Densetsu No Stafy English Patch

Zelda No Densetsu

I certainly do not dismiss the GBA and nor do many others (poke around the support sections and see how many people seek GBA support for things), if I write something about DS hacking I will include GBA stuff as does not make sense to exclude it and it is gaining some traction among ROM hackers. The DS however had several hundred projects 'started' and wading through them to figure out what was what got tedious even if you followed things closely so we got that thread- that is what I was heading towards.

I do follow GBA translations but have not seen anything and unlike say megaman, fire emblem or pokemon the franchise does not descend into its own fanbase/circles and seldom bother to reach outside it so I doubt that has happened here. Equally people can readily play the titles as they are good basic/obvious platform games, and well Again I would love to see translations (though I have way too many projects to go in for these right now) and I could probably get behind a statement of they are the main thing, ignoring them being otherwise totally playable, in need of a translation on the GBA.

There are no official English. Algonquin College Program Availability. To promote Densetsu no Stafy 4. The Legendary Starfy. Of Densetsu no Stafy 4, as well as The Legendary Starfy. A subreddit dedicated to the Legendary Starfy/Densetsu no Stafy. Starfy fan translations might see light of. We can use the actual carts to play English.

Densetsu no Starfy R (Japanese: 伝説のスタフィーR) abbreviated from Densetsu no Starfy Returns (Japanese: デンセツノスタフィーリターンズ) is a. A download to the latest IPS patch can be found at the bottom of the page, and is compatible for a 'clean' Densetsu no Stafy ROM. No Stafy and Densetsu no.

I certainly do not dismiss the GBA and nor do many others (poke around the support sections and see how many people seek GBA support for things), if I write something about DS hacking I will include GBA stuff as does not make sense to exclude it and it is gaining some traction among ROM hackers. The DS however had several hundred projects 'started' and wading through them to figure out what was what got tedious even if you followed things closely so we got that thread- that is what I was heading towards. I do follow GBA translations but have not seen anything and unlike say megaman, fire emblem or pokemon the franchise does not descend into its own fanbase/circles and seldom bother to reach outside it so I doubt that has happened here. Equally people can readily play the titles as they are good basic/obvious platform games, and well Again I would love to see translations (though I have way to many projects to go in for these right now) and I could probably get behind a statement of they are the main thing, ignoring them being otherwise totally playable, in need of a translation on the GBA. No argument that Starfy definitely has a fanbase- hell it is a favourite among many of the staff around here ( and it was my second game of the week/ book game club choice ).

The Legendary Starfy series features of a mix of platforming and marine action, where players move Starfy in both underwater sections and across the land with assistance from friends, such as Starfy's best friend Moe (known in Japanese versions as Kyorosuke ( キョロスケ) the clam). Densetsu no Stafy 3 introduced Starfy's younger sister Starly (known in Japanese versions as スタピー and officially romanized as Stapy), who became a second playable character in Densetsu no Stafy 3 and later titles in the series. Hitoshi Yamagami; Nintendo producer for games in The Legendary Starfy series, and Densetsu no Stafy's original director explained in between Nintendo Life and members of TOSE, Nintendo that TOSE had always wanted to bring The Legendary Starfy series outside of Japan, but they were unsure how the series would be accepted and that Nintendo had previously considered the series to be geared too much towards a Japanese audience for a release outside of Japan. In particular, the team were unsure about how the character 'Moe' would be accepted, and the games in The Legendary Starfy series have featured a number of references to Japanese culture.