Can Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom Maintain Its Status as a 2023 Game of the Year Contender?

Can Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom Maintain Its Status as a 2023 Game of the Year Contender?

Earlier in the year, Breath of the Wild successor⁢ The Legend of Zelda: ​Tears of the Kingdom may have seemed like a potential ⁤game of​ the year, but‌ 2023 has seen many exciting, refined, and innovative⁣ games released since then that make ⁢the latest Zelda ‍title feel lackluster. Compared to ⁢Final⁢ Fantasy 16’s marriage of the renowned JRPG series with silky smooth combat, or‌ Baldur’s ⁤Gate 3 modernizing the beloved Dungeons & Dragons video game series, Tears of the Kingdom⁢ did far less for Zelda. Essentially bolting a clunky item fusion system onto an existing game map, TOTK simply cannot stand alongside the​ true ‍gaming⁢ greats of 2023.

The scale and ambition of Tears of the Kingdom ‍may ‍have impressed on⁢ release, but it became clear that more locations to explore ‍does not equate ⁤with enjoyable gameplay. The‍ TOTK Depths are ugly and dull, adding a vast and unpleasant underground world⁢ largely devoid of interesting ⁢content. While the verticality of‌ TOTK is an impressive feat, as are its new methods for traversal, TOTK often feels like merely an expansion to Breath of the Wild. Alternatively, from a different perspective, BOTW⁤ felt unfinished, and Tears of the Kingdom was ‌simply the finished product. In a leaner year, that still​ might have been enough to merit the most coveted GOTY accolade.

Related: Tears Of The Kingdom Shows One ⁢Zelda Gameplay Feature Still Needs Work

This year has been anything⁤ but lean, however, and the⁢ string of ​more ambitious ⁣and well-polished successes shove Tears of the Kingdom out of serious consideration for game of the year‌ by most rubrics. The minimalist ‌storytelling ⁣of TOTK cannot ‌compare to the⁣ heartfelt bonds⁣ in Sea ‍of Stars ⁢or the myriad narratives of Octopath Traveler 2. ⁢Nintendo’s flagship franchise provided​ a ⁤much ‍better‍ entry with Super​ Mario Bros. ‌Wonder, a game that flawlessly captured the ⁤timeless charm of the 2D platformer while adding truly creative new ⁢mechanics. ⁣Zelda’s most‌ recent entry, conversely, presents another awkward amalgamation of ‍other open-world adventure games, still lacking proper Zelda dungeons.

Just as The Depths proved disappointing, TOTK’s Sky ⁢Islands were an inadequate addition to the ​game, adding a⁣ scant number ⁤of new areas, ⁢most of which failed⁣ to ‍match the initial Wind Temple experience. Custom⁣ Zonai ‌device builds are certainly entertaining and innovative, ‌but the awkward physics and bizarre fusion system left this‌ as a novelty,​ rather ⁢than a real stab at a Minecraft style Zelda.‍ There’s likely more satisfaction to be gained from exploring Marvel’s⁣ Spider-Man 2’s rendition of New York City, or the Like A Dragon: Ishin take on Edo-era⁤ Japan, ⁤over a second run ​through BOTW’s‍ map ‍of​ Hyrule with a few underwhelming new locations added above and below.

2023-11-06 20:00:05
Source from screenrant.com

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