat began as a side game in the Game Boy Advance version of a Link to the Past ultimately expanded into two more games on Gamecube and Nintendo DSi, as well as the excellent GBA adventure The Minish Cap. As indicated by the title, this Link used the mystical Four Sword that lets him split into four different bodies. In addition to his traditional green tunic, he also splits into red, blue, and purple garbed Links as well. Many of the Four Sword quests involve puzzle solving focused around using multiple bodies, an unusual spin on the spatial challenges common in Zelda games. The Minish Cap version is even weirder because Link’s hat is an irascible warlock that can shrink him down to the size of a ratty old Legend of Zelda Twilight PrincessAfter years of running around as a kid, the young adult Link returned in the surreal Twilight Princess. And like most young adults, he had a pretty rough job. This Link is a goat herder, and nothing says high adventure like goat herding! Actually, he stops herding goats and goes on a quest to save Hyrule from being eternally merged with the spooky Twilight Realm, but there’s still a lot of goat herding up top. While the costume tweaks didn’t bring this Link too far from the adult version in Ocarina of Time, he did have one significant new characteristic. When he’s in the Twilight Realm, he forcibly turns into a wolf who bites enemies glowing shadow hearts directly out of their chests. Pretty hardcore. He also meets a yeti and has to help make soup for his sick wife because he’s nice like Legend of Zelda Skyward SwordFor better or worse, Link changed a lot in his marquee Wii exclusive. The console’s motion controller recast the Zelda swordplay as a series of exacting puzzles, with each motion of your actual arm being mimicked by Link on screen and needing to slash enemies in specific ways. In theory at least. Skyward Sword’s motion controls can vary wildly in terms of precision based on the environment it’s played in. But this Link was different in other ways too. For starters, he has a stamina meter that can run out if he sprints too long or climbs a cliff face too quickly. He’s also a craftsman now, gathering up raw materials to make new items and improve old ones. Skyward Sword Link also hangs out with a giant red bird with a hilariously oversized beak and his sword is also an irritating, over-sharing artificial intelligence that loves to skate. I've been playing games since I turned four in 1986, been writing about them since 1987, and writing about them professionally since 2008. My wife and I live in New York City. Chrono Trigger is my favorite game ever made, Hum's Downward is Heavenward is my favorite album, and I regularly find myself singing "You Won't See Me" by The Beatles in awkward situations.
Guidecomplet de The Legend of Zelda : A Link to the Past sur Super Nintendo. Vous trouverez dans cette soluce complète la liste de tous les objets à récupérer dans le jeu mais aussi les quêtes annexes, l'emplacement ainsi que la description des quarts de coeur et surtout le cheminement complet de la quête principale pour ce jeu mythique.
Question asked by dreamteam115 on Nov 3rd 2006 Last Modified Jun 7th 2007Question for The Legend of Zelda A Link to the PastHow do you beat the first boss in the Dark World. I keep cracking off some of it's face plate but I keep dying afterwards Add your answer Please be as detailed as you can when making an answer. Answers that are too short or not descriptive are usually rejected. Please do not use this box to ask a question, it will be rejected - this box is for answers ONLY. If you want to ask a question for this game, please use the ask a question box which is above on the right. Accept submission terms View Terms You are not registered / logged in. If you would like to ne notified if/when we have added this answer to the site please enter your email address. We will only use this address to email the confirmation for this answer. Related questions for this game AnswersFirst of all here's a skill, you have to get some fairies or catch faries and keep them in the magical bottles, so when you die you get revived if you have atleast a fairy in the magical bottle, so cath as much fairies depending how many bottles you have to break off the face plate and then you have to attack it in the face with your sword,CAUTIOUSLY, remember to have som additional fairies in your magical bottles. there might be another solution to that, but thats the way I beat my Boss in the game but still have a long way to go. ^-^Good Luck 0 0 You beat the first boss like this1. Capture enough fairies to where there is one bottle empty. Use that bottle to fill up your magichint. Go the waterfall of wishing and throw in the empty bottle. Tell her it's yours and she'll give you free magic.2. In the lightworld go to Death Mountain and go to the changer at the top of the mountain. Go into the darkworld and at the top there you'll notice there's a small opening on the wall in front of you. Fall off of it and you'll be at a doorway. Go inside and run across the spikesdon't use your Pegasus Shoes! When you get to the other end ther's a chest. Open it and you'll have the Run back to the Dark Palace and face him only make sure you have plenty of bombs. Use the bombs to crack his facemask and then using the cane slash at his face with your Rate me please. 1 1 Showing all replies Guest said 24th May 2016 REPORT Type will try this,just keep getting killed even with 3 bottles of faries If you are still looking for help with this game we have more questions and answers for you to check. Zelda Twilight Princess Guide Complete Mega Guide of Zelda Twilight Princess. Everything is covered from the walkthrough, to heart piece locations, poe guide, enemy and boss guid..

Goto the Lost Woods north of Kakariko Village. Pick up a suspicious bush in the middle of a 3-by-3 square and fall down the pit to find a third heart piece 💗! Elsewhere in the Lost Woods, you might find a mushroom 🍄. Pick it up because you'll need it later. Travel one screen

Accueil Jeux Zelda Pinterest Dossiers Infos parentales Dernière nouvelle Éditorial A Link to the Past VC Précédemment sur ZF Accueil Zelda [Index] + [Dérivés] A Link to the Past VC The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past VC 神々のトライフォース [Kamigami No Triforce] Wii Virtual ConsoleThe Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past pour la console virtuelle de la Wii. Il vous en coûtera 800 Wii points 900 au Japon. Ventes totales Date de sortie 02 décembre 2006 22 janvier 2007 23 mars 2007 Ventes en million NCª NCª NCª NCª Sites officiels ªChiffres manquants, titre non encore disponible ou indisponible sur le marché indiqué. Les évaluations de ZF L'argus du jeu 8€ Valeur neuve de Zelda A Link to the Past VC, ou d'occasion en parfait état et complet. 8€ Valeur moyenne de Zelda A Link to the Past VC, d'occasion en bon état avec boîte et notice. 8€ Valeur en loose de Zelda A Link to the Past VC, disque ou cartouche seule, simplement en état de fonctionnement. Nouvelles relatives sur ZF Aucune nouvelle liée. Contenu relatif sur ZF

Vousdébutez sur le jeu The Legend of Zelda : Link's Awakening (2019) sur Switch ? Venez découvrir tout ce qu'il faut savoir sur ce jeu grâce à toutes les soluces que propose notre wiki.

From the moment of its first reveal the Switch remake of The Legend of Zelda Link’s Awakening captured Zelda fans’ attention with its eye-catching diorama aesthetic and reimagining of a classic. The Game Boy original transposed the top-down style of A Link to the Past on Super NES to a handheld in a way few thought possible given the Game Boy’s exceptionally modest specs. The project began as a port of the 16-bit game, but the end result was a dreamy, engrossing adventure that matched and some might say surpassed the ambitions of many of the home console games. As befits such a storied series, several entries have been remastered over the years, although perhaps surprisingly, Link's Awakening on Switch is arguably the first totally ground-up remake we've ever seen - Nintendo seems reluctant to put out revisions of games without worthwhile and substantial additions. With that in mind we thought it was worth looking back at the revisions we have seen in the past and see what they streamlined, tidied up and added to the mix. So, let’s start with something that has a very familiar flavour at the moment… The Legend of Zelda Link’s Awakening DX 1998 Image Nintendo Link’s Awakening is not only the latest in the series to be revisited, but it was also the first Zelda game to receive a remaster. The Legend of Zelda Link’s Awakening DX came out five years after the Game Boy original to accompany the launch of the Game Boy Color - there’s no prizes for guessing the main addition it brought. As well as up to 16 colours, an extra dungeon, a camera shop and Game Boy Printer compatibility were added along with some minor script tweaks. The DX version is backwards compatible with the original monochrome Game Boy, which makes it tough to justify playing the original over this version under any circumstances – this really is the definitive version of the game! Well, it was until very recently. The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time 3D 2011 Image Nintendo You could argue that the GameCube port of Ocarina of Time available on promo disc was a sort of remaster as it upped the resolution of the original game and added new content in the form of the Ura Zelda’ expansion originally planned and canned for the 64DD. That Master Quest’ aside, it was the sterling 2011 version on 3DS which really earned the remaster’ moniker. Developed by Grezzo, the same company behind the new Link’s Awakening remake, Ocarina of Time 3D used the handheld system’s touchscreen for inventory management which gave instant access to items like the Iron Boots which were a pain to equip and unequip, and then re-equip in the original. In truth, we’re not certain the Water Temple truly warrants the reputation it’s gained over the last two decades as a complete and utter nightmare, but minor tweaks made that dungeon a little more approachable this time around. Optional gyro aiming in first-person was added along with a hints system and a remixed version of the aforementioned Master Quest. Oh, and it runs at 30fps over the original’s 20 and there’s stereoscopic 3D. Possibly the game's greatest triumph, though, is the tightrope it walks between delivering visuals as you remember them’ while giving almost everything a fresh lick of paint. It’s not until you return to the Nintendo 64 version that you realise quite what an overhaul this was. If we're super picky, the lack of rumble feedback could reasonably be considered a step back from the N64 original, and we’re not sure Grezzo quite recaptured the morning mist hanging over Lake Hylia before sunrise, but it’s very tough to argue that this isn’t the optimal way to play Ocarina of Time in 2019. The Legend of Zelda The Wind Waker HD 2013 Image Nintendo The Wind Waker HD took the timeless art style of the GameCube original and gave it a 169 canvas to shine on. As the title suggests, it added full HD and a host of minor gameplay and control changes to make for a smoother experience. The infamous and oft-maligned Triforce Quest towards the end of the game was streamlined in this update and a new, faster sail for your boat sped up navigation across the ocean, too. The Wii U GamePad displays a map and provides access to your inventory, and also functions as the main screen should you wish to play in Off-TV mode. Miiverse integration and the ability to snap selfies rounded out a very attractive repackaging of a classic. In fact, aside from the new bloom-heavy lighting model which divided opinion and is a distinct departure from the original, the only step this remaster really put wrong was releasing on Nintendo’s least successful mainline console ever. We’re sure anyone desperate to play The Wind Waker has already done so, but in terms of Wii U ports yet to make the jump to Switch, this one’s an absolute open goal. The Legend of Zelda Majora’s Mask 3D 2015 Image Nintendo The success of the previous 3DS remaster made 2015’s Majora’s Mask 3D a no-brainer, although Nintendo held off for a long time before announcing it which resulted in fans instigating the Operation Moonfall campaign. As with its previous effort, Grezzo sanded off the rough edges of the N64 original while keeping its disturbing, surreal spirit intact. It includes all the control and touchscreen changes from the previous game and added a much-improved Bomber’s Notebook, fishing holes, a new side quest, boss battle tweaks, more save statues and various other tweaks to many areas and mechanics alongside the visual overhaul. The pressure of the three-day time-loop that put some people off in the original was mitigated somewhat by the ability to travel to a specific future hour in the cycle and the combination of these myriad buffs makes the 3DS the best place for newcomers to play both of the Nintendo 64 Zeldas. The Legend of Zelda Twilight Princess HD Image Nintendo The other HD Wii U update of a GameCube original, Twilight Princess HD benefited from similar GamePad-based upgrades to The Wind Waker HD. Developed by Tantalus alongside Nintendo itself, it also got an exclusive dungeon called the Cave of Shadows and numerous tweaks across the board to freshen it up. Many players will have experienced this as a Wii launch title which flipped’ the entire game and the geography of Hyrule in order to make Link right-handed. Considering the basic motion waggle of the Wii version as opposed to the more precise system of Skyward Sword, it always seemed like a drastic solution to a very minor problem, but this remaster reverts to the GameCube map and puts landmarks back in their vaguely Ocarina of Time-based locations. Add in a bunch of amiibo support and you’ve got another very strong Zelda remaster. Is it worth tracking down a Wii U for? Probably not, especially if you’ve got a GameCube or a Wii. If only there was another option… That’s the lot, unless you want to start splitting hairs about the cross-platform editions of Twilight Princess and Breath of the Wild or arguing that the addition of the Hurricane Spin to the Game Boy Advance port of A Link to the Past constitutes a remaster’. This could certainly do with a spruce up. — Image Nintendo So, what does the future hold in terms of remasters and remakes? Well, we know Breath of the Wild 2 is on the way, but realistically that’s a 2021 game – holiday 2020 at the earliest – which leaves a big Zelda-shaped gap in the Switch’s release schedule once we’ve all woken the Wind Fish. Inti Creates boss Takuya Aizu recently mentioned a dream to remake Zelda II The Adventure of Link, a desire various people have echoed in the past. Of all the games, that one is certainly the standout in terms of entries which could do with an overhaul – it has moments of surreal magic and music to match the best in the series, but they’re buried in mechanics that have aged poorly. Series boss Eiji Aonuma joked about a possible Skyward Sword port for Switch before a company statement walked back the possibility. The obvious way to go would be to throw the Wii U versions of Wind Waker HD and Twilight Princess HD on Switch - that would surely go down very well with the millions of Switch owners who skipped the Wii U. Then again, now that Grezzo has the Link’s Awakening remake under its belt, why not remake the Oracle games or the GBA's The Minish Cap in the same style? Why not go back to the original NES game and use it as a template for a Zelda Maker’ which could switch Game Styles between '8-bit', '16-bit', 'Toon' and 'Dreamy Diorama'?... Whatever the future holds, Nintendo is busy beavering away on the brand new game and there are no doubt other projects bubbling away in the minds of Eiji Aonuma’s team. That said, we're sure somebody will be wielding the reMaster Sword before too long and we’ll see more vintage Zelda adventures polished up and put out on Switch. And if they continue hitting the high bar set by the examples above, we’ll be more than happy to revisit each and every one. Which of these remakes was most successful? Are there any where you’d prefer to play the original instead? Is The Legend of Zelda on NES really a remaster of the Famicom Disk System original? Feel free to get into the nitty gritty in the usual place and tell us what you'd like to see in the future...
ThisLink to the Past interview originally appeared in the 1/92 edition of Famicom Tsuushin magazine. In typical Miyamoto fashion, it’s a combination of design insights into LttP specifically, and game design generally. Neat anecdotes abound: I especially liked the alternate title, “Ganon’s Revenge”! The final boss of The Legend of Zelda A Link Between Worlds, Yuga, resides in Lorule Castle. He can be tough to defeat, but with this article, you should have no trouble when the time comes to face him. Steps 1Go into the boss arena to start the battle. 2In the first phase, Yuga will use his trident to try to hurt you. Avoid this attack. then attack him with your sword when he becomes vulnerable. 3In the second phase, Yuga will shoot spheres towards you. Use your sword to deflect them back at him. Keep doing this until Yuga is hit with the spheres. For some more fun, you can also use the Bug Catching Net to deflect his spheres back at him. 4In the third phase, Yuga will turn into a painting. At this point, Zelda will give you the Bow of Light. Merge into the wall and use it to keep him in place. Merge into the wall behind him while he is kept in place and hit him with another arrow. He'll fall out of the wall. Slash him with your sword when he falls out of the wall. 5Run around the room to avoid the birds Yuga starts shooting. 6Do the same thing as before when Yuga shoots a sphere at you, and Yuga will merge into the wall. Shoot an arrow from the Bow of Light. Yuga will block it and charge at you. Merge into the wall behind him when he slides to stop charging at you, and shoot an arrow from the Bow of Light at him. 7Deflect both of the spheres he shoots at you back at him with your sword or Bug Catching Net. 8Shoot an arrow from the Bow of Light at him when he merges into the wall, and then quickly shoot an arrow in the other direction. The arrow will go all the way around and hit him. 9Slash at him with your sword when he is stunned until he's defeated. Ask a Question 200 characters left Include your email address to get a message when this question is answered. Submit Video Have the expanded energy gauge. You can get it by getting the Stamina Scroll in the Ice Ruins. Have bottled fairies that can revive you in the event that you die. You'll also want to have red or blue potions in case your health gets low. It's suggested that you have all 5 bottles that you can get in the game to have healing items in. Have the Red Mail on. You can find it in Lorule Castle. If you've previously gotten the Blue Mail located in the Swamp Palace, you'll take 1/4th of the damage you would normally take if you had the Green Mail, while the Red Mail halves the damage you take. Show More Tips About this article Thanks to all authors for creating a page that has been read 24,540 times. Did this article help you?
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5529504visiteurs sont passés depuis le 21/08/2000. Accueil; A Link to the Past; Solution Accueil Jeux Zelda Pinterest Dossiers Infos parentales Dernière nouvelle Éditorial A Link to the Past Précédemment sur ZF Accueil Zelda [Index] + [Dérivés] A Link to the Past The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past 神々のトライフォース [Kamigami no Triforce] Super NintendoLa bombe atomique de la génération 16 bits. Ventes totales Date de sortie 21 novembre 1991 avril 1992 24 septembre 1992 Ventes en million 1 Sites officiels ªChiffres manquants, titre non encore disponible ou indisponible sur le marché indiqué. Les évaluations de ZF L'argus du jeu 300€ Valeur neuve de Zelda A Link to the Past, ou d'occasion en parfait état et complet. 80€ Valeur moyenne de Zelda A Link to the Past, d'occasion en bon état avec boîte et notice. 40€ Valeur en loose de Zelda A Link to the Past, disque ou cartouche seule, simplement en état de fonctionnement. Nouvelles relatives sur ZF › A Link to the Past 2 renommé 11/06/13 › A Link to the Past 2 announcé sur 3DS 17/04/13 › Aonuma parle encore de la 3DS 09/11/11 › Succès Virtual Console indication 07/05/07 Contenu relatif sur ZF IjBDF50.
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  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/6
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/411
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/111
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/873
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/725
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/663
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/344
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/547
  • 16txzvxrln.pages.dev/417
  • solution zelda link to the past