Hamster Will Release VS. Valkyrie’s Adventure: Legend of the Key of Time As The Newest Arcade Archives Game On Switch | Retro Gaming News 24/7 (www.retronews.com)
from ktec@lemmy.zip to retrogaming@lemmy.world on 26 Jul 2024 08:41
https://lemmy.zip/post/19778310

Hamster’s Latest Arcade Archives Release: VS. Valkyrie’s Adventure

Hamster is set to release the classic arcade game, Valkyrie’s Adventure: Legend of the Key of Time, as the newest addition to their Arcade Archives collection on Nintendo Switch. Scheduled for availability worldwide from July 25th, this eagerly anticipated retro title is priced at $7.99 / €6.99 / £6.29 in digital format.

First introduced by Namco in 1986, this action RPG transports players into the legendary Marvel Land as the valiant Valkyrie on her quest to collect the mystical Key of Time and defeat the tyrant Zouna.


Have you played the original? Do you think it will catch on with a new audience?

#retrogaming

threaded - newest

TimeNaan@lemmy.world on 26 Jul 2024 16:15 collapse

Is it the same game as Valkirie no Densetsu on TG16? Because that was really fun.

Redkey@programming.dev on 26 Jul 2024 23:47 collapse

After watching some of a playthrough on YouTube, the PC Engine version looks fairly close to the original arcade game (also called Valkyrie no Densetsu/Legend of the Valkyrie). The Famicom game (called Valkyrie no Boken: Toki no Kagi no Densetsu/Valkyrie’s Adventure: Legend of the Key of Time) is very different. The two games really only share the title (sort of) and a little backstory.

Legend of the Valkyrie is an on-rails multi-direction shooting game with light RPG elements. The most similar games I can think of are the D&D beat-em-up games Tower of Doom and Shadow Over Mystara, which were also originally arcade games.

But the Famicom’s Valkyrie’s Adventure is a ridiculously open world action RPG. The player is dropped in the middle of the wilderness with a sword and no idea of what to do first. You’re free to walk in any direction, like most home 2D action RPGs. There’s virtually no text, and many “puzzles” which involve using particular items in particular one-tile spaces (without any clues or hints). There’s a guide in the original Famicom manual that will get you part-way through the game, but from there you’re on your own.

TimeNaan@lemmy.world on 27 Jul 2024 06:32 collapse

Thanks for the in depth explanation!