I can only afford the time to play one of them, which one should I play?

Many YouTubers seem to prefer BotW. But most reviews say TotK improves nearly everything.

I prefer easier combat and less complexity. Is there one that would be more enjoyable for me?

  • TheRedSpade@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Related question: If someone wanted to see what all the hype behind the series is about, which game should they play first?

    I typically like to start at the beginning, but the first Zelda game (I think for NES) couldn’t hold my interest for 2 seconds or my attention for 2 minutes.

    • evujumenuk@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      That’s a good question, since it doesn’t have a trivial answer. Zelda is basically three or four different types of games in a trench coat tunic.

      There’s the open world adventure that the original Zelda established, which is probably best represented by BotW.

      There’s the 2D tile-based action puzzler, the quintessential of which is probably LttP.

      There’s the 3D “interconnected small rooms”, which got its start with OoT and was so successful that to this day players are arguing that the newest two games are not really Zelda even though they stick to the original concept much more closely.

      Finally, there’s Adventure of Link.

  • NeryK@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    Play BotW first. A few years down the line, if you ever want more and are able to make time for it, play TotK. One should not play them back to back anyway.

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Agreed. I waited 2-3 years between them, and TOTK still feels a bit samey, but I do appreciate waiting because I’ve forgotten enough that there’s still a sense of discovery.

    • Phen@lemmy.eco.br
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      1 month ago

      I kinda agree with you to some extent. At the time my general reaction was something like: “everything it does, it does wonderfully. But I wish it did more”.

      When TotK came out, my first impression was “I guess I’m never playing BotW again”. Mostly because they kind of overlap with each other in many aspects.

      But I still thought BotW was a great game, before TotK existed.

      • 🇰 🌀 🇱 🇦 🇳 🇦 🇰 🇮 @pawb.social
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        1 month ago

        From the comments, I guess some people prefer the emptiness. I, on the other hand, like having things to do. TOTK has so much to do. It also tells the story way better. BOTW was amazing when it was new, but it didn’t hold my attention for more than 30 hours. There wasn’t enough quests, no reason to explore the map other than the sake of seeing what was there (which was nothing 90% of the time), and even the combat was not quite as good because the powers were uninteresting and nothing Zelda games hadn’t done before along with the fact you go through weapons like popcorn so most combat just ends up being throwing your bombs at them.

        TOTK fixed everything that was wrong with BOTW. It has so much stuff to do, and I don’t just mean the boring-ass shrine puzzles. The powers are interesting, the building aspect is super fun, there is even more map to explore, it’s easier to get around and there are reasons to explore it, quests up the wazoo, weapons last a bit longer and you can craft your own or just make a tank or something which is awesome, etc. It makes BOTW look like crap by comparison, even after being blown away by BOTW initially.

    • themeatbridge@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Really? I think I sunk 100 hours into BOTW. I would also go with TOTK all things being equal, but I never felt like BOTW was a tech demo.

      • Carnelian@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        Well over 300 hours in BotW here, loved it. It feels a lot more “grounded” in comparison to totk, which feels a lot more “sandboxy” at times. Both great games, just different vibes

        I would also say, there were a TON of times in TotK where they riff on previous things from BotW. A lot of the enjoyment I got was the subversion of expectations. In the lead up to the game we all thought they just copy/pasted the map to save time but they actually did a TON of work to it, and it’s very interesting and nostalgic to retread over places that have changed so much.

        I would guess your best bet is playing them in order, altho it’s probably fine either way

        • WarmSoda@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          The caves alone are impressive. They didn’t just add them, they carved out where all the water comes out of the landscape and made those caverns too.

          I played a little of BotW after and i was curious if a waterfall had a cave in TotK. Turns out it has an entire system attached to it. And they did that across the entire map.

    • Balinares@pawb.social
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      1 month ago

      See my answer above for my personal take on this. TotK is a bigger, longer game with far more things to do, but in filling the delicate emptiness that’s at the heart of BotW, they also made TotK… mundane. Greater, by most metrics. But mundane.

      When I played TotK, a great game, I enjoyed myself a lot, then moved on to the next item on my pile.

      When I played BotW, I went through an experience, and it stuck with me since.

  • misk@sopuli.xyz
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    1 month ago

    TotK is better in every way but BotW is once in a lifetime experience due to how contemplative it can be. You’re not going to play both at the same time and they benefit from playing in order. If you’re low on cash buy some used copy of BotW off someone on Vinted* and sell on Vinted once done, then do TotK.

    * or Craiglist or OLX or whatever is used locally where you live

    • Cloudless ☼@feddit.ukOP
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      1 month ago

      It is the time that I can’t afford, not the cash. It is not about playing them at the same time, it is just that it takes me months to finish just a single long game, and there are too many long games I want to play before I die.

      I still haven’t finished Skyrim which I started playing on PS3.

      • misk@sopuli.xyz
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        1 month ago

        Apologies for my scatterbrain. In that case I’d go with BotW because it’s shorter/focused (others will say it’s too minimalist) and you’ll get to experience a modern Zelda game. Also, if you don’t own Switch 2 it runs good enough while TotK was just a bit too much for Switch 1.

        • Cloudless ☼@feddit.ukOP
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          1 month ago

          Shorter/focused sounds good. And yes I only have a Switch Lite and I am unlikely to get a Switch 2.

          Thanks for your suggestions, very helpful.

          • neon_nova@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 month ago

            Totk ran fine for me on the switch. I guess some parts had lag, but I can’t remember having any serious performance issues.

            • overload@sopuli.xyz
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              1 month ago

              Everyone has different cutoffs for what performance is acceptable to them. I thought TOTK was fun but the low resolution and regular FPS dips made me realise I’d rather wait for the switch 2 to experience it properly.

  • inlandempire@jlai.lu
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    1 month ago

    TOTK felt like an upgrade to BOTW to me as well, the sandbox is incredible, BOTW felt too static once I experienced TOTK

  • Zacpod@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’ve tried botw 4 times now. It’s the whole reason I bought a switch. It bores the living fuck out of me every time I play.

    I know a lot of people love it, and you might too. But I’ve never been able to play more than 3-4 hours in without being bored off my ass and going to play something else instead.

  • NocturnalMorning@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Play them in order, you get more story out of it that way. I promise it will be worth it! BoTW is a master piece, and somehow they topped it with ToTK

      • Balinares@pawb.social
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        1 month ago

        Then I’d pick BotW.

        Like another poster said, BotW is a once in a lifetime experience, and somehow strikes a kind of beautiful perfection even as, oddly, TotK is mechanically better in most respects.

        BotW achieves something unique by dropping you in what’s left of Hyrule a century after Hyrule was defeated. And it’s a wilderness that could have been desolate, but it’s not: it’s beautiful. Things are growing back, despite everything. Wildlife, but settlements, also. It’s all sparse, this renewal, and there’s so much woe yet to fight. But it’s there. And the mood is both mournful, and quietly hopeful in a way I find comforting and deeply healthy.

        BotW is built around a core of emptiness, but that emptiness is not a void: there are countless secrets and little wonders to unearth everywhere, everywhere. Sometimes it’s a treasure, or a trace from the past. Sometimes it’s the shapes that rain drops draw on wet moss. There’s wonder everywhere, just a wander away. BotK understands this, and elevates the wandering.

        Where TotK is full of activities and minigames and quests everywhere, so you’re never at a loss for what to do next, and it’s by all measures a richer, bigger, fuller game. But it’s also, squarely, a lesser experience.

        Of the two I’d pick BotW in an eyeblink and it’s not even close.

        But that’s my answer, not yours. Only you know what you’re looking for in a video game.

  • evujumenuk@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I finished BotW 100%, and am currently nearing 100% completion with TotK. Here’s what I would do if I were you.

    Get the BotW demo. It’s free, and it contains the entire first portion of the game, the Great Plateau.

    Play that, and when you’re finished, read the story synopsis on Wikipedia or wherever. Then acquire and play through TotK.

    The Great Plateau gives you about 80% or 90% of what’s great about BotW in a tight, controlled package. If you’ve played Metal Gear Solid V, this is basically Ground Zeroes.

    TotK is so amped up over BotW that there’s no “tutorial inside area” that showcases the mechanics of the full game, it’d basically be a carbon copy of the entire thing.

    In terms of gameplay, this should give you something pretty close to the full experience.

    Edit time! Looks like the BotW store demo was not actually generally available, let alone “free”. Since you’re only hurting for time, not money, you could still get the cartridge version of BotW and sell it after completing the Great Plateau. The rest of my reply should still apply.

  • Owl@mander.xyz
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    1 month ago

    BOTW. It is truly a masterpiece

    TOTK has a lot of not-so-fun time consuming elements, worse combat and is overall more bland

    Also TOTK is very, very, very gimmicky

    • sugar_in_your_tea@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      TOTK has more creative combat, such as my kid fusing a bomb barrel to a shield, which blows up enemies when they attack. Other than that, the combat feels very similar to BOTW, and there’s new enemy types (and I think more variety?).

      It’s certainly gimmicky, and I think the puzzles are easier, though neither has particularly great puzzles. I personally think TOTK is the better sandbox game, while BOTW is a little better Zelda game, but they’re both kinda crappy Zelda games IMO.