nitpickeryellow
Nitpicker_Yellow
nitpickeryellow

Via “Fangs and Bones”. Visit the Skull Lake at night.

Weapons you find in the wild (the beginning axe and sledgehammer for example) in caches (some rarer ones) or on mobs (and lying around in camps if you stealth) will respawn, so it’s not like you can ever “run out”.

If you don’t like combat, you don’t do combat. You can swing a metal box at them (or the corresponding physics puzzle solution to the situation), or stealth to steal their weapons and sneakstrike them with those, or find a climbing way around them (which will lead to a Korok puzzle). It’s part of the “freedom” and

He’s talking about the exact same mob. At the beginning of the game, he’s in front of a Shrine and highly likely to one-shot you.

Only if you miss the parry. If you succeed, there is no damage (Pot Lid survives).

I read higher by another commenter that you have to ignore the site and call them directly, the Cnet site should have a phone number as well apparently.

That’s the one I was thinking about when I read the title too.

You can buy a house, but it’s not what you mean.

Link is too strong, he chops tree down in three hits, he can kill with a tree branch, no wonder he wears down every weapon he uses. There’s even probably some magic involved seeing how they burst into a blue explosion.

It caps way before you reach 900, all the ones you find after that are basically useless, but at least it’s easier to get to that point with the extra ones.

I read a lot the arguments that all system releases usually only have 1-2 good games worth getting anyway. Have not bothered verifying.

(Guaranteed at the condition of being off the plateau, as Horses can’t spawn or be registered on the plateau.)

Epona is guaranteed on the first scan of the Smash Bros Link amiibo.  Source

That’s for rerolling one amiibo’s drop for the day, but if you want to scan one several times a day (get several rewards), then you change the clock.

I would like to make the correction that amiibo is never capilatized.

They are basically the closest we can get to experts players of the game. Specialists sure, but world-class experts nonetheless. I think it is worth covering, in the realm of videogame culture.

The shield-surfing tricks they are using for example totally change how the beginning of the game can be approached.

Do it while crouching from the side and Link will punch the chest!

Now playing

I feel like everyone should look at Dunkey’s video on Breath of the Wild to understand how mechanically unique this game is, to at least understand this part of the discussion.

I know how to toggle between horizontal/vertical for battle mode, but I can’t for the life of me figure it out for story.

I saw reports of three cases: