

The team behind this title threw everything they had at giving fans a fresh, new adventure in the version of Hyrule that changed everything.


Our next entry is also a work of Kaze Emanuar, this time in collaboration with CDi-Fails and /Zel/. Where you find these materials is your business but our old pal Google should help point the way. As always, you'll need a patching tool, the patches themselves, and some ROMs. They vary in length but certainly not in quality. To that end, we've got three new titles that would give anyone a reason to dust off the system's super weird three-prong controller - or, you know, an emulator. Once you get the game running, it's just you and this work of art that someone managed to spin out of limited hardware and good old-fashioned ingenuity. There are no brain-hijacking casino gimmicks. The appeal of retro gaming - especially these unique, new experiences - is that unlike with Fortnite or Destiny 2, there are no distractions here. But thanks to new tools and platforms like Patreon, on which fans can financially support these creators, we're finally entering the golden age of hacks for 1996's little 3D beast. The N64 had been long thought to be too complicated to emulate or develop games for to be worth the time and effort for a passion project that won't make its creators much profit. These are fan games (but don't let that turn you away, please!). Now obviously these aren't official releases, as Nintendo is busy toiling away on The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild 2 and Metroid Prime 4 for the Switch. Yes, there are new, spectacular, games for the Nintendo 64 (which have nothing to do with the Gigaleak).
NINTENDO 64 BANJO KAZOOIE ROM HACK SERIES
While the rest of the world is losing their minds over the bleeding edge graphics being promised by Sony's PlayStation 5 and Microsoft's Xbox Series X, I have spent my week playing new Nintendo 64 titles.
