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Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon

Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon are action-adventure games developed by Animation Magic and published by Philips Interactive Media for the CD-i on October 10, 1993 in North America[1] and December 25 of the same year in Europe.[1] They were released on the same day, were developed simultaneously, and look and play similarly because they use the same graphic engine. Both games are based on Nintendo's The Legend of Zelda franchise, but are not acknowledged as official, canonical entries[2] and are the first two games of three Zelda games released for the CD-i. The third, Zelda's Adventure, was developed separately and plays differently.

Link: The Faces of Evil
Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon
Packaging for Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon. The artwork for Link and Zelda were reused promotional art from The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past.
Developer(s)Animation Magic
Publisher(s)Philips Interactive Media
Director(s)Dale DeSharone
Producer(s)Dale DeSharone
Designer(s)Dale DeSharone
Rob Dunlavey
Programmer(s)Linde Dynneson
John O'Brien
John Wheeler
Artist(s)Tom Curry
Max Stienmetz
John Ursino
Writer(s)Jonathan Merritt
Composer(s)Tony Trippi
William Havlicek
SeriesThe Legend of Zelda
Platform(s)Philips CD-i
Release
Genre(s)Action-adventure
Mode(s)Single-player

Link: The Faces of Evil puts the player in control of Link, who goes on a quest to defeat Ganon and rescue Princess Zelda. Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon changes the roles and has the player control Zelda, who sets out to save Link and King Harkinian and defend her kingdom from Ganon. Both travel to a new world (Koridai and Gamelon, respectively) to thwart Ganon's plans. At the time of their release, the games received mixed to positive reviews. In later years, both games have received universally negative reception for their plots, full-motion video animated cutscenes, voice acting, controls, and graphics. The games were not acknowledged in the official The Legend of Zelda: Hyrule Historia guidebook; Eiji Aonuma, who has served as a series director since Ocarina of Time, has remarked that the games do not "fit in the 'Zelda' franchise".[2] This has led to the three games (Link: The Faces of Evil, Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, and Zelda's Adventure) being considered not only the worst games in the Zelda franchise but also among the worst video games of all time.

Gameplay edit

Players take control of Link in The Faces of Evil, and of Zelda in The Wand of Gamelon. At the beginning of both games, players have access to only three areas, which are accessed through an in-game map. The two characters only have their swords and shields at this stage. The sword can be used to attack enemies either by stabbing or shooting "Power Blasts", while the shield can deflect attacks. Link's sword in The Faces of Evil is known as his Smart Sword, and will not hurt anyone considered friendly.[3] The shield is used whenever the player character is standing still or crouching. They gain new items later on in the game, including lamp oil, rope, and bombs, all of which can be purchased from a shop. Rubies (rupees in canon Zelda games) can be obtained by stabbing them with the sword after defeating an enemy, after which they can be spent at the shop.

The player's health is measured in "Life Hearts". Although the player begins the game with only three hearts, there are ways to earn more. Each time the player character is injured, they will lose at least one-half of a heart. The first two times the player runs out of Life Hearts, the player will be given the option of continuing from near the point where their last heart was lost. When the player loses their hearts for the third time, they will be returned to the map and must start the level from the beginning. Returning to the map replenishes their Life Hearts and lives, and they will retain any items and Rubies they picked up.[3][4]

Plot edit

Link: The Faces of Evil edit

The story begins in Hyrule Castle, where a bored Link discusses the prospects of new adventure with King Harkinian. Link's hopes are fulfilled, when a wizard named Gwonam arrives at the castle to announce that Ganon (the series' antagonist) and his minions have taken over Koridai Island and recruits Link to stop Ganon. In Koridai, Gwonam explains that many of Ganon's minions have established the "Faces of Evil", giant mountains and stone structures that bear the resemblance of their commanding minions that act as their bases of operation. During Link's quest, Gwonam informs him that Ganon has captured Zelda and imprisoned her in his lair.[5]

Link ventures through the island and conquers all the faces along with defeating their leaders such as the necromancer Goronu; the anthropomorphic jokester pig Harlequin; the fire-breathing armored knight Militron; the gluttonous cyclops Glutko; and the anthropomorphic wolf Lupay.[6][7] At one point during Link's adventure, he discovers the sacred Book of Koridai, which he brings to a translator named Aypo who reveals to him that the book is the only way to defeat Ganon.[8] Link finally confronts Ganon and imprisons him within the pages of the Book of Koridai, before he rescues a sleeping Zelda and awakens her. Gwonam appears and congratulates Link on his success, declaring him the hero of Koridai.

Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon edit

King Harkinian announces his plan to aid Duke Onkled of Gamelon, who is seemingly under attack by Ganon's forces,[9] and orders his daughter Princess Zelda to send Link for backup if she does not hear from him within a month. A month eventually passes without word from the King, so as instructed, Zelda sends Link to find him. When he too goes missing, Zelda ventures off to Gamelon to find both Link and the King, accompanied by her elderly nursemaid, Impa.

As she ventures across Gamelon, Zelda battles many of Ganon's minions including the villainous mummy Gibdo; the three wicked witches of the Fairy Pool; and the intimidating knight Iron Knuckle. During Zelda's quest, Impa discovers that King Harkinian was captured by Ganon and that Link was engaged in a battle, the outcome of which is unclear. Eventually, Zelda rescues a woman named Lady Alma from evil sorcerer Wizrobe; Alma later reveals that she knows Link. Zelda then travels to Dodomai Palace, where she storms the castle, kills Ganon's henchman, Hektan, and saves a prisoner named Lord Kiro (sometimes known as Fari), who had accompanied King Harkinian before he was captured and reveals that Duke Onkled is intentionally collaborating with Ganon, and that he lured the King to Gamelon to be imprisoned. Zelda and Kiro confront Onkled, who reveals the secret entrance to Reesong Palace, where Ganon has taken residence.

Zelda travels to the Shrine of Gamelon to battle shapeshifter Omfak and obtain the Wand needed to defeat Ganon, then makes her way to Reesong Palace where she fights him. After incapacitating Ganon with the Wand, she rescues her father. Back at Hyrule Castle, Duke Onkled is ordered by the King to scrub all the floors in Hyrule as punishment for his treason. Although Link's whereabouts are still unknown, a comment by Lady Alma prompts Zelda to throw her mirror against the wall, and as it smashes Link magically materializes, seemingly having been trapped in the mirror, although he seems to have no recollection of what happened. They decide to celebrate Gamelon's return to peace with a feast.

Development edit

In 1989, Nintendo signed a deal with Sony to begin development of a CD-ROM-based add-on for the Super NES (see Super NES CD-ROM) that would allow for FMV and larger games.[7][10] However, Nintendo broke the agreement and instead signed with Philips to make the add-on, which caused Sony to spin off their add-on into its own console called the PlayStation.[6][7][11] Witnessing the poor reception of the Sega Mega-CD, Nintendo scrapped the idea of making an add-on entirely.[7][10] As part of dissolving the agreement with Philips, Nintendo gave them the license to use five of their characters, including Link, Princess Zelda, Ganon, and Mario[12] for games on Philips's console, the CD-i, after the partnership's dissolution.[10][13]

Contracting out to independent studios, Philips subsequently used the characters to create three games for the CD-i, with Nintendo taking no part in their development except to give input on the look of the characters[5][10] based on the artwork from Nintendo's original two games and that of their respective instruction booklets.[14] Philips insisted that the development studios utilize all aspects of the CD-i's capabilities, including FMV,[9] high-resolution graphics, and CD-quality music.[14] Because the system had not been designed as a dedicated video game console, there were several technical limitations, such as unresponsive controls (especially for the standard infrared controller),[9] and numerous problems in streaming audio, memory, disc access, and graphics.[14] The first two games were showcased at the 1993 Consumer Electronics Show.[15]

The Faces of Evil and The Wand of Gamelon were the first two Nintendo-licensed games released on the Philips CD-i.[16] They were given the relatively low budget of approximately $600,000, and the development deadline was set at a little over a year – to be split between the two games.[9][14] It was decided by Animation Magic, the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based development team led by Dale DeSharone, that the two games would be developed in tandem and would share the same graphics engine in order to make more efficient use of the budget.[17]

The rest of the development team included three programmers (all previous employees of Spinnaker Software), musician Tony Trippi, and freelance writer Jonathan Merritt, who created the scripts and designs. Under DeSharone's direction, development progressed similarly to that of his game Below the Root, which Retro Gamer's John Szczepaniak suggested was as a forerunner.[18] Background designs were created by local Cambridge artists.[14] The animated cutscenes were created by a team of animators from Russia, led by Igor Razboff, who were flown to the United States for the project.[19] These games marked the first time that Russian outsourcing had been utilized by an American games company – a move that was only possible due to the somewhat thawed political climate after the fall of the Berlin Wall.[14]

For voice acting, Animation Magic auditioned local New England community theater actors. Jeffrey Rath was cast as Link. In a 2010 interview with The Gaming Liberty, Rath stated that there were two-hour recording sessions after roughly 15 minutes of rehearsals.[20] Bonnie Jean Wilbur was cast as Zelda[21] and her husband Paul Wann played various characters, including Gwonam. Mark Berry provided the voices of King Harkinian, Ganon and a Gibdo. Additional voices were provided by Jeffrey Nelson, Natalie Brown, Phil Miller, Chris Flockton, John Mahon, Josie McElroy, Jerry Goodwin, Karen Grace, and Marguerite Scott.[22]

Reception edit

Contemporary responses edit

At the time of its release, contemporary criticism was mixed for both games. SNES Force magazine described the animated sequences as "breathtaking" and praised the game for its high-resolution graphics and its "brilliant" use of sound and speech.[23] Highly anticipated by the French video game press, Joystick magazine's development preview of The Faces of Evil described it as a veritable arcade-quality game with stunning graphics and "perfect animation". They gave The Wand of Gamelon similar praise, and gave it additional praise for its use of voice acting, its plot and its backgrounds.[24][25] The same magazine would ultimately score The Faces of Evil 79%, a few months later, giving particularly high marks for music, sound effects and play-through time.[26]

Other publications gave more negative reviews. CDi Magazine rated The Faces of Evil 65%, stating that the game was a poor relation to the original Nintendo games and singling out the perfunctory storyline, the lack of graphical features like parallax and the slow and repetitive gameplay. Another reviewer for the magazine gave The Wand of Gamelon a higher 75% and called it a "reasonably good game" for its puzzles and animated sequences, but criticized its plot and controls.[27][28] In 1994, Edge reported that as CD-i sales began to suffer, criticism sharpened, and the games were described as low-cost, low-risk ventures that had failed to excite any interest in the platform.[29]

Re-evaluation and infamy edit

Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon have been met with negative reviews in retrospect. Wired magazine said that the animation in both games was extremely simple and stilted and that the graphics had several glitches.[6] IGN's Travis Fahs criticized the games for using a style similar to Zelda II: The Adventure of Link, for "insufferable" controls, and for the designers' poor understanding of the Legend of Zelda franchise. He noted, however, that the backgrounds looked decent considering the poor design of the CD-i's hardware.[30] IGN's Peer Schneider criticized The Wand of Gamelon for not effectively indicating when a platform begins or ends, and also said its controls were "sloppy". Schneider also argued that the decision to star Zelda in The Wand of Gamelon may have been based on the fact that the CD-i's library was directed at women. However, he felt that they failed at this due to Zelda playing the same role as Link.[31]

 
Pictured is the intro of Link: The Faces of Evil. The quality of the games' cutscenes has been derided by critics.

The games' animated cutscenes and voice acting drew particular criticism. The Star Tribune described the voice acting as "laughable",[32] and was also criticized by Zelda Elements as "jarring".[5] IGN described the cutscenes as "infamous" and "cheesy";[33] other reviewers described them as "freakish"[16] and "an absolute joke".[10] Schneider felt that the cutscenes in The Wand of Gamelon were "entertaining... for all the wrong reasons".[31]

The games' soundtracks drew mixed responses. Zelda Elements felt it was "average" and not up to the usual Zelda quality,[9] while Schneider described the soundtrack as "redbook audio CD pop".[31] This has been contested by other reviewers, who described it as diverse, high-quality and superb with an adventurous upbeat tempo blending "delicious '80s synth", electric guitar, panpipes, marimbas, and other unusual instruments.[14]

Despite the largely negative reception that the games have received, there have been a few positive reviews as well. Both Danny Cowan of 1UP.com and John Szczepaniak of Hardcore Gaming 101 praised Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon as among the best games on the CD-i. Szczepaniak in particular suggested that several of the magazines that had rated and reviewed Wand of Gamelon and Faces of Evil had engaged in hate campaigns having never even played the game.[14] Their praises drew from the games' detailed, well-drawn in-game backgrounds (which was described as both Gigeresque[14] and Monet-esque)[34] and "pretty decent" gameplay,[16][9][17] although both criticized the controls.[16][17] According to Szczepaniak, the games' controls work best when played with a hardwired three-button CD-i control pad, as opposed to the CD-i's "crappy infrared remote".[17][35]

In a periodical for Retro Gamer magazine, Szczepaniak suggested that the natural comparison of the games by reviewers to the quality of games in the rest of the Zelda series was an improper comparison to make, arguing that when reviewed in their own right, the games were actually excellent.[36] Contrary to what were described as "lies perpetuated about [Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon]", Retro Gamer described the games as "astoundingly good" and rated them together as number ten in its "Perfect Ten Games" for CD-i. While acknowledging that they were non-canonical, the games were praised for exhilarating pacing and superb gameplay design.[34]

Various characters from the game, including shopkeeper Morshu, wizard Gwonam, and King Harkinian, have gained notoriety as internet memes, and have been featured in countless fan-made 3D animations and YouTube poop parody videos.[37][38]

Sales edit

In 1994, Edge reported that both Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon had sold a "respectable number of units",[29] but IGN claimed that sales of CD-i games (including these two) were poor and caused them to be readily available years later.[31]

Rankings edit

IGN's Peer Schneider ranked the two games among Nintendo's biggest failures (despite the games not being made by Nintendo).[39] Electronic Gaming Monthly contributor Seanbaby ranked Zelda: Wand of Gamelon the sixth worst game of all time, while GameTrailers rated it fifth worst game of all time.[40][41]

The Wand of Gamelon appeared in an IGN bracket poll of "The Greatest Legend of Zelda Game" along with Zelda's Adventure. It lost in the first set of rounds to The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past.[42]

Legacy edit

Unofficial remakes of both games were developed in GameMaker by amateur developer Seth "Dopply" Fulkerson in an effort to teach himself game development. After four years of development, the remakes were released in November 2020 for Linux and Microsoft Windows. The remakes feature the same assets and gameplay as the original releases and add several quality-of-life improvements. In addition to subtitles for cutscenes and a widescreen mode, the remakes add new unlockable content and the ability to choose between the original gameplay style and "Remastered Mode", which makes various gameplay changes to reduce player frustration.[1][43] To avoid receiving a cease-and-desist notice from Nintendo like many similar fan projects, Fulkerson made the remakes unavailable for download two days after their release.[44]

By 2023, Fulkerson was developing a spiritual successor to the games, titled Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore. Arzette features similar gameplay and graphics to Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon, as well as vocal performances by Link and Zelda actors Jeffrey Rath and Bonnie Jean Wilbur. The game was published by Limited Run Games on February 14, 2024 for the Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox Series X/S, and Windows.[45]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "Amateur dev remakes CD-i games Link: The Faces of Evil and Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon so we can suffer them again, 27 years later". Eurogamer. 28 November 2020.
  2. ^ a b Cipriano, Jason (19 September 2013). "Eiji Aonuma Addresses Those Horrible 'Zelda' CD-i Games". MTV. Viacom International Inc. Retrieved 22 August 2023. Mr. Aonuma laughed a little bit before stating, "I don't know that those really fit in the 'Zelda' franchise."
  3. ^ a b Animation Magic (1993). Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon instruction booklet. Philips Media.
  4. ^ Animation Magic (1993). Link: The Faces of Evil instruction booklet. Philips Media.
  5. ^ a b c Zelda Elements Staff (January 1, 2008). . Zelda Elements. Archived from the original on March 14, 2009. Retrieved April 7, 2008.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  6. ^ a b c Kohler, Chris (March 24, 2008). . Wired. Archived from the original on April 1, 2009. Retrieved April 7, 2008.{{cite magazine}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  7. ^ a b c d Zelda Elements Staff (January 1, 2008). . Zelda Elements. Archived from the original on March 6, 2008. Retrieved April 7, 2008.
  8. ^ Animation Magic (1993). Link: The Faces of Evil (Philips CD-i). Philips Media. Level/area: Nortinka. Ipo the Reader: Listen. Such is the power of the Prince of Darkness that he can kill with a single look. Attacks against Ganon will prove fruitless unless Link attacks with the sacred book.
  9. ^ a b c d e f Zelda Elements Staff (January 1, 2008). . Zelda Elements. Archived from the original on February 20, 2008. Retrieved April 7, 2008.
  10. ^ a b c d e GameTrailers Staff (2006-10-22). . GameTrailers. Archived from the original on 2008-03-19. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
  11. ^ GameSpy Staff (2008-01-01). . GameSpy. Archived from the original on April 4, 2008. Retrieved April 7, 2008.
  12. ^ Samuel Clemens (July 4, 2022). . Games Reviews. GR Media. Archived from the original on July 5, 2022. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
  13. ^ Wilson, Mark (2007-06-05). . Kotaku. Archived from the original on 2008-06-08. Retrieved 2008-04-07.
  14. ^ a b c d e f g h i "The Making of... Zelda: 'Wand of Gamelon' & 'Link: Faces of Evil'". Retro Gamer. No. 27. August 2006. pp. 52–57. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  15. ^ Rodrigues, Iara, ed. "Game Plus: Multimídia - Zelda Ataca CDI". GamePower. No.16. Pg.45. October 1993.
  16. ^ a b c d Cowan, Danny (April 25, 2006). "CDi: The Ugly Duckling". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on July 20, 2012. Retrieved April 7, 2008.
  17. ^ a b c d Szczepaniak, John (October 22, 2007). . Hardcore Gaming 101. Archived from the original on October 28, 2014. Retrieved February 4, 2010.
  18. ^ The Making of... Zelda: 'Wand of Gamelon' & 'Link: Faces of Evil' - Roots of Origin. Retro Gamer. Issue 27. p. 55. August 2006.
  19. ^ McFerran, Damien (12 September 2014). "Meet The Unsung Pioneer Behind The Most Reviled Zelda Games Of All Time". Nintendo Life. Gamer Media. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
  20. ^ Retroplayer (November 11, 2010). . The Gaming Liberty. Archived from the original on February 22, 2021. Retrieved July 5, 2022.
  21. ^ Doolan, Liam (13 July 2022). "Random: Voice Of Zelda In CD-i Games Would Love To Return To The Role". Nintendo Life. Retrieved 13 July 2022.
  22. ^ Samuel Clemens (July 11, 2022). . Games Reviews. GR Media. Archived from the original on July 11, 2022. Retrieved July 10, 2022.
  23. ^ Rice, Chris, ed. NEWS: ZELDA CDi EXCLUSIVE. SNES Force. Issue 1. Pg.7. July 1993.
  24. ^ ECTS 93: CDi Philips - Link: The Faces of Evil. Joystick. No.38. Pp.43-44. May 1993.
  25. ^ ECTS 93: CDi Philips - Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon. Joystick. No.38. Pp.43. May 1993.
  26. ^ CD TESTS: Link The Faces of Evil. Joystick. No.44. Pg.192. December 1993.
  27. ^ Stout, Andy. "Games - Zelda The Wand of Gamelon". CDi Magazine (Andy Clough, ed.). Haymarket Publishing, UK. Issue 2. Pg.25. October 1993.
  28. ^ Toor, Mat. "Games - Link The Faces of Evil". CDi Magazine (Andy Clough, ed.). Haymarket Publishing, UK. Issue 2. Pg.24. October 1993.
  29. ^ a b Brookes, Jason, ed. (August 1994). (PDF). Edge. No. 11. p. 49. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 18, 2018. Retrieved February 1, 2019.
  30. ^ Fahs, Travis (2010-08-27). "IGN Presents the History of Zelda". IGN. Retrieved 2013-09-18.
  31. ^ a b c d Schneider, Peer (December 8, 2001). "Hyrule Times Vol. 12: Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon". IGN. from the original on June 2, 2018. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  32. ^ Salas, Randy A. (2007-03-04). . Star Tribune. p. 4F. Archived from the original on March 29, 2012. Retrieved 2009-09-23.
  33. ^ Drucker, Michael S. (2005-09-30). "The Legend of Zelda: The Complete Animated Series - DVD Review at IGN". IGN. Retrieved 2010-05-14.
  34. ^ a b Retrospection: Philips CD-i - Perfect Ten Games: Link: FoE / Zelda: WoG. Retro Gamer. Issue 32. p. 47. January 2007.
  35. ^ "GamesTM 116 – History of Metroidvania".
  36. ^ Profile: Dale DeSharone - Highlights: Dale's Top Tips. Retro Gamer. Issue 31. p. 75. December 2006.
  37. ^ Doolan, Liam (January 24, 2021). "Random: Morshu From Link: The Faces of Evil Has Been Turned Into A 3D Animation". Nintendo Life.
  38. ^ Randall, Harvey. "The internet shitposted too close to the sun, and now we're getting a spiritual successor to the most cursed Zelda games of all time". Retrieved 6 September 2023.
  39. ^ Schneider, Peer (December 7, 2001). "Hyrule Times Vol. 11: Link: The Faces of Evil". IGN. from the original on June 2, 2018. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  40. ^ Reiley, Sean (2007-01-01). "#6: Zelda: Wand of Gamelon (CDI)". Seanbaby.com. from the original on March 26, 2018. Retrieved April 7, 2008.
  41. ^ "Top Ten Best and Worst Games of All Time". Gametrailers.com. 2006-11-17. Retrieved 2009-12-27.
  42. ^ "The Greatest Legend of Zelda Game". IGN. 2011. from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved September 18, 2013.
  43. ^ Bolding, Jonathan (28 November 2020). "A fan has remade the Faces of Evil and the Wand of Gamelon". Pc Gamer.
  44. ^ @thedopster (November 30, 2020). "Just as a reminder, I have pulled the..." (Tweet) – via Twitter.
  45. ^ Romano, Sal (July 12, 2023). "Interactive animated adventure game Arzette: The Jewel of Faramore announced for PS5, Xbox Series, PS4, Switch, and PC". Gematsu. Retrieved July 13, 2023.

link, faces, evil, zelda, wand, gamelon, action, adventure, games, developed, animation, magic, published, philips, interactive, media, october, 1993, north, america, december, same, year, europe, they, were, released, same, were, developed, simultaneously, lo. Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon are action adventure games developed by Animation Magic and published by Philips Interactive Media for the CD i on October 10 1993 in North America 1 and December 25 of the same year in Europe 1 They were released on the same day were developed simultaneously and look and play similarly because they use the same graphic engine Both games are based on Nintendo s The Legend of Zelda franchise but are not acknowledged as official canonical entries 2 and are the first two games of three Zelda games released for the CD i The third Zelda s Adventure was developed separately and plays differently Link The Faces of EvilZelda The Wand of GamelonPackaging for Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon The artwork for Link and Zelda were reused promotional art from The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past Developer s Animation MagicPublisher s Philips Interactive MediaDirector s Dale DeSharoneProducer s Dale DeSharoneDesigner s Dale DeSharoneRob DunlaveyProgrammer s Linde DynnesonJohn O BrienJohn WheelerArtist s Tom CurryMax StienmetzJohn UrsinoWriter s Jonathan MerrittComposer s Tony TrippiWilliam HavlicekSeriesThe Legend of ZeldaPlatform s Philips CD iReleaseNA October 10 1993 1 EU December 25 1993 1 Genre s Action adventureMode s Single player Link The Faces of Evil puts the player in control of Link who goes on a quest to defeat Ganon and rescue Princess Zelda Zelda The Wand of Gamelon changes the roles and has the player control Zelda who sets out to save Link and King Harkinian and defend her kingdom from Ganon Both travel to a new world Koridai and Gamelon respectively to thwart Ganon s plans At the time of their release the games received mixed to positive reviews In later years both games have received universally negative reception for their plots full motion video animated cutscenes voice acting controls and graphics The games were not acknowledged in the official The Legend of Zelda Hyrule Historia guidebook Eiji Aonuma who has served as a series director since Ocarina of Time has remarked that the games do not fit in the Zelda franchise 2 This has led to the three games Link The Faces of Evil Zelda The Wand of Gamelon and Zelda s Adventure being considered not only the worst games in the Zelda franchise but also among the worst video games of all time Contents 1 Gameplay 2 Plot 2 1 Link The Faces of Evil 2 2 Zelda The Wand of Gamelon 3 Development 4 Reception 4 1 Contemporary responses 4 2 Re evaluation and infamy 4 3 Sales 4 4 Rankings 4 5 Legacy 5 See also 6 ReferencesGameplay editPlayers take control of Link in The Faces of Evil and of Zelda in The Wand of Gamelon At the beginning of both games players have access to only three areas which are accessed through an in game map The two characters only have their swords and shields at this stage The sword can be used to attack enemies either by stabbing or shooting Power Blasts while the shield can deflect attacks Link s sword in The Faces of Evil is known as his Smart Sword and will not hurt anyone considered friendly 3 The shield is used whenever the player character is standing still or crouching They gain new items later on in the game including lamp oil rope and bombs all of which can be purchased from a shop Rubies rupees in canon Zelda games can be obtained by stabbing them with the sword after defeating an enemy after which they can be spent at the shop The player s health is measured in Life Hearts Although the player begins the game with only three hearts there are ways to earn more Each time the player character is injured they will lose at least one half of a heart The first two times the player runs out of Life Hearts the player will be given the option of continuing from near the point where their last heart was lost When the player loses their hearts for the third time they will be returned to the map and must start the level from the beginning Returning to the map replenishes their Life Hearts and lives and they will retain any items and Rubies they picked up 3 4 Plot editLink The Faces of Evil edit The story begins in Hyrule Castle where a bored Link discusses the prospects of new adventure with King Harkinian Link s hopes are fulfilled when a wizard named Gwonam arrives at the castle to announce that Ganon the series antagonist and his minions have taken over Koridai Island and recruits Link to stop Ganon In Koridai Gwonam explains that many of Ganon s minions have established the Faces of Evil giant mountains and stone structures that bear the resemblance of their commanding minions that act as their bases of operation During Link s quest Gwonam informs him that Ganon has captured Zelda and imprisoned her in his lair 5 Link ventures through the island and conquers all the faces along with defeating their leaders such as the necromancer Goronu the anthropomorphic jokester pig Harlequin the fire breathing armored knight Militron the gluttonous cyclops Glutko and the anthropomorphic wolf Lupay 6 7 At one point during Link s adventure he discovers the sacred Book of Koridai which he brings to a translator named Aypo who reveals to him that the book is the only way to defeat Ganon 8 Link finally confronts Ganon and imprisons him within the pages of the Book of Koridai before he rescues a sleeping Zelda and awakens her Gwonam appears and congratulates Link on his success declaring him the hero of Koridai Zelda The Wand of Gamelon edit King Harkinian announces his plan to aid Duke Onkled of Gamelon who is seemingly under attack by Ganon s forces 9 and orders his daughter Princess Zelda to send Link for backup if she does not hear from him within a month A month eventually passes without word from the King so as instructed Zelda sends Link to find him When he too goes missing Zelda ventures off to Gamelon to find both Link and the King accompanied by her elderly nursemaid Impa As she ventures across Gamelon Zelda battles many of Ganon s minions including the villainous mummy Gibdo the three wicked witches of the Fairy Pool and the intimidating knight Iron Knuckle During Zelda s quest Impa discovers that King Harkinian was captured by Ganon and that Link was engaged in a battle the outcome of which is unclear Eventually Zelda rescues a woman named Lady Alma from evil sorcerer Wizrobe Alma later reveals that she knows Link Zelda then travels to Dodomai Palace where she storms the castle kills Ganon s henchman Hektan and saves a prisoner named Lord Kiro sometimes known as Fari who had accompanied King Harkinian before he was captured and reveals that Duke Onkled is intentionally collaborating with Ganon and that he lured the King to Gamelon to be imprisoned Zelda and Kiro confront Onkled who reveals the secret entrance to Reesong Palace where Ganon has taken residence Zelda travels to the Shrine of Gamelon to battle shapeshifter Omfak and obtain the Wand needed to defeat Ganon then makes her way to Reesong Palace where she fights him After incapacitating Ganon with the Wand she rescues her father Back at Hyrule Castle Duke Onkled is ordered by the King to scrub all the floors in Hyrule as punishment for his treason Although Link s whereabouts are still unknown a comment by Lady Alma prompts Zelda to throw her mirror against the wall and as it smashes Link magically materializes seemingly having been trapped in the mirror although he seems to have no recollection of what happened They decide to celebrate Gamelon s return to peace with a feast Development editMain article CD i games from The Legend of Zelda series History of the Zelda CD i franchise In 1989 Nintendo signed a deal with Sony to begin development of a CD ROM based add on for the Super NES see Super NES CD ROM that would allow for FMV and larger games 7 10 However Nintendo broke the agreement and instead signed with Philips to make the add on which caused Sony to spin off their add on into its own console called the PlayStation 6 7 11 Witnessing the poor reception of the Sega Mega CD Nintendo scrapped the idea of making an add on entirely 7 10 As part of dissolving the agreement with Philips Nintendo gave them the license to use five of their characters including Link Princess Zelda Ganon and Mario 12 for games on Philips s console the CD i after the partnership s dissolution 10 13 Contracting out to independent studios Philips subsequently used the characters to create three games for the CD i with Nintendo taking no part in their development except to give input on the look of the characters 5 10 based on the artwork from Nintendo s original two games and that of their respective instruction booklets 14 Philips insisted that the development studios utilize all aspects of the CD i s capabilities including FMV 9 high resolution graphics and CD quality music 14 Because the system had not been designed as a dedicated video game console there were several technical limitations such as unresponsive controls especially for the standard infrared controller 9 and numerous problems in streaming audio memory disc access and graphics 14 The first two games were showcased at the 1993 Consumer Electronics Show 15 The Faces of Evil and The Wand of Gamelon were the first two Nintendo licensed games released on the Philips CD i 16 They were given the relatively low budget of approximately 600 000 and the development deadline was set at a little over a year to be split between the two games 9 14 It was decided by Animation Magic the Cambridge Massachusetts based development team led by Dale DeSharone that the two games would be developed in tandem and would share the same graphics engine in order to make more efficient use of the budget 17 The rest of the development team included three programmers all previous employees of Spinnaker Software musician Tony Trippi and freelance writer Jonathan Merritt who created the scripts and designs Under DeSharone s direction development progressed similarly to that of his game Below the Root which Retro Gamer s John Szczepaniak suggested was as a forerunner 18 Background designs were created by local Cambridge artists 14 The animated cutscenes were created by a team of animators from Russia led by Igor Razboff who were flown to the United States for the project 19 These games marked the first time that Russian outsourcing had been utilized by an American games company a move that was only possible due to the somewhat thawed political climate after the fall of the Berlin Wall 14 For voice acting Animation Magic auditioned local New England community theater actors Jeffrey Rath was cast as Link In a 2010 interview with The Gaming Liberty Rath stated that there were two hour recording sessions after roughly 15 minutes of rehearsals 20 Bonnie Jean Wilbur was cast as Zelda 21 and her husband Paul Wann played various characters including Gwonam Mark Berry provided the voices of King Harkinian Ganon and a Gibdo Additional voices were provided by Jeffrey Nelson Natalie Brown Phil Miller Chris Flockton John Mahon Josie McElroy Jerry Goodwin Karen Grace and Marguerite Scott 22 Reception editContemporary responses edit At the time of its release contemporary criticism was mixed for both games SNES Force magazine described the animated sequences as breathtaking and praised the game for its high resolution graphics and its brilliant use of sound and speech 23 Highly anticipated by the French video game press Joystick magazine s development preview of The Faces of Evil described it as a veritable arcade quality game with stunning graphics and perfect animation They gave The Wand of Gamelon similar praise and gave it additional praise for its use of voice acting its plot and its backgrounds 24 25 The same magazine would ultimately score The Faces of Evil 79 a few months later giving particularly high marks for music sound effects and play through time 26 Other publications gave more negative reviews CDi Magazine rated The Faces of Evil 65 stating that the game was a poor relation to the original Nintendo games and singling out the perfunctory storyline the lack of graphical features like parallax and the slow and repetitive gameplay Another reviewer for the magazine gave The Wand of Gamelon a higher 75 and called it a reasonably good game for its puzzles and animated sequences but criticized its plot and controls 27 28 In 1994 Edge reported that as CD i sales began to suffer criticism sharpened and the games were described as low cost low risk ventures that had failed to excite any interest in the platform 29 Re evaluation and infamy edit Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon have been met with negative reviews in retrospect Wired magazine said that the animation in both games was extremely simple and stilted and that the graphics had several glitches 6 IGN s Travis Fahs criticized the games for using a style similar to Zelda II The Adventure of Link for insufferable controls and for the designers poor understanding of the Legend of Zelda franchise He noted however that the backgrounds looked decent considering the poor design of the CD i s hardware 30 IGN s Peer Schneider criticized The Wand of Gamelon for not effectively indicating when a platform begins or ends and also said its controls were sloppy Schneider also argued that the decision to star Zelda in The Wand of Gamelon may have been based on the fact that the CD i s library was directed at women However he felt that they failed at this due to Zelda playing the same role as Link 31 nbsp Pictured is the intro of Link The Faces of Evil The quality of the games cutscenes has been derided by critics The games animated cutscenes and voice acting drew particular criticism The Star Tribune described the voice acting as laughable 32 and was also criticized by Zelda Elements as jarring 5 IGN described the cutscenes as infamous and cheesy 33 other reviewers described them as freakish 16 and an absolute joke 10 Schneider felt that the cutscenes in The Wand of Gamelon were entertaining for all the wrong reasons 31 The games soundtracks drew mixed responses Zelda Elements felt it was average and not up to the usual Zelda quality 9 while Schneider described the soundtrack as redbook audio CD pop 31 This has been contested by other reviewers who described it as diverse high quality and superb with an adventurous upbeat tempo blending delicious 80s synth electric guitar panpipes marimbas and other unusual instruments 14 Despite the largely negative reception that the games have received there have been a few positive reviews as well Both Danny Cowan of 1UP com and John Szczepaniak of Hardcore Gaming 101 praised Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon as among the best games on the CD i Szczepaniak in particular suggested that several of the magazines that had rated and reviewed Wand of Gamelon and Faces of Evil had engaged in hate campaigns having never even played the game 14 Their praises drew from the games detailed well drawn in game backgrounds which was described as both Gigeresque 14 and Monet esque 34 and pretty decent gameplay 16 9 17 although both criticized the controls 16 17 According to Szczepaniak the games controls work best when played with a hardwired three button CD i control pad as opposed to the CD i s crappy infrared remote 17 35 In a periodical for Retro Gamer magazine Szczepaniak suggested that the natural comparison of the games by reviewers to the quality of games in the rest of the Zelda series was an improper comparison to make arguing that when reviewed in their own right the games were actually excellent 36 Contrary to what were described as lies perpetuated about Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon Retro Gamer described the games as astoundingly good and rated them together as number ten in its Perfect Ten Games for CD i While acknowledging that they were non canonical the games were praised for exhilarating pacing and superb gameplay design 34 Various characters from the game including shopkeeper Morshu wizard Gwonam and King Harkinian have gained notoriety as internet memes and have been featured in countless fan made 3D animations and YouTube poop parody videos 37 38 Sales edit In 1994 Edge reported that both Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon had sold a respectable number of units 29 but IGN claimed that sales of CD i games including these two were poor and caused them to be readily available years later 31 Rankings edit IGN s Peer Schneider ranked the two games among Nintendo s biggest failures despite the games not being made by Nintendo 39 Electronic Gaming Monthly contributor Seanbaby ranked Zelda Wand of Gamelon the sixth worst game of all time while GameTrailers rated it fifth worst game of all time 40 41 The Wand of Gamelon appeared in an IGN bracket poll of The Greatest Legend of Zelda Game along with Zelda s Adventure It lost in the first set of rounds to The Legend of Zelda A Link to the Past 42 Legacy edit Unofficial remakes of both games were developed in GameMaker by amateur developer Seth Dopply Fulkerson in an effort to teach himself game development After four years of development the remakes were released in November 2020 for Linux and Microsoft Windows The remakes feature the same assets and gameplay as the original releases and add several quality of life improvements In addition to subtitles for cutscenes and a widescreen mode the remakes add new unlockable content and the ability to choose between the original gameplay style and Remastered Mode which makes various gameplay changes to reduce player frustration 1 43 To avoid receiving a cease and desist notice from Nintendo like many similar fan projects Fulkerson made the remakes unavailable for download two days after their release 44 By 2023 Fulkerson was developing a spiritual successor to the games titled Arzette The Jewel of Faramore Arzette features similar gameplay and graphics to Faces of Evil and Wand of Gamelon as well as vocal performances by Link and Zelda actors Jeffrey Rath and Bonnie Jean Wilbur The game was published by Limited Run Games on February 14 2024 for the Nintendo Switch PlayStation 4 PlayStation 5 Xbox Series X S and Windows 45 See also editZelda s Adventure the third Zelda game released for the CD i References edit a b c d e Amateur dev remakes CD i games Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon so we can suffer them again 27 years later Eurogamer 28 November 2020 a b Cipriano Jason 19 September 2013 Eiji Aonuma Addresses Those Horrible Zelda CD i Games MTV Viacom International Inc Retrieved 22 August 2023 Mr Aonuma laughed a little bit before stating I don t know that those really fit in the Zelda franchise a b Animation Magic 1993 Zelda The Wand of Gamelon instruction booklet Philips Media Animation Magic 1993 Link The Faces of Evilinstruction booklet Philips Media a b c Zelda Elements Staff January 1 2008 Overview Link The Faces of Evil Zelda Elements Archived from the original on March 14 2009 Retrieved April 7 2008 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c Kohler Chris March 24 2008 Game Life The Video 7 Nintendo and CD i Wired Archived from the original on April 1 2009 Retrieved April 7 2008 a href Template Cite magazine html title Template Cite magazine cite magazine a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c d Zelda Elements Staff January 1 2008 Overview CDi Series Zelda Elements Archived from the original on March 6 2008 Retrieved April 7 2008 Animation Magic 1993 Link The Faces of Evil Philips CD i Philips Media Level area Nortinka Ipo the Reader Listen Such is the power of the Prince of Darkness that he can kill with a single look Attacks against Ganon will prove fruitless unless Link attacks with the sacred book a b c d e f Zelda Elements Staff January 1 2008 Overview Zelda The Wand of Gamelon Zelda Elements Archived from the original on February 20 2008 Retrieved April 7 2008 a b c d e GameTrailers Staff 2006 10 22 The Legend of Zelda Retrospective Zelda Retrospective Part 3 GameTrailers Archived from the original on 2008 03 19 Retrieved 2008 04 07 GameSpy Staff 2008 01 01 Nintendo From Hero to Zero GameSpy Archived from the original on April 4 2008 Retrieved April 7 2008 Samuel Clemens July 4 2022 Stephen Radosh An Interview with the Creator of Hotel Mario Games Reviews GR Media Archived from the original on July 5 2022 Retrieved July 5 2022 Wilson Mark 2007 06 05 This Day in Gaming June 5th Kotaku Archived from the original on 2008 06 08 Retrieved 2008 04 07 a b c d e f g h i The Making of Zelda Wand of Gamelon amp Link Faces of Evil Retro Gamer No 27 August 2006 pp 52 57 Retrieved February 1 2019 Rodrigues Iara ed Game Plus Multimidia Zelda Ataca CDI GamePower No 16 Pg 45 October 1993 a b c d Cowan Danny April 25 2006 CDi The Ugly Duckling 1UP com Archived from the original on July 20 2012 Retrieved April 7 2008 a b c d Szczepaniak John October 22 2007 Zelda Wand of Gamelon Link Faces of Evil Phillips CD I 1993 Hardcore Gaming 101 Archived from the original on October 28 2014 Retrieved February 4 2010 The Making of Zelda Wand of Gamelon amp Link Faces of Evil Roots of Origin Retro Gamer Issue 27 p 55 August 2006 McFerran Damien 12 September 2014 Meet The Unsung Pioneer Behind The Most Reviled Zelda Games Of All Time Nintendo Life Gamer Media Retrieved 4 April 2021 Retroplayer November 11 2010 An Interview with Jeffrey Rath The Gaming Liberty Archived from the original on February 22 2021 Retrieved July 5 2022 Doolan Liam 13 July 2022 Random Voice Of Zelda In CD i Games Would Love To Return To The Role Nintendo Life Retrieved 13 July 2022 Samuel Clemens July 11 2022 The Legend of Zelda The Voice Behind the Character Games Reviews GR Media Archived from the original on July 11 2022 Retrieved July 10 2022 Rice Chris ed NEWS ZELDA CDi EXCLUSIVE SNES Force Issue 1 Pg 7 July 1993 ECTS 93 CDi Philips Link The Faces of Evil Joystick No 38 Pp 43 44 May 1993 ECTS 93 CDi Philips Zelda The Wand of Gamelon Joystick No 38 Pp 43 May 1993 CD TESTS Link The Faces of Evil Joystick No 44 Pg 192 December 1993 Stout Andy Games Zelda The Wand of Gamelon CDi Magazine Andy Clough ed Haymarket Publishing UK Issue 2 Pg 25 October 1993 Toor Mat Games Link The Faces of Evil CDi Magazine Andy Clough ed Haymarket Publishing UK Issue 2 Pg 24 October 1993 a b Brookes Jason ed August 1994 CD i Philips Reinvents PDF Edge No 11 p 49 Archived from the original PDF on August 18 2018 Retrieved February 1 2019 Fahs Travis 2010 08 27 IGN Presents the History of Zelda IGN Retrieved 2013 09 18 a b c d Schneider Peer December 8 2001 Hyrule Times Vol 12 Zelda The Wand of Gamelon IGN Archived from the original on June 2 2018 Retrieved September 18 2013 Salas Randy A 2007 03 04 Game over Think again before bringing back these vintage titles Star Tribune p 4F Archived from the original on March 29 2012 Retrieved 2009 09 23 Drucker Michael S 2005 09 30 The Legend of Zelda The Complete Animated Series DVD Review at IGN IGN Retrieved 2010 05 14 a b Retrospection Philips CD i Perfect Ten Games Link FoE Zelda WoG Retro Gamer Issue 32 p 47 January 2007 GamesTM 116 History of Metroidvania Profile Dale DeSharone Highlights Dale s Top Tips Retro Gamer Issue 31 p 75 December 2006 Doolan Liam January 24 2021 Random Morshu From Link The Faces of Evil Has Been Turned Into A 3D Animation Nintendo Life Randall Harvey The internet shitposted too close to the sun and now we re getting a spiritual successor to the most cursed Zelda games of all time Retrieved 6 September 2023 Schneider Peer December 7 2001 Hyrule Times Vol 11 Link The Faces of Evil IGN Archived from the original on June 2 2018 Retrieved September 18 2013 Reiley Sean 2007 01 01 6 Zelda Wand of Gamelon CDI Seanbaby com Archived from the original on March 26 2018 Retrieved April 7 2008 Top Ten Best and Worst Games of All Time Gametrailers com 2006 11 17 Retrieved 2009 12 27 The Greatest Legend of Zelda Game IGN 2011 Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved September 18 2013 Bolding Jonathan 28 November 2020 A fan has remade the Faces of Evil and the Wand of Gamelon Pc Gamer thedopster November 30 2020 Just as a reminder I have pulled the Tweet via Twitter Romano Sal July 12 2023 Interactive animated adventure game Arzette The Jewel of Faramore announced for PS5 Xbox Series PS4 Switch and PC Gematsu Retrieved July 13 2023 nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Link The Faces of Evil and Zelda The Wand of Gamelon amp oldid 1224909359 Zelda The Wand of Gamelon, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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