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Zelda no Densetsu - Fushigi no Kinomi - Daichi no Shou (Japan)

also known as Legend of Zelda, The - Oracle of Seasons
Game Boy Color
🇯🇵
Reviewed in
2001
91
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✪ Reviewed on June 28, 2024
85

The action leaning half of the twin adventure, where Link bends the four seasons of Holodrum to save the sage Din. More combat driven than its sibling, with inventive dungeons and a link to Oracle of Ages for the true ending. Top flight portable Zelda.

Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure 1 player 7+
Description
Link explores the land of Holodrum and controls the four seasons to rescue the sage Din captured by General Onox in the Japanese version. Published by Nintendo, released in Japan in February 2001. Manipulation of all four seasons transforming the world, varied dungeons, link with Jikuu no Shou for the secret ending. Japanese edition.

Zelda no Densetsu - Fushigi no Kinomi - Daichi no Shou review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
4/5
Story
"Captivating"
Toggle the seasons with a gesture and watch Holodrum transform: blossoming spring, blazing summer, russet autumn, frozen winter. This visual mechanic, rendered with remarkable finesse, gives the world a constant life. The care of the coloured sprites makes it one of the console's finest showcases.
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,64 MB 📅27/02/2001
Published by Nintendo

Zelda no Densetsu - Fushigi no Kinomi - Daichi no Shou (GBC) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Original Japanese release of Oracle of Seasons, locally tagged as the Chapter of Earth of the Fushigi no Kinomi diptych. The Japanese sleeve diverges noticeably from the Western edition, with Din-led key art and dedicated katakana typography. The cartridge supports the cross-cartridge password system, but only the Japanese edition of its Ages counterpart enables full transfer without falling back on English passwords.

Memorable bosses

More action-focused than its twin, this entry lines up brisk guardians you often have to trap by changing the season to transform the arena. From the serpent Aquamentus to General Onox, who morphs into a dragon, the duels favor rhythm and dodging. The season mechanic and a colorful bestiary give these battles an immediate punch, ideal on the small screen.

A cult cover

At the opposite of its twin's blue, this cover blazes with reds and oranges: Din, the Oracle of Seasons, and the Rod of Seasons set a sunnier, more martial mood. Link, sword ready, stands out against foliage in the four colors of the year. The warmth of the palette signals at once the action-leaning half of the Oracle duo.

Is Zelda no Densetsu - Fushigi no Kinomi - Daichi no Shou still worth playing in 2026?

The action leaning half of the twin adventure stays vibrant thanks to the way it weaves the four seasons of Holodrum into every screen. Dungeons play with the changing environment with rare invention, combat bites harder than in Oracle of Ages, and the overall flow holds its own against the best 2D Zelda games made since. The cross link with its sibling extends the journey in a meaningful way. A must for fans of portable Zelda and anyone curious about tightly tuned design from that era.

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