Thick Thighs Save Lives
NeoGAF's Physical Games Advocate Extraordinaire
Previews:
IGN
All in all, Echoes of Wisdom feels like an earnest and clever return to the Zelda games I grew up playing. Challenging, inventive, fresh, and genuinely just really fun. Every new puzzle and conflict is a blank canvas for experimentation, but it’s all wrapped in that distinctively familiar and challenging Zelda game vibe that made me fall in love with these games to begin with. It’s vintage Zelda mixed with the playful and creativity based gameplay that younger audiences are used to building their own stories with these days. It’s not pushing that side of things as far as games like Minecraft, Roblox, or even Tears of the Kingdom does, but it’s also not rigid and specific with the way it makes you approach it.
Attempting to juggle several of the core tenets of what makes the Zelda games so special to so many people across so many generations and make them all happy is an extremely tall order. The longer any franchise thrives, the more difficult it becomes to please everyone that approaches it with specific expectations. Every fan has a different reason why Zelda is special to them. But so far, Echoes of Wisdom feels like it’s taking the best elements of the most beloved modern and vintage Zelda games and making them work together in a pretty clever synchronicity. Whether they’ll get along for the whole trip remains to be seen, but right now it feels like a smart move and a truly exciting way to push the classic side of the franchise towards the future.
Polygon
The Legend of Zelda: Echoes of Wisdom may not have the gargantuan scope of recent 3D Zelda games, but it does appear to have similarly creative gameplay and player flexibility. It plays like a classic Legend of Zelda game, though, pairing old-school puzzle-solving and dungeon-crawling with ingenuity, resulting in a magical combination of styles. Zelda’s first solo adventure already feels like a winner.
Variety
In a hands-on demo ahead of release, Zelda finds herself imprisoned early in the game and must escape from jail. Using the Tri Rod, she can create echoes of wooden boxes and stools to climb high up and avoid her jailers. Or, she can make and throw breakable pots that distract enemies as she sneaks away. It’s clear early on that Zelda has many different ways to traverse the world, solve puzzles and navigate dungeons with her echoes and abilities — it’s a level of freedom that echoes (pun intended) the open-world possibilities of “Breath of the Wild” and “Tears of the Kingdom.”
But echoes aren’t Zelda’s only magical weapon. She can also magically transport objects and herself around with Bind and Reverse Bond. With the Tri Rod, Zelda can move her echoes and other large obstacles, like boulders and statues, across short distances with Bind. Using Reverse Bond, she can tether herself to things like floating platforms or wall-crawling spiders to reach new areas. Knowing how to combine those two versatile spells with the array of echoes is the key to mastering the game’s puzzles.
As for combat, Zelda is no pushover. When her echo army can’t do the job, she can take matters into her own hands with Swordfighter Form. During an early dungeon, Zelda gains access to this magical ability that transforms her into sword-wielding figure that looks awfully similar to the missing Link. For a limited time when using the form, Zelda swings her own sword, runs faster and jumps higher than normal. She gains this powerful ability after defeating a shadowy, mysterious foe who looks a lot like Link in the dungeon.
TechRadar
After playing through over an hour of the upcoming game at a preview event hosted by Nintendo, I’m confident that the next entry in the long-running series has all the makings of a fantastic sandbox experience. It could even become one of the best Nintendo Switch games of the year.
On the surface, Echoes of Wisdom looks most similar to Link's Awakening, a 2019 Nintendo Switch remake of a 1993 Game Boy title. It has the same adorable art style, which lends everything a cutesy, miniaturized look. The Hyrule setting is almost like a diorama, with a top-down perspective and shiny, plastic-like textures to really sell the effect.
That said, anyone who played Link's Awakening will know that the attractive overall look of that game was always a little undermined by its rough performance. Substantial framerate drops were common, particularly when entering or exiting a scene.
Thankfully, the build of Echoes of Wisdom that I played performed substantially better. It wasn’t perfect, with a couple of visible dips in particularly busy moments, but it was much more consistent on the whole which bodes well for the finished release.
TechRaptor
Fantasian Neo Dimension's UI still looks like it's made more for the phone than console, and while that is truth of the matter, I had hoped Square Enix would do a bit more to make it look appealing for gamers playing this new version on the big screen.
I'm just not a fan of the somewhat generic looking UI design, so it reminds me that yes, I am playing a mobile game. It's serviceable and does the job, but keep your expectations in check. Regardless, Fantasian is a coveted title for a reason, and I can see why fans were so quick to praise it back when it launched in 2021.
NPR
Nintendo had me play through the introductory prison break, an early dungeon, and a small patch of the game’s (relatively open) world. I have only one gripe: You’ll switch between echoes through a long line in a pause menu, akin to the Fuse power interface in Tears of the Kingdom. I quickly tired of scrolling and relied on sorting items by “Most Recent” and “Most Used,” consigning other handy echoes to oblivion.
However, this annoyance hardly diminishes the achievement Echoes of Wisdom is shaping up to be. While the game’s story appears to be a simple inversion of the “Knight saves Princess” trope, its mechanics add astonishing depth and variety to a decades-old formula. Where Tears of the Kingdom felt like a triumphant end of an era, Echoes of Wisdom may well be an understated but confident start of something new.