![]() I played late into the night, my newborn daughter sleeping soundly nearby, thrilled by the myriad discoveries in this new Paper world!įrom climbing the heights of a fairytale castle and then facing off against the fearsome (but cartoony) Hooktail dragon. My guy dutifully hauled both upstairs to the guest bedroom where we would stay (and oh, the looks I got). I was well-hooked by TTYD though, so I brought my 19-inch tube tv and my GameCube with us on the trip. By Thanksgiving, we had to go out of town to visit his family in upstate NY. I had not played the original Paper Mario 64 yet, so I had no idea what to expect. I remember my partner surprising me with the game in the fall of 2004. (It’s regrettably never been ported or remade.) It is the single most purely fun gaming experience I’ve ever had – and this from a lifelong Zelda die-hard. If you’re like me and were lucky enough to experience it when it released, you were lucky indeed. It remains much-loved and critically praised, but was criminally underplayed by most Nintendo fans. It has the perfect blend of memorable characters, awesome storytelling, and witty dialogue and humor that is missing in typical Mario fare! (Did I mention the main battleground is a theater stage where the audience applause dictates your upgrade points?) And it remains, in my opinion, one of the BEST Nintendo games ever made. This brilliant, ultra-charming RPG was a complete departure for the traditional Mario gameplay. The storytelling in Majora’s Mask really was second to none in the series!īut the game that brought me the most smiles and happy memories is the superb Paper Mario: The Thousand Year Door (GC). It stole my breath away and every event and action that led to it made it all the more impactful. The epic scene that plays out with them on the “final day” (when the Moon crashes down) was powerful. Its retrieval eventually culminated in the touching reunion of the engaged Anju & Kafei, which Link is instrumental in. Obtaining it involved a very lengthy sidequest that included tracking down other masks and items. ![]() The masks that unlocked a special side-story were my favorites, and the most rewarding of all of them was the hard-won Couple’s Mask. Some unlocked important quests and some of them didn’t do much at all, but it still felt rewarding every time I added a new one. In The Legend of Zelda: Majora’s Mask for the N64, it was all about collecting masks of course! I painstakingly tracked down each one, whether it was needed to progress in the story or not. Even better when there’s a tally log that keeps track of them. ![]() I tend to love games with a major collecting aspect, especially recipes or special artifacts. *****Spoiler Alert***** – there are a few spoilers ahead for these two wonderful games! Sidequests and Saving a Romance I have so many of these favorite, treasured memories! There are some that are indescribably special to me, even after many years. Then there are those triumphant moments where you fought your way through a major set of obstacles or vanquished a particularly difficult enemy. It may be something laugh-out-loud funny, poignant or heartbreaking, or perhaps a revealing backstory to a character. Some leave such a lasting impression that they become part of you, little treasures always within reach. There are moments in beloved games that really stay with you.
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