A player controls the protagonist in a three-dimensional world. In the beginning, the player only use a sword and shield but can use another weapon as well.
Parameters | Values |
---|---|
File Name: | Legend of Zelda, The - Ocarina of Time (USA).zip |
Console/System: | N64 |
Genre: | Action |
Filesize: | 25.75MB |
Region: | Japanese |
Year of release: | 1998 |
Downloads: | 386430 |
The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time takes place in the fictional kingdom of Hyrule. The pixie Navi stirs Link from a bad dream in which he observes a man in dark protection seeking after a little youngster riding a horse. Navi carries Link to the Great Deku Tree, who is reviled and close to death.
The Deku Tree discloses to Link an "underhanded man of the desert" cursed him and tries to overcome the world, and that Link must stop him. Before passing on, the Great Deku Tree gives Link the Spiritual Stone of the Forest and sends him to Hyrule Castle to talk with Hyrule's princess.
At the Hyrule Castle garden, Link meets Princess Zelda, who trusts Ganondorf, the Gerudo ruler, is looking for the Triforce, a blessed relic that gives its holder special force. Zelda requests that Link get the three Spiritual Stones so he can enter the Sacred Realm and guarantee the Triforce before Ganondorf comes to it. Link gathers the other two stones: the first from Darunia, head of the Gorons, and the second from Ruto, princess of the Zoras. Connection re-visitations of Hyrule Castle, where he sees Ganondorf pursue Zelda and her overseer Impa is riding a horse, as in his bad dream, and fruitlessly endeavours to stop him. The main characters of the game are Link, Zelda, Ganondorf, Ganon, Navi and Sheik.
Legend Of Zelda, The - Ocarina Of Time was essentially launched for N64. The preferred emulator is Project 64. Project64 is a free and open-source programming Nintendo 64 emulator. This product utilizes a module framework permitting outsider gatherings to use their modules to actualize explicit segments. Project64 can play Nintendo 64 games on a PC perusing ROM pictures, either unloaded from the read-just memory of a Nintendo 64 ROM cartridge or made legitimately on the PC as homebrew.