Much more accommodating to the single player experience than Tri Force Heroes, with formations allowing all 4 Links to be controlled at once, however this is still a multiplayer focused so the single player experience is hampered by some tedious elements.
For example, in multiplayer each Link can pick up their own weapon while in single player, that weapon is given to all 4 Links so backtracking becomes a bigger thing. Some bosses/enemies require the right colour of Link to attack it which becomes much more difficult for a single player to do. And in multiplayer Force Fairies (lives in this game) are much more available and are only used when a Link has no force gems to drop, while in single player they are used whenever you lose all of your hearts.

While the single player experience is flawed, the game does offer a few ideas that were ahead of it's time. If you use the GBA as a controller (required in multiplayer) then you have another screen (this pops up in a window on TV in single player) and what is cool about this is the way the levels are designed to make use of this, essentially acting like a DS or Wii U. For example the Helmaroc King boss sees you trying crash it into various caves on the TV while inside the cave on the GBA you can attack it's hammer. All of the dark world stuff takes place on the GBA so you can see where you are in relation to the standard overworld and how your actions are affecting it. It's a really neat concept and with 4 players, it offers a really unique experience.

The biggest caveat though with multiplayer is that you need 4 GBAs and 4 GCN/GBA link cables as well as the game and Gamecube setup to get the full experience which was expensive in 2004/2005 and gosh knows how expensive that is now.
Like I said though, the idea was ahead of its time and I would love to see an attempt of getting it to work on Switch via online and handheld local multiplayer so a wider audience can experience one of the most forgotten about Zelda titles

Reviewed on Apr 23, 2021


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