Take away my gamer badge if you want, but Breath of the Wild didn't feel like a Zelda game to me, it felt like a Xenoblade game.
It's not a bad game at all, of course, I just don't like it as much as say, Ocarina of Time or Windwaker.
I wasn't a fan of the lack of real dungeons, the small pool of enemies and the even smaller pool of bosses (Bosses are usually my favorite part of Zelda). It all got very same-y fast.
I usually don't like to complain about graphics, but I really wasn't a fan of Breath of the Wilds art style. There was very little texture or definition to anything, which made the characters faces look like a blob of colours sometimes. I usually love cell shading too. In my opinion, Windwaker did it much better. It probably helps that Windwakers character designs complimented the style.
It also sucks that Ganon was reduced to a generic evil purple cloud without any character other then "ROAR!". He was an interesting, intelligent and intimidating character in Windwaker (I know I keep using Windwaker as an example shut up).
I kinda miss when Zelda games had that Dungeons and Dragons kind of feel to its world, with uncanny things like redeads, wallmasters and deadhands living deep in dungeons that felt like no one had set foot in them in hundreds of years.
I hope the new Breath of the Wild is at least going to have some more variety than the first one.
EDIT: Oh, and the music. The Legend of Zelda series has some of the most memorable music of all time. However, BotW went for minimalist piano tinkling with no real memorable tracks. I struggle to think of more then one. Not saying the music was bad, but again, it just wasn't Zelda. Zelda music isn't supposed to be forgettable background piano ambiance.
which ones?
Four swords, phantom hourglass... zelda 2 lmao
As with any opinion about media I'm sure there are people who will act like I personally kicked their puppy for saying those games are bad though
Zelda 2's an interesting one since it was a dead end for design within the series, but did have some influence on other devs - Nihon Falcom's Dragon Slayer games ultimately took after it, as did Taito Corp.'s Cadash.
The Dragon Slayer series was a mainstay of Japanese home computers and didn't get much of a international run, but Dragon Slayer 2: Xanadu did get a spinoff known as Faxanadu that saw international release. Likewise, Sierra On-Line localized and ported Dragon Slayer 5: Sorcerian for english audiences using MS-DOS-based PCs.
Wand of Gamelon :garf-troll: