
A girl will take the medicine and give you a saw. Give the mushroom to the potion Lady inside the fenced in area. Take Cojiro to the Lost Woods where you sell the mask and show the chicken to the guy. Take the cucco back to the girl to get the blue chicken Cojiro. Be aware though, that you’ll be warped back to the starting point of the game.First you must get the pocket cucco from the girl in Kakiriko Village and then awake Talon in the house near the Tower. Save anywhere by pressing up and A on the start menu. Press A as a Fairy to instantly return to your normal form Enemy rebalancing, no more huge HP pools Loads of gameplay tweaks (building on Zelda II Redux) 11 new towns to visit (vs 8 in vanilla Zelda II) 9 new temples to explore (vs 7 in vanilla Zelda II) So, difficulty is lower than the original Zelda II, there are no cheap deaths and grinding isn’t necessary. Gameplay has been altered to make this, above all, a fun gaming experience. The focus of Amida’s Curse lies in exploration above combat. The game has been rebuilt from the ground up, with a new world, new graphics and an original soundtrack by bentglasstube.


Zelda II – Amida’s Curse is a brand new Zelda II adventure. Can Link unravel the secrets of Amida and return to his own world? Amida has a deep emotional link to our hero. Little does he know, that he’s on a brand new adventure that will take him to places he couldn’t have imagined.

Curious, he starts exploring the magical world of Amida. One day, Link finds a portal to a strange land. As well as boasting improved visuals, Amida's Curse also showcases a new soundtrack composed by Bentglasstube. In Amida's Curse, exploration is much more important than combat, and there's an entirely new world to explore with a host of towns and temples. Zelda II - Amida's Curse is the result of 18 months of effort, and aims to "focus on the fun aspects of Zelda II and leave out the frustrating design choices". If you're one of those people who, despite trying hard, has never really bonded with Link's second NES quest, then you might be interested to learn that indie developer Ok Impala! has created an unofficial ROM hack that alters the game to make it more enjoyable. There's a lot of (sometimes tedious) side-scrolling combat and the difficulty level has come under particular criticism over the decades. Zelda II: The Adventure of Link is beloved by many – so much so that it's often mentioned whenever 'Zelda remakes' are discussed – but only the most diehard fan would try to argue that it doesn't have its fair share of problems.
