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Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap, The

Generally favorable reviews
Based on 56 critic reviews
How did we calculate this?
Based on 48 votes
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Game Info
Publisher: Nintendo
Developer: Flagship
Genre(s): Action, Adventure
Players: 4
ESRB Rating: E (Everyone)
Release Date: January 10, 2005
Summary
As he searches an unfamiliar land for fragmented relics called Kinstones, Link will have to take a closer look at the ground beneath his feet. When he discovers a magical hat called The Minish Cap, he gains the power to shrink down to the size of the Minish people, who are in grave danger. As he travels back and forth between their world and his, he'll solve puzzles, fight through dungeons and slowly uncover the evil behind their plight and vanquish it. [Nintendo]
Also On Metacritic
GAMES: Legend Of Zelda: A Link to the Past
Cheat Codes & Hints: Cheat Code Central GameSpot Guide
Also On The Web: Game Power Aus Preview GameSpot Preview GameSpy Preview IGN Playtest Nintendo Insider Preview Official Website Planet GameCube Preview
What The Critics Said
All critic scores are converted to a 100-point scale. If a critic does not indicate a score, we assign a score based on the general impression given by the text of the review. Learn more...
GBA Central
The game may be short by the franchise's standards, but every minute of it is breathtaking.
Read Full Review >GameSpy
What better way to make good use of your new DS system (with its lacking library) than by popping this game in? It looks absolutely stunning on the DS's screen.
Read Full Review >Yahoo! Games
Arguably the best GBA game ever released. It's addictive, ingenious, and makes no mistakes.
Read Full Review >Detroit Free Press
All of the quests, big and small, add up to an quest that belies the tiny cartridge's size. This "Zelda" game packs in the fun.
Read Full Review >G4 TV
The Minish Cap does virtually nothing wrong. It’s an excellent and faithful Zelda game, and one of the best Game Boy Advance games to date.
Read Full Review >Gaming Age
The music in The Minish Cap is simply wonderful. Around 70 percent of the music is composed of previous Zelda music, but redone to fit the new game.
Read Full Review >Four Fat Chicks
The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap is pretty amazing. I have an Xbox 360 and I just got a shiny new PC. I'm on the cutting edge of technology. But when I think of all the games I've played over the past six months, The Minish Cap—a Gameboy Advance game—rises right to the top of my list. It's just that good.
Read Full Review >GameCube Advanced
The overworld map -- while bearing minor resemblance to the layout of previous games -- is much larger than you’d think and the dungeons are as big, fiendish and ingenious as ever with a perfect learning curve.
Read Full Review >GameBiz
The shrinking adds a new breath of air to the gameplay, and new characters seem to fit into the Hyrule world almost like they have always been there, especially the Picori.
Read Full Review >Nintendo Power
A million small details add up to a wonderfully real world, and Link's hat bud Ezlo is one of the best characters in ages, thanks to some very funny writing. [March 2005, p.106]
RPG Fan
Two dimensional adventuring in the land of Hyrule has truly never been better. TMC takes all of the elements that I know and love about my Zelda games, improves on and adds more to them, then moves them to a portable medium and provides a true must-buy title for the GBA.
Read Full Review >Game Informer
Simultaneously embraces links to the past while offering numerous innovations that keep gameplay fresh, exciting, and a true joy to play. [Feb 2005, p.124]
Computer and Video Games
Minish Cap is a miracle. It constantly thrills and surprises you and the difficulty is perfectly judged. There's an absolute mountain of bonuses to discover thanks to the Kinstone system and you can get lost for hours just doing that. There certainly hasn't been a better GBA game released all year.
Read Full Review >My Gamer
The graphics, especially when zoomed in, are breath taking and the new remixed classic Zelda tunes fit the game perfectly. Unfortunately, the quest seems to end a little short.
Read Full Review >Just RPG
The game far surpassed my expectations. Even if you’re not a huge Zelda fan, TMC is easy to pick up and has a way of enthralling you right from the get-go.
Read Full Review >Pelit (Finland)
Link returns once again, this time equipped with a nosy cap on his head. The game is a bit on the short and easy side, but in every other respect it is an excellent action-adventure. [Jan. 05]
Da Gameboyz
With great graphics, good sound and a relatively long quest, players will definitely feel as though they have been rewarded once again for purchasing a Nintendo published game.
Read Full Review >WHAM! Gaming
Top notch for the handheld market. The audio sports a lot of remixing of previous Zelda tunes, combined with all the new original scoring. It's standard Zelda fair -- which is pretty much the equivalent of saying it's great stuff.
Read Full Review >BonusStage
It’s sad that the game isn’t longer or at least a bit more challenging, but regardless of those nagging sore spots The Minish Cap is a superb original installment that would be as well worth the money had it been released on the GameCube as it is on the GBA.
Read Full Review >GameSpot
The game easily lives up to its predecessors, with enough questing and variety to keep you entertained for the duration of its storyline and beyond.
Read Full Review >Nintendophiles
With a wonderful mix of Four Swords style gameplay and a Wind Waker feel, the game takes a little something from everything and still manages to improve on it.
Read Full Review >Cinescape
Fans of the series and of great action-RPGs in general should quickly don The Minish Cap. While it’s not the longest or most challenging Zelda ever, it’s more than worth a purchase.
Read Full Review >AceGamez
Nintendo has once again shown us why The Legend of Zelda is one of the greatest gaming legends of all time.
Read Full Review >GMR Magazine
Outside of a slightly boring midgame stretch in which you're tracking down overdue library books (no, really) and an overly tough final boss, this is a flawless portable adventure. [Feb 2005, p.91]
Inside Gamer Online
Although the game is a bit short with six main dungeons and should take only about 30 hours to beat the first time, the gameplay additions and unique style definitely makes up for it.
Read Full Review >GamerFeed
Compared to past 2D Zelda titles, Minish Cap is bursting with personality and detail. Little touches, such as the expression on Link's face and accompanying scream as he rides a mine cart, his disheveled hair, the smart-talking Ezlo, the creative new gadgets and detailed environments help to give the game a certain charm.
Read Full Review >Gaming Target
For a game about shrinking, it grows on you quickly.
Deeko
For all of the items in Minish Cap's "Pro" column, there is but one item in the "Con" column: it's just too darn easy. The dungeons, though fantastically designed, are fairly small and light on monsters.
Read Full Review >1UP
Simultaneously a beautifully holistic encapsulation of the entire history of Zelda and a worthy new chapter to the series in its own right, Minish Cap is quite simply one of the most engrossing portable games ever made -- and it ranks pretty high among Zelda titles, too.
Read Full Review >IGN
It's a Zelda adventure done right, and fits like a glove within the long line of successful titles in the series across all of Nintendo's gaming platforms.
Read Full Review >Electronic Gaming Monthly
With superb dungeons, exciting combat, and one of the coolest gameplay gimmicks ever (shrinking down to Minish size), this is definitely one Zelda you don't want to miss. [Feb 2005, p.116]
games(TM)
In creating the Minish Cap, Capcom has managed to bring back feelings we haven't experienced since the first time we went adventuring with Link; considering those are the feelings that made us love Zelda in the first place, that can only be a good thing.
Read Full Review >Siliconera
Everything that you would expect and want in a Zelda title... It really sucks you into the game's world. [JPN Import]
Read Full Review >Eurogamer
If you can accept that it won't last you as long as you might like, then your quest is clear: leave no stone unturned in your search for this game, and then leave none of its stones unturned either.
Read Full Review >Weekly Famitsu
9 / 8 / 9 / 10 - 36 platinum [Oct 2004]
NTSC-uk
Thankfully, longevity hasn’t been sacrificed for the sake of beauty: the main quest alone will take the average gamer a minimum of fifteen hours and that’s without spending a single moment delving into the fabulous subquests, which will double, even triple that time...A stunning and wondrous game.
Read Full Review >GameZone
The music does a great job of setting the atmosphere of the different dungeons and areas in the game. The only minor issue was a slight distortion on some of the voice samples in the game, such as Link’s yell.
Read Full Review >Pocket Games
Lots of fresh and tasty new gameplay added to the Zelda mix. [Spring 2005, p.73]
Electric Playground
A beautifully designed, quirky game. If you like Zelda, you'll love it. If adventure games and bus rides are your thing, pick it up.
Read Full Review >Sydney Morning Herald
Engaging sub-quests extend the game's lifespan and chatting to the beguiling locals while humming the tunes is a joy.
Read Full Review >GameShark
For a real visual treat, pop it into a Nintendo DS and enjoy the game with true backlighting.
Read Full Review >Play Magazine
Simply incredible. [March 2005, p.66]
Warcry
Minish Cap is a Zelda game that could have been right on par with Link to the Past if only it had more of the staple content for the series, such as dungeon puzzle solving and less senseless collecting.
Read Full Review >The New York Times
Some puzzles struck me as unfair, and if you die the game often revives you at a place where you will have to replay too large a chunk. The worst part is a final big battle that seems 10 times more difficult than anything preceding it.
Read Full Review >Gamestyle
Aside from an overfamiliarity that threatens to sterilise the series, our only real criticism is the lack of difficulty for much of the game. It is certainly long enough, with so much to see and do, but it doesn't require near as much skill as we'd have liked - only perseverance.
Read Full Review >Edge Magazine
It would be easy to take The Minish Cap for granted, left as it is with little to do but shuffle and tinker with its immaculate heritage. That, however, would be a grave mistake... Maybe you can't go wrong with the Zelda template, but they haven't always gone this right. [Christmas 2004, p.91]
NintendoWorldReport
Like trying out a broken roller-coaster ride - one that is highly enjoyable while it lasts, but is over too quickly and gets stuck often, so the excitement quickly gets replaced by frustration. However, when it does move, it gives you a thrilling, almost magical, experience that makes you want to remain seated all the way through to the end.
Read Full Review >GamePro
Going backwards instead of forwards in the timeline was a masterstroke - it's totally satisfying for fans and does nothing but stoke the fires for the forward-looking, new GameCube tale coming in 2005.
Read Full Review >Adrenaline Vault
While not the best RPG to hit the GBA, and not the best Zelda game in the series, it remains a strong game on both fronts in my mind.
Read Full Review >Nintendojo
The postman often getting in my way in running around Hyrule Town was a minor annoyance.
Read Full Review >Next Level Gaming
It’s cute, but only a decent filler game at best. I managed to beat it in less than a week, and I didn’t even try that hard.
Read Full Review >GameCritics
For me, The Minish Cap has marked a point at which I seem to have become blasé to the brilliance of the series, at least in terms of its largely unchanging design foundations.
Read Full Review >Cheat Code Central
What I am beginning to find most troubling is the developers penchant for including items and characters from previous games to the point of ad nauseum already. Anyone who has played a Link game will be totally familiar with the numerous items in the game and that's ruined some of the surprise and enjoyment for me.
What Our Users Said
The average user rating for this game is 9.3 (out of 10) based on 48 User Votes
Note: User votes are NOT included in the Metascore calculation.
Game Z. gave it a10:
It was a very fun and addicting game.
John Q. gave it a10:
Great graphics, great game, more difficult puzzles. The only thing about this game is that if you don't have a walkthrough there are a few puzzles that statistically impossible to figure out with trial and error without spending several hours --- esp, the blue / red floor tiles. To me, there is no point of having a puzzle based on trial and error rather than clever thinking. I finished a Link to the Past, then this one. Looking forward to a new release. Tried Final Fantasy, just didn't like it -- the great thing about Zelda titles is that they have a great story line, puzzles, and when you fight (unline FF) it is live action. I tried a few other games -- but again, esp on the game boy micro, Zelda delivers esp in the area of keeping the scenes / characters large enough for comfortable play. Overall, this is a great game!
Danny L. gave it a10:
I read some comments and I don't really believe people beat this game 100% in under 3 or 4 hours. The people who say did that probably used walkthroughs. I, myself took a decent amount of time playing this game. It was difficult to find and fuse kinstones with everyone and it was time-consuming to find the heart pieces. The Final Boss took some thought to know how to beat. This is a great Legend of Zelda Game and it is worthy to be called one. Although it is something that can be accomplished by oneself, it is hard to believe people beat this game 100% under 3 hours. This game could be beaten 100% w/o any help. (Unlike Majora's Mask, almost impossible to beat the whole game 100%)
Robby S. gave it a10:
Zelda legend of the Minish Cap is fun and iI'm pretty sad that there not going to make any more for hand helds but the final boss is pretty hard to beat im still trying to beat him. Vattie god like form is really powerful.
I. L. gave it a10:
Pretty much the best 2d Zelda since A Link to the Past. If it was longer it would be the better than LTTP.
Nathaniel L. gave it a10:
This is most certainly the best GBA Zelda game todate it has great visuals and sound but there is a huge gaping loss of difficulty (as in 3 hours 100% all everything) and it gets frustrating. Thats all coming from the mind of an 11 year old kid. but i did find getting all the kinstone fusions was alot of fun. I started playing this with an emulator but I purchased it because useind a keyboard was awkward.
Maddie S. gave it a10:
This is one of my favourite games ever!!!!!!! There is literally only one thing wrong with this game and that is thatI have about 2 kinstones left to find and I CAN'T FIND THEM!!!
