Bonus 2: The Story of the Second Quest

Nakago:

And I’ve got something even more interesting today. This is the first dungeon map ever created for Zelda.

Iwata Asks
Tezuka:

Basically, we were going to make lots of dungeons using one square per room, and lay them out like a jigsaw puzzle.

Iwata:

In order to fit in as many dungeons as possible given the limited memory, you were making them like you were doing a puzzle.

Nakago:

Right. Tezuka-san said, “I did it!” and brought this to me. I created the data exactly in line with it, but then Tezuka-san made a mistake and only used half of the data. I said, “Tezuka-san, there’s only half here. Where did the other half go?” and he was like, “What?! Oops, I messed up…” But Miyamoto-san said it was fine just like that.

Tezuka:

Heh heh heh. (laughs)

Nakago:

So, using the half of the memory that was left over, we decided to create the Second Quest20. 20Second Quest: A second adventure of greater difficulty prepared for players who had cleared the original quest in The Legend of Zelda. When you play this quest, Link on the select screen changes so he’s holding a sword.

Iwata:

Huh? Just wait a second. If Tezuka-san hadn’t messed up, there’d have been no Second Quest?

Nakago:

Yes, that’s right.

Iwata Asks
Iwata:

Whaaat?! (laughs)

Everyone:

(laughs)

Tezuka:

Is it alright to reveal this? (laughs)

Nakago:

But it’s true! (laughs) And this is the original map for the Second Quest.

Iwata:

So this is the Second Quest resulting from Tezuka-san’s mistake…

Tezuka:

(as if suddenly remembering) Oh, that’s right…

Iwata:

Was it Miyamoto-san who suggested turning this into a second quest?

Tezuka:

I imagine so.

Nakago:

Yeah, it was.

Tezuka:

He didn’t tell us to just remake the game.

Nakago:

He said this was just right.

Aonuma:

Just right?

Nakago:

He played it, and it felt just right.

Iwata:

Whew! Now that’s what you call turning a tight spot into an opportunity! (laughs)

Nakago:

There’s actually something I forgot to mention last time in “Iwata Asks.”

Iwata:

Are you going to bring out another ancient document? (laughs)

Nakago:

Yes! It’s for Super Mario, but…

Iwata:

Okay, from now on this is “Iwata Forgot to Ask: New Super Mario Bros. Wii.” (laughs)

Nakago:

When I first heard the basic concept for Super Mario, there were five worlds.

Iwata:

There are eight now, but at first there were only five?

Nakago:

Miyamoto-san wrote them down on a sheet of A4 paper, and said, “This is what I have in mind.” He’d written down the outlines of five worlds. I said, “All right,” and then he said, “Actually there’s something else I’d like to talk to you about...” There was actually another sheet there. He opened it up, and the other three worlds appeared.

Iwata:

In other words, he’d used an A3 sheet of paper.

Nakago:

That’s right. A sheet of A3 paper folded in half. He showed me the five worlds on one side, got me to agree, and then…

Iwata:

He revealed there were a few more.

Aonuma:

What a way to get your consent! (laughs)

Nakago:

Here’s that paper. It says “Underwater 2 + a”. That means “Underwater 2,” which was planned for 3-2, plus a little more. In other words, the idea was to import the underwater stage of World 3-2 into World 7-2 without changing the geographical forms, but increasing the number of enemies. In the end, there was no “Underwater 2,” and 7-2 was “Underwater 1 (2-2) + a.”

Iwata Asks
Iwata:

So even though the worlds increased, you used the same material, so it was no big problem.

Tezuka:

He wasn’t foisting an unreasonable task onto us. He was suggesting something possible.

Nakago:

All the while plotting how to get me to agree. (laughs) I forgot to mention it before, so I thought I absolutely must this time.

Iwata:

I’m surprised Super Mario was so fully laid out from the beginning.

Tezuka:

The other day, Miyamoto-san also saw this for the first time in a long while.

Iwata:

What was his reaction?

Tezuka:

He was floored.

Everyone:

(laughs)

Nakago:

When I told him about his five-worlds ploy, he said, “Yeah, I did that on purpose.”

Tezuka:

And he even said, “I pulled the same stunts back then.”

Nakago:

He hasn’t changed in 25 years!

Aonuma:

With this, and the map for Zelda we just saw, you were making games after establishing a view of the whole picture at the start. Learning that alone makes me happy I came today.

Nakago:

It makes a big difference whether you have a vision of the complete picture or not.

Aonuma:

Right as rain! Oh, Miyamoto-san always says that.

Tezuka:

I think you mean “clear as day.”

Aonuma:

You’re right. That was it. Miyamoto-san likes things to be clear as day. And he absolutely loves the situation where he can say, “I see.” He orders us to persuade him to be able to say, “I see.”

Iwata Asks
Iwata:

He wants to hear it from the others, and he wants to say it himself.

Tezuka:

Yeah. I think recently he’s realised that himself. That he wants to be put into a situation where he can say it.

Aonuma:

He likes to say “I see.”

Iwata:

He lives for it.

Nakago:

I see...

Everyone:

(laughs)

Iwata:

It’s fate that someone like that made Zelda.

Aonuma:

I think so, too.

Iwata:

I mean, when you’re playing Zelda there are places where you want to say “I see.”

Aonuma:

I completely agree. I see.

Everyone:

(laughs)