#Legend of the River King
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obscurevideogames · 1 year ago
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Legend of the River King (TOSE - Game Boy - 1997)
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doctor-dragon · 1 year ago
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@vgadvisor
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alln64games · 7 months ago
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Legend of the River King 64
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JP release: 27th November 1998
PAL release: N/A
NA release: N/A
Developer: Pack-In-Video
Publisher: Victor Interactive
Original Name: Nushi Tsuri 64
N64 Magazine Score: 56%
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Nushi Tsuri is a series of fishing RPGs that were released between 1990 and 2007. A few games have received western releases under the name Legend of the River King on the Game Boy and Game Boy Colour. Some of the later games were called River King in North America, but Harvest Fishing in Europe, to try and market it as a Harvest Moon spin-off (the mainline games of both franchises were made by Marvelous, but River King was first).
While the N64 version of Legend of the River King was marketed for a western release at some point, it ended up getting cancelled, so we’re left with a Japan-only game, which heavily relies on Japanese text. Google Lens is fine for rough translations, but is unfortunately not quite up to the task for specifics like translating fish names and other technical things like baits and lures. Still, I tried out what I could.
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The game is presented as a top down 2D RPG and it looks lovely in motion, especially the water. Movement is surprisingly unrestrictive as it seems you can climb up any surface and swim through the water – there is one section where you’re blocked that’s part of a lengthy quest to reach the main objectives. The setting seems to be based on the British countryside (my girlfriend even commented on the look without seeing the red post box or football field), but with Japanese buildings.
The game stars a large family, and you get to choose which one to play as. While most of the game is the same for each, they have their own end goals. The girl I picked wanted to find a rare fish that uses a nest because it’s something her fiancé wanted to see. Along the way, you need to hone your skills by catching fish in order to get better equipment and win tournaments.
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While the game is pretended in a cure and lovely 2D format, it changes completely once you get a bite on your rod. You are presented with a 3D view of the very nicely detailed fish. You need to use the analogue stick to make the fish think that the bait is real (it’s very difficult to figure out the tight motion) and use the a button to reel in. If the rod starts to strain, you’ll feel a rumble and you’ll need to let go until you see enough slack on the line to start reeling in again.
I found the fishing to be very difficult, even after reading tips online, and still struggled with the little indoor fishing that lets you fish as much as you want without using resources. You need to keep your eye on both your supplies and the quality of your rod.
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Exploring the areas of the game (that I could access to – I never got the bridge repaired to access the blocked off areas), I did manage to find an old man that talked about the fish my character was after, as he laments that the species is now incredibly rare due to pollution. I did attempt to fish in this area on the off chance that I would find one, but I couldn’t even get bite, even trying lots of different bait.
I imagine that the information needed to figure out what kinds of rods, lures and baits you need to use in different locations is somewhere, but as Google isn’t great at translating those kinds of things, it’s lost on me, so this was kind of the end of my adventure. I did manage to catch a few fish, and you fill out an encyclopaedia with information – and you can make the model of the fish move its mouth by pressing A, so I had fun making it sing along to the tune of the music.
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There is also more than just fishing. Wildlife will also attack you, either form you walking into them on the map or random encounters. Everything – seagulls, mice, eagles, cats, starfish – is out to get you, and you have three options: placate them with food, attack them or run away.
On top of catching fish, you also collect bugs and flowers. With bugs, you find them on the map and use your net to start the “battle” phase where you use a net or your bare hands to collect the bugs in a first person view. Cutting flowers is a bit more simple.
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Legend of the River King seems like a nice and relaxing game, and it’s a shame that the language barrier makes it difficult to fully play and enjoy. I do really like this kind of RPG where the “combat” is something that isn’t a battle system, such as the handheld Mario Golf and Tennis games.
Even though I couldn’t get very far in the game, I enjoyed the time I spent with it.
It’s almost impossible to get a decent way into it if you’re not even slightly conversant in Japanese, such is the option-heavy nature of the text – but we did have a fair amount of fun once we discovered how to fish.
- Jes Bickham, N64 Magazine #26
Remake or remaster?
It would be nice to see an English translation of this game – and perhaps a Story of Seasons fishing game.
Official Ways to get the game
There is no official way to get Legend of the River King 64
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gamersonthego · 2 years ago
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GOTG Review: Legend of the River King
In 2023, I’ve decided to make a real effort in clearing out my massive and ever-increasing backlog of games. To assist with this I built something I like to call Backlog Roulette. 
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Each month I’ll spin this wheel during the monthly preview episodes of a podcast I co-host called The Casual Hour, and I will play whichever of the 90+ games Lady Luck selects for me. I don’t have to finish every game chosen, but I do need to give them “the old college try.” You can watch me explain the concept and rules if you’re interested, but the other thing of note is I want to write about each game here on GOTG. And the first game that came up was 1998’s Legend of the River King for the Game Boy. 
Legend of the River King is a fishing RPG developed by Victor Interactive Software and published by Natsume (which is probably why it gives off some strong Harvest Moon vibes from its visuals).
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I think fishing games are fascinating in the same way I think golf and baseball video games are fascinating. It’s interesting to analyze the different ways designers handle their mechanics, how they view the act of casting a rod, throwing a ball or swinging a club through a controller. Whatever method they land on, it’ll never be quite like the real thing, but that layer of abstraction can be its own form of fun. 
That’s uh, not really the case here with Legend of the River King. Its mechanics are tedious, arbitrary, confusing and often frustrating. Its options are too deep and its systems are too shallow. I wrote almost 600 words about the arcane way you select your bait and tackle, how the game includes a way to basically bypass all of its most intriguing mechanics and the pretty, but dead simple mini-game you play every time you hook a fish, but it was about as fun to read as Legend of the River King was to play, so instead, let's talk about the deeper issue here.
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That deeper issue is the game's use of tension, and I can’t understand why the developers put so much of it into Legend of the River King. For a fishing game set in a tiny, slow-paced, generally carefree world, you are often put on edge. Some of this tension is believable and low stakes, like running out of bait or having a full pail of fish and needing to return to town. But some of it feels weirdly punitive, like random wild animal JRPG battles that can ether knock you out, steal your fish or both. Or your raft (a crucial part of you traversing the world) actively diminishing your health every time you use it, which is often! There’s even a manufactured story tension of needing to catch a specific fish to cure your sister’s illness (though thankfully no time limit is put upon you to get that medicine). 
But for all this tension the game piles on you, none of it results in anything really meaningful. If you get knocked out by an animal or collapse from exhaustion on your raft, you’ll just wake up at the last inn you visited (though, in an odd bit of design, you'll be at 1 HP, requiring you to stay at the inn again to fully heal). You don’t even lose the fish you caught. The worst thing that can really happen to you is that a monkey steals a fish in a random battle that you were going to deliver to a quest giver, but it just creates more busy work rather than something that truly affects the gameplay experience. I suppose if you completely ran out of money and couldn’t buy new bait or lures, you could theoretically hit a failstate, but that’s never really an issue.  
So with that in mind, is Legend of the River King supposed to be a chill fishing adventure, or is it supposed to be a test of survival against a harsh world that doesn’t want you in it? The game can’t decide, and leads to a mess of a 6-8 hour experience.
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And while I’m pretty down on the game generally, I do have to admit there is the foundation of something cool here. The art (especially the underwater scenes featuring nicely detailed fish sprites and a very impressive parallax scrolling effect) is quite good, and the music is great. And when it wasn’t slowly sapping my health away, I liked exploring the world and mentally noting which fish show up where (but man, could this game have used a map).
Legend of the River King is a long-running series, with at least four of its titles having come over to the west, so I have to imagine Victor Interactive Software figured out the formula at some point. I’m not sure I’ll be putting Legend of the River King 2 on my backlog anytime soon, but I could also see myself taking the bait once again at some point. 
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tuliptheoshawott · 1 year ago
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belmonteiro · 2 years ago
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15-lizards · 2 years ago
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Do you guys think that as time passes Robb’s story gets turned into a folk tale…a cautionary story for children…a story rooted in truth but the real details are lost. A boy king marches south looking for justice for his good father but gets betrayed by the people he trusted too much…he gets turned into a beast, half boy and half wolf, forgetting who he is and living among the forest. The riverlanders say that you can hear the wolf king howl when you’ve been lied to, and that he scavenges the woods, pouncing on liars and betrayers. And his mother, so mad with grief, stalks riverbanks at nights, her face torn to bloody ribbons, attacking similar victims, but preferring the ones with blonde hair. Little children hear scary tales of Lady Stoneheart and the Wolf King and are too frightened to ever tell a lie. Men sit in taverns, singing sad drinking songs about a mother and child draped in tragedy. Girls sit about with their needlework, sighing at the true love the Wolf King died for, his fair queen who he put above all others, even himself. Robb Stark is betrayed, and this is true. But time twists the truth. Truth fades into story fades into legend. And he is forgotten, nothing more than a symbol in an old tale.
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dangermousie · 1 year ago
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Pre-Joseon Sageuks: a Biased and Incomplete List
So, as promised way earlier, a post on pre-Joseon sageuks that I’ve either watched or plan to watch so am aware of them. I am sure there are others but here is what I got. Obviously my takes on them are subjective blah blah blah.
Jumong - arguably the Daddy of all Traditional Sageuks, this one ran for over 80 episodes and had insane ratings. It follows the rise of the mythical founder of Gogureyo tho it takes fantastical elements of his story and changes them for historically plausible ones. It’s very long and very meaty and politics/battle heavy and has a large cast of complex characters (including pretty nifty women and a LGBTQ supporting OTP) but it is anchored by the incredible performance of Song Il Gook as the titular character as he slowly but believably grows from nothing to a hero if at the cost of losing his marriage.
The King of Tears Lee Bang Won - this is basically a half and half beast as (you can tell by the title), it’s set in the last days of Goryeo and early days of Joseon. The time period covered is the same as in My Country and Six Flying Dragons, but this is the most traditional take of them all, even more so than 6FD. Not a single pretty face in the cast (tho Joo Sang Wook is a mighty fine man, emphasis on “man”), this is for the real fans of traditional sageuks. I enjoyed it a lot but if you want to check out pre-Joseon sageuks but have mainly watched youth sageuk stuff before, you should probably start with another drama on this list.
The Great Seer - set in the reign of King Gongmin, the last proper king of Goryeo (his son King U is technically the very last but there are questions as to his status), this is for those of you who want to watch Ji Sang in a sageuk. It’s centered around seers but don’t expect mysticism, this knuckles down to politics.
Shin Don - hi there, another story set in the reign of King Gongmin! From the title, you can tel it centers heavily on the powerful monk who ruled for the King at one point. This has been on my to-watch list forever because this appears to devote a decent chunk of its time to Gongmin X Noguk and I am dying for a proper drama for those two. This is from 2005 so if you do watch, keep that in mind in terms of visuals etc. That cast is lit!
Bicheonmu - this is sort of cheating because it’s pretty much set in China but it involves Koreans so. It’s a drama take on the same story told in a pretty awesome movie. Tragic love, battles, young Joo Jin Moo etc. i am very fond of it. This said, find and watch the Chinese version, Korean one was shredded.
The Iron Empress/Empress Cheon Chu - set in Goryeo, this was another of women ruler centric dramas that had a mini popularity peak in late 00s/early 10s (a trend I wish continued.) it got overshadowed by Queen Seonduk but by all accounts is a solid drama. It’s on my list but I haven’t watched it yet.
The King’s Daughter, Soo Baek Hyang - by the writer of The Rebel and My Dearest. Have I got your attention? Another woman centric ruler tale set in Baekje. Yes, there is a love story. That cast is great, to boot. I have started and liked what I’ve seen but got sidetracked. Need to get back to it. Before you look at the ep number and faint seeing the number 108, keep in mind that the eps are half an hour long so it’s an equivalent of a normal 54 ep sageuk so if you can watch eg Empress Ki, you are good with this.
My Country: The New Age - Lee Bang Won but make it gay. OK, I kid, sort of (not really) but this is smart and passionate and heartbreaking. If you want a wide scope or lots of politics, probably not a take for you (Six Flying Dragons is RIGHT there), but if you want an intense, emotional tale, come right in!
Six Flying Dragons - to me, this is THE drama about Lee Bang Won. It’s smart and emotional, deals with politics and has heart. It has a large cast of characters I got invested in, OTPs that will blow your mind etc etc.
Faith/The Great Doctor - if you are a fan of old school shoujo like Red River, Basara or Fushigi Yuugi, this or Moon Lovers are your best bet on this list. A time traveling tale with other fantasy elements about a modern day plastic surgeon who ends up being kidnapped into Goryeo during the early days of King Gongmin’s (hi!) reign by a tormented, oath bound warrior played by Lee Min Ho at his hottest (and playing historical General Choi Young. Do RPS at your pleasure), this one is one of my all time favorites.
Seodonyo/Ballad of Seo Dong - I am actually currently watching this one tho I haven’t been posting about it. Set in both Baekje and Silla, this is an angsty love story with a side of politics. It’s filmed in 2005 and looks accordingly but if you don’t mind dated visuals, this is pretty great!
Emperor of the Sea - set in Silla and Tang, this was a huge hit and deservedly so. Our protag is a slave and gladiator and a great naval hero. This is grim and smart and epic. It’s from 2004 so once again, if dated visuals are no-go, skip, but if you want a great story and performances, this has your name on it.
The Kingdom of the Winds - an epic cursed prince narrative, our ML (Song Il Gook at his sexiest) rises from abandoned prince and slave and abused assassin to general, royal and king, sparing time for an angsty delicious love story with an enemy princess. This has serious sageuk bits AND the best shoujo tropes in the business, plus enough whump to keep anyone happy.
Gye Baek - Lee Seo Jin, another sageuk stalwart, stars as the title character in this tale of a Baekje commoner, war slave and general. This is grim but glorious.
Soldier/God of War - this is a traditional war-centric sageuk and grim as hell. Another slave to general tale.
King Geun Chu Go - this is on my watch list; it’s about a warrior king of Baekje. Haven’t seen it but heard good things.
Ja Myung Go - smart and unrelentingly tragic, featuring Jang Ryeo Won and Jung Kyung Ho as doomed lovers and Park Min Young in an evil role, this is great and has deeply flawed characters in the very definition of doomed by the narrative tale.
Arthdal Chronicles - this is obviously a fantasy but the tale of prophesied twins, magical priestess, wars and mysticism is clearly set in a pre-Joseon in terms of aesthetics world.
Alchemy of Souls - like Arthdal this is pure fantasy but also like Arthdal, a lot of its styling is pre-Joseon so on this list it goes.
Moon Lovers/Scarlet Heart Ryeo - ok I think if people have heard of only one drama on this very long list, it’s probably this one. Modern time traveling heroine ending up during the reign of Goryeo’s King Taejo, in the middle of his sons’ fight for the throne, having an epic but doomed romance with shoujo catnip tortured bad boy Lee Jun Ki.
Shine or Go Crazy - if you want a more historical take on Moon Lovers succession fight but still with plenty of hotness, angst and doomed romance, come right in. This baby stars Jang Hyuk, so you know it’s bound to be good. I actually started it and enjoyed it but got sidetracked. Need to get back to it. Fun fact: while Moon Lovers was hugely popular internationally, domestically Shine or Go Crazy (they aired around the same time), did much better.
The Legend/The First King’s Four Gods - for a long time this was my favorite kdrama of all time and is still probably in my top 10. Ignore the odd first episode, the rest is perfection. Expensive and wonderfully written, this was Bae Yong Joon’s last drama before he retired to rest on his pile of money (if you are young, you probably don’t remember what a big deal he was, bigger than all the Hallyu stars nowadays put together. He basically was singlehandedly supporting the kdrama industry at one point), but what a worthy way to go out. It’s an epic Goguryeo fantasy tale of a prophesied prince coming into his own, with such amazing characters and relationships and OTPs and battles and points about destiny versus free will. It is everything and I kinda want to rewatch now.
The Blade and The Petal/Sword and Flower - ostensibly a star-crossed Gogureyo love story, this really is more about politics. It’s a mixed bag. The visuals are insane but Uhm Tae Woong, while always solid in modern dramas, is out of place in a sageuk (in QSD Kim Nam Gil stole his thunder; there is nobody to do so here but that doesn’t help him.)
Queen Seon Duk - probably the most famous entrant into female power sageuks, this was a mad hit and centered on the titular character’s rise to power and fight for the same with her female nemesis Mishil. If you want love stories, angsty fighter Bidam propelled Kim Nam Gil to stardom as he stole the leading man mantle from Uhm Tae Woong.
Empress Ki - currently rewatching this. It’s set in the waning days of Goryeo but takes place mainly in Yuan. Still, the FL is Korean and a lot of the story revolves around one of her suitors’, a deposed Korean king, attempts to get his land back. As you can tell by my rabid posts, this is a great drama - politics, romance (I ship FL and the Yuan emperor like mad), murder, dysfunction and everything good.
Hwarang - it’s so brain dead it might as well be a brain-eating amoeba in drama form but it did give us both Park Hyung Sik and Park Seo Joon before they made it big in drama world. It’s terrible tho, stay away.
River where the Moon Rises - I have such a love/hate relationship with this drama - I loved the beginning, with our tormented assassin heroine slowly being warmed by the loyal rustic ML with his own trauma. And then Ji Soo’s bullying scandal happened and he was replaced by Na In Woo, aka the actor I like least from any country in all my close to two decades of watching dramas. I tried but I simply couldn’t and I am still mad. This said, if you don’t share my NIW allergy, it’s probably worth a watch.
The Great King’s Dream - if you liked QSD and can’t get enough of the period but want an even more traditional tale, you can do worse than this drama. I liked what I saw but this baby is 70 eps and lacks Bidam so I peaced out. Maybe I will get back to it sometime, but probably not.
Jeong Do Jeon - as you can tell by the title, centers on JDJ and the last days of Goryeo. Not really my bag (time period been done plenty in other dramas and I don’t have that much interest in JDJ) but supposed to be solid.
My Only Love Song - a short silly mess but still probably better than River (which tells the same story) because it doesn’t have NIW.
King Gwanggaeto the Great - 92 eps. I can’t!
The King Loves - delicious love triangle (that goes ALL ways), angst, prettiness, a side of bodyguard romance. What’s not to love in this Goryeo tale?
ETA: this post was so long that when I tried to tag every drama I mentioned, tumblr told me you hit the tag limit of 30 tags no more tags for you. Oh well, sorry dramas that ended up I tagged!
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briefbestiary · 1 year ago
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These deadly beasts are sometimes believed to live in pairs. Should the one hunting be killed it will release a whistling sound that rings out to its mate, beckoning them to come take vengeance.
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river phoenix
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alchemisland · 5 months ago
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Gaelic chieftains called to war
Praying away the sun
Wearing no plate
Neither glistening nor glimmering
Shriving before all-knowing Dagda
Lorefather seated at Síd in Broga.
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Highest casement descried
Ancient hyperbole starchasing
Charting firmaments blaze-gazed
Bending royal Boyne thereby parades
Men from lost continents
Atlantean fashion and knowledge
Heart center in our missing province
High kings crowned
Stone screaming sent up
Steel shivering with summoned fire
Shimmering in flaxen chieftain’s hand
Long simmering, long suffering.
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Long-haired dale men reared
On fox milk and stonesucking
Stoop from steeds kneeling by rockeries
Alive with mockeries of wild garlic
Healing herb stocks, to pluck Michaelmas Daisies.
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To war to war to war
Tomorrow no thing to adore
Whore who pries eye’s diamond from today
Daycent portion of muscle-contorting mushrooms,
Foreshortening flesh, cleaving distance
Dissolving density, messing with measure and propensity
Delinearizing agent ameliorating
Mycoidal alchemy highlighting destiny’s imminence
Enabling men to whip quickly, ripping from rigid armatures
Becoming creatures of pure havoc and harm, ten or one armed
Flexile chimerism born of root and charm, word and leaf.
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Throat-clappered bells
World’s truss replays tenfold
Sky backpeeling to announce victories fated
Naming today’s ever-changing favours.
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obscurevideogames · 1 year ago
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Legend of the River King (TOSE - Game Boy - 1997)
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marthalmary · 2 months ago
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@aymenbasil
@classydelusionbread
@ibrahim-family
@samerpal
@salwshani
Not sure if they are vetted
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whereishermes · 7 months ago
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The Birth of Rome: She-wolf to Senate
In the tenth century BCE, the Latini tribe, meaning ‘people of the plains,’ settled in a region expanding about 80 kilometers south from the lower Tiber to present-day Terracina. Legend has it that during the eighth century BCE, the land was ruled by King Numitor, with his capital in Alba Longa (the exact location of which is debated). Fraternal conflict, a recurring theme in Roman history, began…
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gccxon · 8 months ago
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speculativism · 10 months ago
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New writing! Isca Libra!
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