Game Boy: Difference between revisions

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The Game Boy was the first (excluding the ''Game and Watch'' line) battery-powered handheld game console sold by [[Nintendo]], and was the third system that a portable Legend of Zelda game was released for, behind the {{GW}} and {{G&WZ}}. It was one of the world's best-selling game system lines, selling over 118 million units worldwide to date since the release of the original Game Boy<ref>[http://www.nintendo.com/corp/report/06AnnualReport.pdf#page=14 Annual Report 2006 (PDF File)]</ref>, and has spawned many successful spin-offs, including the Game Boy Pocket.
The '''Game Boy''' was the first (excluding the ''Game and Watch'' line) battery-powered handheld game console sold by [[Nintendo]], and was the third system that a portable Zelda game was released for, behind the {{GW}} and {{G&WZ}}. It was one of the world's best-selling game system lines, selling over 118 million units worldwide to date since the release of the original Game Boy<ref>[http://www.nintendo.com/corp/report/06AnnualReport.pdf#page=14 Annual Report 2006 (PDF File)]</ref>, and has spawned many successful spin-offs, including the Game Boy Pocket.


==''The Legend of Zelda'' Games==
==''The Legend of Zelda'' Games==

Revision as of 08:55, 21 April 2015

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This article is a short summary of Game Boy.
NintendoWiki features a more in-depth article.

Template:System

The Game Boy was the first (excluding the Game and Watch line) battery-powered handheld game console sold by Nintendo, and was the third system that a portable Zelda game was released for, behind the Template:GW and Template:G&WZ. It was one of the world's best-selling game system lines, selling over 118 million units worldwide to date since the release of the original Game Boy[1], and has spawned many successful spin-offs, including the Game Boy Pocket.

The Legend of Zelda Games

The original Game Boy technically had one Zelda release: Link's Awakening. The first Game Boy Color Zelda title, Link's Awakening DX, could actually be played in black-and-white as a Game Boy game. However, a special dungeon, the Color Dungeon, could only be played on a Game Boy Color, as it was locked via a color-based puzzle at the entrance.

References