I've been playing Zelda since age 6. My first was A Link to the Past, one of the toughest as well as one that is packed with dialogue.creationis apostate said:Even though every single one that isn't on the nes requires ALOT of reading.Shakomaru said:Legand of Zelda: The Minish Cap. Or really any zelda game.no, they seriously aren't besides the original. They are very twisted, specific and require a fair bit of reading.ZeroMachine said:Zelda games are always a great choice.
She's dyslexic though you were not.ZeroMachine said:I've been playing Zelda since age 6. My first was A Link to the Past, one of the toughest as well as one that is packed with dialogue.creationis apostate said:Even though every single one that isn't on the nes requires ALOT of reading.Shakomaru said:Legand of Zelda: The Minish Cap. Or really any zelda game.no, they seriously aren't besides the original. They are very twisted, specific and require a fair bit of reading.ZeroMachine said:Zelda games are always a great choice.
Kids can read. In fact, one of the reasons I learned to read so fast was because I played games that required a lot of reading.
Zelda is perfect. It teaches puzzle solving, complex thought, and it tells a grand story of good vs evil. If "it requires reading" is the best argument you have against it, then you don't have a lot of ground to stand on.
Get her Kirby super star ultra for the DS it's the best thing you could get requires no reading and slowly upscales in difficulty. you basically need to learn 3 buttons and the directional pad.Speaking of which I'm going to play that again.delanofilms said:TL;DR Want to teach my 8 year old sister video gaming, but she can't read well. Suggestions?
I find myself in a conundrum. My little sister is 8 and I wanted to introduce her to gaming. She watches me play video games very often and enjoys doing so and I would love to teach her how to start gaming, but there's a problem. It's not the state of the industry, exclusively preaching to the choir instead of truly appealing to children as they used to, though that plays part of the problem. No, the big problem is that she can't read. Oh sure, she can-with some direction-sound out words and grasp the meaning of a sentence, but she's dyslexic and can't read fluently. This is a problem. I personally began gaming for myself with Pokemon Blue which I thought I might be able to use to help her get a general idea of controls and a non-action combat system so there would be no reliance on lightning gamer-reflexes, but the text. It dominates everything. If you can't glance at a word on screen and immediately know what it means it quickly becomes overwhelming. Remember, she's only 8 and hasn't played video games before so she doesn't have that button-brain link that surpasses the fingers yet, so leaping into most action-based systems is a no. My question to you all is this: What games could I use to break her into the field? Something that doesn't immediately cry foul at every slip-up and with a minimal reliance on reading such that I can easily tell her what she needs to do in order to build those gamer instincts. Run to the right, talk to everyone, how to go about exploring a standard JRPG town will come with her ability to read more fluently but getting past that "pressing the button labeled 'A'" cure to just "pressing 'A'" is what I would think the first step should be. Any suggestions?
Ah, shit, I missed that. Then Kirby. Definitely Kirby.GrimHeaper said:She's dyslexic though you were not.ZeroMachine said:I've been playing Zelda since age 6. My first was A Link to the Past, one of the toughest as well as one that is packed with dialogue.creationis apostate said:Even though every single one that isn't on the nes requires ALOT of reading.Shakomaru said:Legand of Zelda: The Minish Cap. Or really any zelda game.no, they seriously aren't besides the original. They are very twisted, specific and require a fair bit of reading.ZeroMachine said:Zelda games are always a great choice.
Kids can read. In fact, one of the reasons I learned to read so fast was because I played games that required a lot of reading.
Zelda is perfect. It teaches puzzle solving, complex thought, and it tells a grand story of good vs evil. If "it requires reading" is the best argument you have against it, then you don't have a lot of ground to stand on.
TGet her Kirby super star ultra for the DS it's the best thing you could get requires no reading and slowly upscales in difficulty. you basically need to learn 3 buttons and the directional pad.Speaking of which I'm going to play that again.delanofilms said:TL;DR Want to teach my 8 year old sister video gaming, but she can't read well. Suggestions?
I find myself in a conundrum. My little sister is 8 and I wanted to introduce her to gaming. She watches me play video games very often and enjoys doing so and I would love to teach her how to start gaming, but there's a problem. It's not the state of the industry, exclusively preaching to the choir instead of truly appealing to children as they used to, though that plays part of the problem. No, the big problem is that she can't read. Oh sure, she can-with some direction-sound out words and grasp the meaning of a sentence, but she's dyslexic and can't read fluently. This is a problem. I personally began gaming for myself with Pokemon Blue which I thought I might be able to use to help her get a general idea of controls and a non-action combat system so there would be no reliance on lightning gamer-reflexes, but the text. It dominates everything. If you can't glance at a word on screen and immediately know what it means it quickly becomes overwhelming. Remember, she's only 8 and hasn't played video games before so she doesn't have that button-brain link that surpasses the fingers yet, so leaping into most action-based systems is a no. My question to you all is this: What games could I use to break her into the field? Something that doesn't immediately cry foul at every slip-up and with a minimal reliance on reading such that I can easily tell her what she needs to do in order to build those gamer instincts. Run to the right, talk to everyone, how to go about exploring a standard JRPG town will come with her ability to read more fluently but getting past that "pressing the button labeled 'A'" cure to just "pressing 'A'" is what I would think the first step should be. Any suggestions?
Never stated an opinion as fact. Ever.creationis apostate said:Ignoring the blatant opinion stated as fact which shows your level of intelligence, kids can read, but as said in the OP she has dyslexia. Google it. See what it means. I have nothing against Zelda but it requires more than a little ability when it comes to playing games.ZeroMachine said:I've been playing Zelda since age 6. My first was A Link to the Past, one of the toughest as well as one that is packed with dialogue.creationis apostate said:Even though every single one that isn't on the nes requires ALOT of reading.Shakomaru said:Legand of Zelda: The Minish Cap. Or really any zelda game.no, they seriously aren't besides the original. They are very twisted, specific and require a fair bit of reading.ZeroMachine said:Zelda games are always a great choice.
Kids can read. In fact, one of the reasons I learned to read so fast was because I played games that required a lot of reading.
Zelda is perfect. It teaches puzzle solving, complex thought, and it tells a grand story of good vs evil. If "it requires reading" is the best argument you have against it, then you don't have a lot of ground to stand on.
That's the sort of thing that doesn't need to have the words "in my opinion" in front of it. Don't argue such silly semantics.creationis apostate said:ZeroMachine said:Never stated an opinion as fact. Ever.creationis apostate said:Ignoring the blatant opinion stated as fact which shows your level of intelligence, kids can read, but as said in the OP she has dyslexia. Google it. See what it means. I have nothing against Zelda but it requires more than a little ability when it comes to playing games.ZeroMachine said:I've been playing Zelda since age 6. My first was A Link to the Past, one of the toughest as well as one that is packed with dialogue.creationis apostate said:Even though every single one that isn't on the nes requires ALOT of reading.Shakomaru said:Legand of Zelda: The Minish Cap. Or really any zelda game.no, they seriously aren't besides the original. They are very twisted, specific and require a fair bit of reading.ZeroMachine said:Zelda games are always a great choice.
Kids can read. In fact, one of the reasons I learned to read so fast was because I played games that required a lot of reading.
Zelda is perfect. It teaches puzzle solving, complex thought, and it tells a grand story of good vs evil. If "it requires reading" is the best argument you have against it, then you don't have a lot of ground to stand on.
And also, see my other post. I missed that part.yes you did. And thank you.Zelda is perfect.