Castlevania Legends
Castlevania Legends | |
---|---|
Developer(s) | Konami Computer Entertainment Nagoya |
Publisher(s) | Konami |
Director(s) | Kouki Yamashita |
Designer(s) | Tsukasa Hiyoshi |
Programmer(s) | Yoshiteru Yamaguchi |
Artist(s) | Kazunobu Uchida |
Composer(s) | Kaoru Okada Youichi Iwata |
Series | Castlevania |
Platform(s) | Game Boy |
Release | |
Genre(s) | Action, platform |
Mode(s) | Single-player |
Castlevania Legends[a] is a 1997 action-platform game developed and released by Konami for the Game Boy. The third Castlevania game released for the system, the story follows Sonia Belmont, a vampire hunter battling the first incarnation of Count Dracula. The game was conceived as a prequel to all other games in the Castlevania series; however, it later became recognized as non-canon.
Castlevania Legends was released in Japan on November 27, 1997 and in Europe and North America on March 11, 1998. The game received mixed to negative reviews, with criticism directed towards its lack of difficulty, short length, technical issues, and unoriginality. The game received its first official re-release on the Nintendo Switch Online service on October 31, 2023.
Gameplay
[edit]Castlevania Legends is a side-scrolling platformer where the protagonist, Sonia Belmont, armed with a whip, charges through five stages of Count Dracula's castle, filled with various enemies and candles containing items. Each stage ends in a mini-boss fight which rewards a "Soul Weapon", which Sonia can cast, consuming varying amounts of hearts.
The game implements two difficulty levels and password based save states. Should the timer run out, Sonia fall off the screen, or either her life bar or time counter fall to zero, she will lose all of her hearts and one life, and will restart at the last checkpoint with the basic whip. If she loses all of her lives, the player is presented with the game over screen, where they may exit or choose to continue from the last checkpoint of the current stage. Once per stage, Sonia can activate her inborn ability to enter "Burning Mode", where she becomes invincible, moves faster, and has more powerful attacks for ten seconds.[2]
Plot
[edit]The story begins in the year 1450[3] in Transylvania, during the incarnation of the original Count Dracula. Sonia Belmont, the first vampire hunter of her clan, develops mystical powers in her 17th year, and ventures out to challenge Dracula, meeting Alucard who seeks revenge against his father.[4] After Dracula's defeat, he swears to Sonia that as long as there is evil in the world, he will be resurrected, and in response she swears her family will always defeat him. The game was designed as the first game in the series timeline, but later declared non-canon[3] after the release of Lament of Innocence.
Reception
[edit]Publication | Score |
---|---|
Computer and Video Games | 2/5[5] |
Electronic Gaming Monthly | 4.75/10[6] |
Nintendo Life | 4/10[8] |
Nintendo Power | 6.4/10[7] |
Castlevania Legends was met with negative reception by critics upon release. Electronic Gaming Monthly's four reviewers found the game overly short and boringly easy, as well as complaining of ropy collision detection and cheap deaths resulting from what should be simple jumps. However, their biggest criticism was that there was no real advancement from the previous Castlevania Game Boy installment, Castlevania II: Belmont's Revenge, since other Game Boy releases had made major advances in both gameplay and graphics in the seven years that had passed since Belmont's Revenge.[6] Nintendo Power said the game recreates the Castlevania look and feel and praised the addition of Light Mode, but echoed Electronic Gaming Monthly's criticisms that the game is much too easy and that even a slight miscalculation in a jump results in the player character's death.[7] Computer and Video Games found the game overly simplistic even by Game Boy standards, and commented that "Some of the first GB titles were better than this in terms of graphics and collision detection."[5]
In a 2007 Castlevania series retrospective, IGN called the game one of the series's cult classics, but said it suffers from the Game Boy's technical limitations and is overly different from other games in the series.[3] GameSpy called the music "disappointing", as the previous two Game Boy Castlevania games were highly praised for their music.[9] Game Informer's Tim Turi felt that the game was lacking especially compared to Castlevania: Symphony of the Night.[10]
Longtime Castlevania producer Koji Igarashi removed the game from the series timeline, claiming that in his opinion it conflicted with the plotline of the main games.[11]
Time Extension placed Legends fifth last on its list of ranked Castlevania games: "Following the amazing Belmont's Revenge was no easy task, and in all fairness, Legends is an inferior outing in almost every regard, bar the fact that it came with battery back-up so you could save your progress. The visuals, controls and music are all worse than they are in Belmont's Revenge, but that hasn't stopped Legends from becoming one of the most desirable and expensive Game Boy games. It's worth a look, but only via emulation."[12]
In other media
[edit]Sonia was one of the confirmed leads in the Dreamcast game Castlevania: Resurrection, up until that game's cancellation.[13]
Sonia appears as a playable character for the Ode to Castlevania DLC in Vampire Survivors.[14]
Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Konami (2010-08-04). Castlevania: Harmony of Despair. Konami.
Japanese: 歴代の「悪魔城ドラキュラ」シリーズから選ばれた登場キャラクターを操作して、仲間たちと悪魔城に乗り込み、宿敵ドラキュラ伯爵に立ち向かおう。 English translation: Take control of past protagonists from the Castlevania series to brave the Demon Castle alongside friends and defeat the ancient enemy Count Dracula.
- ^ Castlevania Legends Instruction Booklet. Konami. 1997. pp. 2–11. DMG-ADNP-EUR.
- ^ a b c Mark Bozon (2007-01-18). "Castlevania: The Retrospective". IGN. Archived from the original on 2008-09-26. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ^ Castlevania Legends Instruction Booklet. Konami. 1997. p. 2. DMG-ADNP-EUR.
- ^ a b Huhtala, Hakuna (March 1998). "Mini Reviews: Castlevania: Legends". Computer and Video Games. No. 196. p. 73. Retrieved April 30, 2023.
- ^ a b "Review Crew: Castlevania Legends". Electronic Gaming Monthly. No. 106. Ziff Davis. May 1998. p. 103.
- ^ a b "Now Playing: Castlevania Legends". Nintendo Power. No. 106. Nintendo of America. March 1998. p. 98.
- ^ McFerran, Damien (22 October 2012). "Castlevania: Legends Review (GB)". Nintendo Life. Retrieved 27 November 2021.
- ^ "The Music of Castlevania Legends". GameSpy. 2000-01-01. Archived from the original on 2009-07-22. Retrieved 2008-07-13.
- ^ Turi, Tim (2012-04-04). "Ranking The Castlevania Bloodline". Game Informer. Archived from the original on 2013-05-07. Retrieved 2013-12-05.
- ^ Kurt Kalata (2006-07-26). "Tales from the Crypt: Castlevania's 20th Anniversary Blow-out". 1UP.com. Archived from the original on 2016-09-14.
- ^ McFerran, Damien (2 January 2023). "Best Castlevania Games - Every Castlevania Game Ranked". Time Extension. Hookshot Media. Retrieved 19 February 2023.
- ^ "Castlevania Resurrection." IGN.com. 2007. IGN Entertainment Inc. 21 June 2007. <http://dreamcast.ign.com/objects/012/012004.html Archived 2009-02-28 at the Wayback Machine> [1] Archived 2009-02-28 at the Wayback Machine [2] Archived 2013-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Vampire Survivors: Ode to Castlevania". Steam. Retrieved October 29, 2024.
- 1997 video games
- 1990s horror video games
- Castlevania games
- Game Boy games
- Nintendo Switch games
- Nintendo Switch Online games
- Platformers
- Single-player video games
- Video game prequels
- Video games developed in Japan
- Video games featuring female protagonists
- Video games set in the Middle Ages
- Video games set in Transylvania