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Landstalker

Landstalker: The Treasures of King Nole[1] is an action-adventure game that was developed by Climax Entertainment and released for the Sega Genesis in 1992 in Japan and 1993 elsewhere. Players take on the role of the treasure hunter Nigel as he navigates a three-dimensional world through an isometric viewpoint, solving puzzles and fighting enemies.

Landstalker
North American box art
Developer(s)Climax Entertainment
Publisher(s)Sega
Director(s)Kenji Orimo
Designer(s)Kenji Orimo
Programmer(s)Kan Naito
Artist(s)
  • Yoshitaka Tamaki
  • Hidehiro Yoshida
Writer(s)Shinya Nishigaki
Composer(s)Motoaki Takenouchi
Platform(s)Sega Genesis
Release
  • JP: October 30, 1992
  • NA: 1993
  • EU: October 1993
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

The game was a critical and commercial success. A spinoff called Lady Stalker: Challenge from the Past was released in Japan for the Super NES in 1995. A sequel was in the planning stages but was cancelled.[2] Dark Savior and Alundra are considered spiritual successors. Nigel makes a cameo appearance in Time Stalkers.

It has been re-released several times: on the Wii's Virtual Console in 2007, Steam in 2011, on the Sega Genesis Mini in 2019, and on the Nintendo Switch Online + Expansion Pack in 2023.

Gameplay edit

The player, as Nigel the treasure hunter, is tasked with searching for clues that lead to the treasure of King Nole. This is accomplished primarily by travelling through both outdoor areas and dungeons. All gameplay and plot-advancing scenes take place in an isometric view.

From the outset of the game, Nigel may walk, jump, swing his sword, climb ropes and ladders, talk to various non-player characters, and pick up and throw various objects. With very few exceptions, these basic actions do not change throughout the game, although Nigel's weapons and armor may be replaced with better versions. There are a variety of items throughout the game, most of which either increase or restore health and attacking power or are important to advancing the plot or solving puzzles.

Much of the game's dungeons and overworld are filled with monsters, mostly creatures from fantasy and mythology like ogres, skeletons, ghosts, golems, and more; many may be avoided or killed for gold or other collectables, while others must be killed to advance the plot and the game. Many traps and puzzles also appear requiring the player to jump from platform to platform press switches and move blocks to climb on. Locked doors inhibit the player's progress, the player must find keys or beat enemies or puzzles to unlock them and progress further. Many dungeons and areas have a boss to defeat at the end. The monsters, puzzles and dungeons increase in difficulty as the game progresses. The player has health which is kept track of by hearts; health and the maximum health limit may be increased with items purchased in towns or found in dungeons. The player is not prevented from revisiting old towns and dungeons, and is frequently required to do so to advance the plot.

There are several optional side quests found in the game involving helping out the non-player characters. Nigel can complete these tasks for benefits, like increased attacking power and use of shortcut warps to travel across the overworld quicker. These can help the player but are not necessary to complete the game.

Plot edit

The game's intro starts in Gamul Date 312 where Nigel, a treasure hunter who is 88 years old, far older than he appears, is shown traversing a dungeon of rolling boulders and moving platforms called Jypta Ruins to acquire the Statue of Jypta. After selling this statue to a shop owner in a port town of Kalva, Nigel is accosted by a wood nymph named Friday. She explains that she is being chased by three persistent yet bumbling thieves named Kayla, Ink, and Wally because she knows the location of the legendary treasure of King Nole. Once Nigel spends most of his money on a bird to carry him to the island, Friday admits that while she doesn't know the exact location of the treasure she has a "feeling" where it is. The player controls Nigel from here on where he and Friday, who accompanies him for the entire game, first journey through a dungeon until they fall into a river and end up in the care of the red-furred bear-people of Massan. When Nigel awakes, he finds his way to the neighboring village of Gumi, where the yellow-furred bear-people are ready to sacrifice the daughter of Massan's leader, Fara. Nigel follows the crazed tribe into their shrine and breaks them of their curse, freeing Fara and earning the respect of both tribes and a clue to help him to the treasure.

Nigel and Friday travel westward until they come to the lighthouse town of Ryuma which has been attacked by thieves. Nigel goes to the thieves' cave and rescues the mayor and some other men who have been kidnapped. He also finds a lithograph of a dragon, which Friday tells him is a clue to the treasure. Before he can leave, Kayla, Ink, and Wally show up and hold Friday hostage until Nigel hands them the lithograph.

Nigel's heroics earn him a place in the court of Duke Mercator, who orders him to go and defeat an old wizard, Mir, who is locked in a tower nearby and who has been terrorizing the town and extorting the Duke. Nigel braves a crypt and the wizard's tower and faces him in single combat. Defeated, Mir confesses all he knows about King Nole's treasure and then explains that the Duke is his brother and had been using him as a scapegoat for years. Nigel returns to the Duke and is about ready to confront him when he is tossed into a dungeon. While imprisoned he finds out that the princess of Maple, his home country, who had been a guest at the castle, has been taken away by the Duke's dragon-like henchman, Zak. He manages to escape to find the castle knights in open revolt and ships stuck in the harbour because the lighthouse in Ryuma is broken. Nigel saves Arthur, the Duke's general, and is given the key to the Greenmaze, where the Sunstone can be found, the gem that powers Ryuma's lighthouse.

Nigel navigates the maze despite the best efforts of troublesome gnomes and restores the lighthouse. He then takes a ship to pursue the Duke. He makes landing up the coast of the island at Verla, which has practically become a ghost town. The Duke had enslaved the population of the town and forced them to work in nearby mines searching for a legendary treasure. Nigel frees the townspeople, and they give him a legendary sword they found but had hidden from the Duke. Nigel continues through the mine to find the Duke sailing, via rafts, across a lake to an island temple. Nigel finds a way over and navigates through the labyrinth to fight the Duke but is caught off-guard by Zak. Nigel is teleported to safety by Mir before the Duke and Zak can finish him off. Mir then proceeds to give Nigel some more information about King Nole's treasure. Mir also gives a magical axe to Nigel which allows him to cut down trees with a single swing of his sword.

Nigel retakes his sword in hand, and Friday leads him up through mountains to get to the entrance to the underground dungeon where King Nole hid his treasure. They encounter Zak again, who has decided that while he doesn't like working for the Duke any longer he still wants to face Nigel one on one. After Nigel proves his superiority, Zak gives Nigel something he stole from the Duke that will allow Nigel to enter the underground. Zak departs defeated.

Nigel finds himself back at the same cave he started in, this time filled with monsters but no traps. He gets to the Duke just as he uses the Princess to open the gate between the above and below worlds (referencing the song In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida). Nigel charges through into the center of the island and into King Nole's labyrinth, a massive confusing dungeon guarding King Nole's palace. After making it through the labyrinth and the palace, Nigel makes it to the room which held the treasure. After all the challenges so far, things are not quite finished for King Nole's restless Spirit attacks Nigel but Nigel makes quick work of him. The Duke then shows up and as he thanks Nigel for doing the dirty work for him, Gola, the Dragon God that King Nole worshipped, burns him alive.

Nigel fights Gola using all of his strength and cunning, and when the beast is finally vanquished, the treasure is his. With vast sums of gold under his control he decides that rather than retire he and Friday will continue their adventures. In the original ending in the Japanese and European version the treasure vanishes after Gola's last stand. Nigel isn't very upset and suggests taking Friday with him to the main country for new adventures.

Reception edit

The game was reviewed in 1995 in Dragon #217 by Jay & Dee in the "Eye of the Monitor" column. Jay gave the game 3 out of 5 stars, while Dee gave the game 4 out of 5 stars.[5] The game was praised in the Australian-based Megazone magazine, where it received a 9 out of 10. The game received extremely positive attention in GameFan magazine, getting reviewed twice, once for the import version, then again for the American release. The import review gave it a perfect 10 out of 10, stating that it was "the perfect action/RPG" and that if "this was an American release, I would give it game of the year, it's that good."[30] According to Next Generation, Landstalker met with critical acclaim in Japan, and was a major system seller for the Mega Drive there.[31]

In GameFan's annual Megawards, Landstalker won the awards for Most Innovative New Game (Sega) and Best Action/RPG, and was a nominee for the Best Music (Genesis) and Game of the Year awards.[32] Mega placed the game at #5 in their Top Mega Drive Games of All Time.[33] Gamasutra included it as an example of an open world game as part of their Game Design Essentials series.[34] In 2017, Gamesradar ranked the game 24th on their: "Best Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games of all time."[35]

References edit

  1. ^ ランドストーカー 皇帝の財宝, Randosutōkā: Kōtei no Zaihō
  2. ^ McFerran, Damien (11 May 2023). "Here's A Glimpse Of The Landstalker Sequel We Never Got To Play". Time Extension. Hookshot Media. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  3. ^ Stiller, Heiner (March 1993). "Inselabenteuer". Aktueller Software Markt. p. 131. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  4. ^ "ランドストーカー 皇帝の財宝". Beep! Mega Drive (in Japanese). November 1992. p. 26. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  5. ^ a b c Jay & Dee (May 1995). "Eye of the Monitor". Dragon (217): 65–74.
  6. ^ Skid; Brody; Slick, Tom; The Enquirer (January 1993). "Viewpoint". GameFan. Vol. 1, no. 3. pp. 10–13. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  7. ^ Skid; Sgt. Gamer; K. Lee; The Enquirer (September 1993). "Viewpoint". GameFan. Vol. 1, no. 10. pp. 14–15. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  8. ^ Larry, Scary (November 1993). "Landstalker". GamePro. No. 52. p. 252. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  9. ^ Haynes, Rik; Masaki (January 1993). "Landstalker". Sega Zone. No. 3. pp. 36–38. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  10. ^ Peters, Adam (November 1993). "Landstalker". Sega Zone. No. 13. pp. 38–39. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  11. ^ Lawson, Wayne (December 1993). "Landstalker". Hyper. No. 1. p. 53. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  12. ^ Gus; Paul (October 1993). "Landstalker". Mean Machines Sega. No. 12. pp. 102–105. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  13. ^ Ulf; Markus (February 1994). "Landstalker". Mega Fun (in German). pp. 42–44. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  14. ^ Destroy, J'm (January 1993). "Land Stalker". Joystick (in French). No. 34. p. 231. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  15. ^ Wolfen (November 1993). "Landstalker". Player One (in French). No. 36. pp. 14–15. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  16. ^ "Landstalker". Video Games (in German). February 1994. p. 45. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  17. ^ Mellerick, Paul (November 1993). "Landstalker". Mega. No. 14. pp. 32–33. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  18. ^ Longhurst, Richard (November 1993). "Landstalker". Sega Power. No. 48. pp. 52–53. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  19. ^ Boni, Dino (February 1993). "Landstalker". Sega Pro. No. 16. pp. 24–26. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  20. ^ Johnson, Jason (December 1993). "Landstalker". Sega Pro. No. 26. p. 56. Retrieved January 14, 2022.
  21. ^ . GameRankings. CBS Interactive. Archived from the original on 2019-12-09. Retrieved 2021-01-06.
  22. ^ Whitehead, Dan (October 6, 2007). "Virtual Console Roundup • Page 2". Eurogamer. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  23. ^ Shau, Austin (December 19, 2007). "LandStalker: The Treasures of King Nole Review". GameSpot. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  24. ^ 8-Bit Star. . Hardcore Gaming 101. Archived from the original on June 28, 2006. Retrieved January 11, 2022.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  25. ^ Thomas, Lucas M. (September 14, 2007). . IGN. Archived from the original on May 3, 2019. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  26. ^ Duyn, Marcel van (September 2, 2007). "Landstalker: The Treasures of King Nole Review (MD)". Nintendo Life. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  27. ^ "Landstalker". Retro Gamer. No. 44. November 2007. p. 95. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  28. ^ Schreier, Jason. . RPGamer. Archived from the original on January 8, 2009. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  29. ^ Dancin' Humor (2001). . RPGFan. Archived from the original on June 29, 2001. Retrieved January 11, 2022.
  30. ^ "Landstalker". GameFan. 1 (3). January 1993. Retrieved 29 January 2012.
  31. ^ "Backtracking". Next Generation. No. 23. Imagine Media. November 1996. p. 123.
  32. ^ GameFan, volume 2, issue 2 (January 1994), pages 54-58
  33. ^ Mega magazine issue 26, page 74, Maverick Magazines, November 1994
  34. ^ "Gamasutra - Game Design Essentials: 20 Open World Games". www.gamasutra.com.
  35. ^ GamesRadar Staff (2017-06-21). "Best Sega Genesis/Mega Drive games of all time". gamesradar. Retrieved 2022-02-24.

External links edit

landstalker, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, plot, summary, long, excessively, detailed, please, help, improve, removing, unnecessary, de. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article s plot summary may be too long or excessively detailed Please help improve it by removing unnecessary details and making it more concise August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Landstalker news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this message Learn how and when to remove this message Landstalker The Treasures of King Nole 1 is an action adventure game that was developed by Climax Entertainment and released for the Sega Genesis in 1992 in Japan and 1993 elsewhere Players take on the role of the treasure hunter Nigel as he navigates a three dimensional world through an isometric viewpoint solving puzzles and fighting enemies LandstalkerNorth American box artDeveloper s Climax EntertainmentPublisher s SegaDirector s Kenji OrimoDesigner s Kenji OrimoProgrammer s Kan NaitoArtist s Yoshitaka TamakiHidehiro YoshidaWriter s Shinya NishigakiComposer s Motoaki TakenouchiPlatform s Sega GenesisReleaseJP October 30 1992NA 1993EU October 1993Genre s Action adventureMode s Single player The game was a critical and commercial success A spinoff called Lady Stalker Challenge from the Past was released in Japan for the Super NES in 1995 A sequel was in the planning stages but was cancelled 2 Dark Savior and Alundra are considered spiritual successors Nigel makes a cameo appearance in Time Stalkers It has been re released several times on the Wii s Virtual Console in 2007 Steam in 2011 on the Sega Genesis Mini in 2019 and on the Nintendo Switch Online Expansion Pack in 2023 Contents 1 Gameplay 2 Plot 3 Reception 4 References 5 External linksGameplay editThe player as Nigel the treasure hunter is tasked with searching for clues that lead to the treasure of King Nole This is accomplished primarily by travelling through both outdoor areas and dungeons All gameplay and plot advancing scenes take place in an isometric view From the outset of the game Nigel may walk jump swing his sword climb ropes and ladders talk to various non player characters and pick up and throw various objects With very few exceptions these basic actions do not change throughout the game although Nigel s weapons and armor may be replaced with better versions There are a variety of items throughout the game most of which either increase or restore health and attacking power or are important to advancing the plot or solving puzzles Much of the game s dungeons and overworld are filled with monsters mostly creatures from fantasy and mythology like ogres skeletons ghosts golems and more many may be avoided or killed for gold or other collectables while others must be killed to advance the plot and the game Many traps and puzzles also appear requiring the player to jump from platform to platform press switches and move blocks to climb on Locked doors inhibit the player s progress the player must find keys or beat enemies or puzzles to unlock them and progress further Many dungeons and areas have a boss to defeat at the end The monsters puzzles and dungeons increase in difficulty as the game progresses The player has health which is kept track of by hearts health and the maximum health limit may be increased with items purchased in towns or found in dungeons The player is not prevented from revisiting old towns and dungeons and is frequently required to do so to advance the plot There are several optional side quests found in the game involving helping out the non player characters Nigel can complete these tasks for benefits like increased attacking power and use of shortcut warps to travel across the overworld quicker These can help the player but are not necessary to complete the game Plot editThe game s intro starts in Gamul Date 312 where Nigel a treasure hunter who is 88 years old far older than he appears is shown traversing a dungeon of rolling boulders and moving platforms called Jypta Ruins to acquire the Statue of Jypta After selling this statue to a shop owner in a port town of Kalva Nigel is accosted by a wood nymph named Friday She explains that she is being chased by three persistent yet bumbling thieves named Kayla Ink and Wally because she knows the location of the legendary treasure of King Nole Once Nigel spends most of his money on a bird to carry him to the island Friday admits that while she doesn t know the exact location of the treasure she has a feeling where it is The player controls Nigel from here on where he and Friday who accompanies him for the entire game first journey through a dungeon until they fall into a river and end up in the care of the red furred bear people of Massan When Nigel awakes he finds his way to the neighboring village of Gumi where the yellow furred bear people are ready to sacrifice the daughter of Massan s leader Fara Nigel follows the crazed tribe into their shrine and breaks them of their curse freeing Fara and earning the respect of both tribes and a clue to help him to the treasure Nigel and Friday travel westward until they come to the lighthouse town of Ryuma which has been attacked by thieves Nigel goes to the thieves cave and rescues the mayor and some other men who have been kidnapped He also finds a lithograph of a dragon which Friday tells him is a clue to the treasure Before he can leave Kayla Ink and Wally show up and hold Friday hostage until Nigel hands them the lithograph Nigel s heroics earn him a place in the court of Duke Mercator who orders him to go and defeat an old wizard Mir who is locked in a tower nearby and who has been terrorizing the town and extorting the Duke Nigel braves a crypt and the wizard s tower and faces him in single combat Defeated Mir confesses all he knows about King Nole s treasure and then explains that the Duke is his brother and had been using him as a scapegoat for years Nigel returns to the Duke and is about ready to confront him when he is tossed into a dungeon While imprisoned he finds out that the princess of Maple his home country who had been a guest at the castle has been taken away by the Duke s dragon like henchman Zak He manages to escape to find the castle knights in open revolt and ships stuck in the harbour because the lighthouse in Ryuma is broken Nigel saves Arthur the Duke s general and is given the key to the Greenmaze where the Sunstone can be found the gem that powers Ryuma s lighthouse Nigel navigates the maze despite the best efforts of troublesome gnomes and restores the lighthouse He then takes a ship to pursue the Duke He makes landing up the coast of the island at Verla which has practically become a ghost town The Duke had enslaved the population of the town and forced them to work in nearby mines searching for a legendary treasure Nigel frees the townspeople and they give him a legendary sword they found but had hidden from the Duke Nigel continues through the mine to find the Duke sailing via rafts across a lake to an island temple Nigel finds a way over and navigates through the labyrinth to fight the Duke but is caught off guard by Zak Nigel is teleported to safety by Mir before the Duke and Zak can finish him off Mir then proceeds to give Nigel some more information about King Nole s treasure Mir also gives a magical axe to Nigel which allows him to cut down trees with a single swing of his sword Nigel retakes his sword in hand and Friday leads him up through mountains to get to the entrance to the underground dungeon where King Nole hid his treasure They encounter Zak again who has decided that while he doesn t like working for the Duke any longer he still wants to face Nigel one on one After Nigel proves his superiority Zak gives Nigel something he stole from the Duke that will allow Nigel to enter the underground Zak departs defeated Nigel finds himself back at the same cave he started in this time filled with monsters but no traps He gets to the Duke just as he uses the Princess to open the gate between the above and below worlds referencing the song In A Gadda Da Vida Nigel charges through into the center of the island and into King Nole s labyrinth a massive confusing dungeon guarding King Nole s palace After making it through the labyrinth and the palace Nigel makes it to the room which held the treasure After all the challenges so far things are not quite finished for King Nole s restless Spirit attacks Nigel but Nigel makes quick work of him The Duke then shows up and as he thanks Nigel for doing the dirty work for him Gola the Dragon God that King Nole worshipped burns him alive Nigel fights Gola using all of his strength and cunning and when the beast is finally vanquished the treasure is his With vast sums of gold under his control he decides that rather than retire he and Friday will continue their adventures In the original ending in the Japanese and European version the treasure vanishes after Gola s last stand Nigel isn t very upset and suggests taking Friday with him to the main country for new adventures Reception editInitial receptionReview scoresPublicationScoreAktueller Software Markt10 12 3 Beep MegaDrive8 10 4 Dragon nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Jay 5 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Dee 5 GameFan396 400 JP 6 380 400 US 7 GamePro16 20 8 GameZone91 100 JP 9 90 PAL 10 Hyper92 11 Joystick97 14 Mean Machines Sega94 100 12 Mega Fun91 13 Player One91 15 Video Games DE 80 16 Mega92 17 Sega Power89 18 Sega Pro84 JP 19 85 PAL 20 Retrospective receptionAggregate scoreAggregatorScoreGameRankings77 21 Review scoresPublicationScoreEurogamer5 10 22 GameSpot7 10 23 GameSpy9 10 24 IGN7 5 10 25 Nintendo Life nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 26 Retro Gamer88 27 RPGamer4 5 28 RPGFan84 29 The game was reviewed in 1995 in Dragon 217 by Jay amp Dee in the Eye of the Monitor column Jay gave the game 3 out of 5 stars while Dee gave the game 4 out of 5 stars 5 The game was praised in the Australian based Megazone magazine where it received a 9 out of 10 The game received extremely positive attention in GameFan magazine getting reviewed twice once for the import version then again for the American release The import review gave it a perfect 10 out of 10 stating that it was the perfect action RPG and that if this was an American release I would give it game of the year it s that good 30 According to Next Generation Landstalker met with critical acclaim in Japan and was a major system seller for the Mega Drive there 31 In GameFan s annual Megawards Landstalker won the awards for Most Innovative New Game Sega and Best Action RPG and was a nominee for the Best Music Genesis and Game of the Year awards 32 Mega placed the game at 5 in their Top Mega Drive Games of All Time 33 Gamasutra included it as an example of an open world game as part of their Game Design Essentials series 34 In 2017 Gamesradar ranked the game 24th on their Best Sega Genesis Mega Drive games of all time 35 References edit ランドストーカー 皇帝の財宝 Randosutōka Kōtei no Zaihō McFerran Damien 11 May 2023 Here s A Glimpse Of The Landstalker Sequel We Never Got To Play Time Extension Hookshot Media Retrieved 11 May 2023 Stiller Heiner March 1993 Inselabenteuer Aktueller Software Markt p 131 Retrieved January 14 2022 ランドストーカー 皇帝の財宝 Beep Mega Drive in Japanese November 1992 p 26 Retrieved January 14 2022 a b c Jay amp Dee May 1995 Eye of the Monitor Dragon 217 65 74 Skid Brody Slick Tom The Enquirer January 1993 Viewpoint GameFan Vol 1 no 3 pp 10 13 Retrieved January 14 2022 Skid Sgt Gamer K Lee The Enquirer September 1993 Viewpoint GameFan Vol 1 no 10 pp 14 15 Retrieved January 14 2022 Larry Scary November 1993 Landstalker GamePro No 52 p 252 Retrieved January 14 2022 Haynes Rik Masaki January 1993 Landstalker Sega Zone No 3 pp 36 38 Retrieved January 14 2022 Peters Adam November 1993 Landstalker Sega Zone No 13 pp 38 39 Retrieved January 14 2022 Lawson Wayne December 1993 Landstalker Hyper No 1 p 53 Retrieved January 14 2022 Gus Paul October 1993 Landstalker Mean Machines Sega No 12 pp 102 105 Retrieved January 14 2022 Ulf Markus February 1994 Landstalker Mega Fun in German pp 42 44 Retrieved January 14 2022 Destroy J m January 1993 Land Stalker Joystick in French No 34 p 231 Retrieved January 14 2022 Wolfen November 1993 Landstalker Player One in French No 36 pp 14 15 Retrieved January 14 2022 Landstalker Video Games in German February 1994 p 45 Retrieved January 14 2022 Mellerick Paul November 1993 Landstalker Mega No 14 pp 32 33 Retrieved January 14 2022 Longhurst Richard November 1993 Landstalker Sega Power No 48 pp 52 53 Retrieved January 14 2022 Boni Dino February 1993 Landstalker Sega Pro No 16 pp 24 26 Retrieved January 14 2022 Johnson Jason December 1993 Landstalker Sega Pro No 26 p 56 Retrieved January 14 2022 Landstalker for Genesis GameRankings CBS Interactive Archived from the original on 2019 12 09 Retrieved 2021 01 06 Whitehead Dan October 6 2007 Virtual Console Roundup Page 2 Eurogamer Retrieved January 11 2022 Shau Austin December 19 2007 LandStalker The Treasures of King Nole Review GameSpot Retrieved January 11 2022 8 Bit Star Landstalker Hardcore Gaming 101 Archived from the original on June 28 2006 Retrieved January 11 2022 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Thomas Lucas M September 14 2007 Landstalker The Treasures of King Nole Review IGN Archived from the original on May 3 2019 Retrieved January 11 2022 Duyn Marcel van September 2 2007 Landstalker The Treasures of King Nole Review MD Nintendo Life Retrieved January 11 2022 Landstalker Retro Gamer No 44 November 2007 p 95 Retrieved January 11 2022 Schreier Jason Land Stalker Staff Retroview RPGamer Archived from the original on January 8 2009 Retrieved January 11 2022 Dancin Humor 2001 Landstalker RPGFan Archived from the original on June 29 2001 Retrieved January 11 2022 Landstalker GameFan 1 3 January 1993 Retrieved 29 January 2012 Backtracking Next Generation No 23 Imagine Media November 1996 p 123 GameFan volume 2 issue 2 January 1994 pages 54 58 Mega magazine issue 26 page 74 Maverick Magazines November 1994 Gamasutra Game Design Essentials 20 Open World Games www gamasutra com GamesRadar Staff 2017 06 21 Best Sega Genesis Mega Drive games of all time gamesradar Retrieved 2022 02 24 External links editClimax Entertainment Official Archive Japanese Landstalker at MobyGames Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Landstalker amp oldid 1213355316, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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