RomWize

Zelda no Densetsu - Yume o Miru Shima (Japan)

also known as Legend of Zelda, The - Link's Awakening
Game Boy
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
1993
92
Ad
✪ Reviewed on June 11, 2023
88

The Game Boy Zelda, and one of the greatest games ever released. Link washed up on Koholint, eight dungeons, dreamlike writing that haunts. Level design mastered to perfection, OST burned into collective memory. Shorter than a console Zelda but absolutely elegant. Essential, full stop.

Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure 1 player 7+
Description
Japanese title of The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening, an adventure with shipwrecked Link on Koholint Island seeking to awaken the Wind Fish. Published by Nintendo, released in Japan in June 1993. Top-down exploration, eight dungeons, island inhabitant interactions, and a memorable ending.

Zelda no Densetsu - Yume o Miru Shima review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
"Captivating"
On a simple palette of greys, the island of Koholint overflows with life: lively villages, sunlit beaches and dungeons with clearly distinct moods. The care of the sprites and the expressiveness of the inhabitants transcend the limits of the hardware. This graphic density, full of dreamlike charm, remains a peak of the monochrome handheld.
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,28 MB 📅06/06/1993
Published by Nintendo

Zelda no Densetsu - Yume o Miru Shima (Game Boy) price, value & rarity

Compare prices
Loading eBay listings…

Collector interest

Original Japanese edition of the 1993 portable Zelda, before the DX colour revision, released under the Yume o Miru Shima title, that is the Dreaming Island. Nintendo rigid case with a Japanese obi marked Yume o Miru Shima and a clean cover signature by Takashi Tezuka, distinct from the American art. Japan run was short at launch and was later absorbed by the DX reissue, which makes the mono original cartridge with obi notably scarce outside the country.

Memorable bosses

Far from Hyrule, the island of Koholint hides Nightmares guarding each dungeon, from the worm Moldorm to a giant eel, each beaten with the item found on site. The final clash, where the foe takes on several mythic forms, crowns a bittersweet adventure. Inventive patterns and an ambient melancholy give these duels a place apart in handheld memory.

A cult cover

Link, sword raised on a spray-swept beach, his gaze fixed on a horizon where the Wind Fish's egg looms: the painted illustration sets up the island mystery and the dream's melancholy from the start. Soft hues and a contemplative layout contrast with the action and make you long to uncover Koholint's secret. As spellbinding as ever.

Is Zelda no Densetsu - Yume o Miru Shima still worth playing in 2026?

Link's Awakening remains one of the greatest games ever made for a handheld, and time has only confirmed its status. Shipwrecked on Koholint Island, Link explores eight dungeons of unashamed dreamlike strangeness, supported by writing that still surprises and a score etched into the medium's collective memory. The level design is remarkably precise, the inventory turns into an instrument and the ending leaves a lasting wake. Shorter than a console Zelda but utterly elegant, it stays essential for anyone interested in adventure games, in any era.

Similar games