The Frog for Whom the Bell Tolls
Comments
chasil
gjm11
Donne was a poet (a very good poet, at that) but this particular passage is from a bit of devotional prose, not a poem, and I think it's misleading to format it as if it were poetry. Especially as it's quite unlike the style of Donne's poetry.
chasil
I pulled it from this source. Perhaps they are amenable to your insights?
graemep
Thea article says the title is a reference to Hemingway, but Hemingway's use of it was a reference to John Donne. The latter is far more familiar to me. Its no more relevant to the game though.
jaccola
Indeed, the same meditation that originated the phrase ‘no man is an island’.
Though, of course, the better version is “Ask not for whom the timer ticks. It ticks for thee”
barrowclift
What serendipity, I've just begun my own play through a few days ago after having learned of the game (as most of those in North America have) through the Link's Awakening cameo. It's thoroughly charming, makes me sad it never enjoyed a proper release outside of Japan.
If any readers here have an interest in retro gaming or (like me) loved Link's Awakening back in the day, I highly recommend giving it a look.
SethMLarson
Woah, that's awesome!! Enjoy :)
Oarch
From the title I'd assumed this was a mixed metaphor between boiling the frog and facing impending doom.
Maybe I need to stop AI doomscrolling for a bit.
nitefood
What amazes me is I thought the exact same thing, verbatim. And I hadn't thought about that boiling frog in years. I guess it scarred you and me both when we saw it.
Cpoll
"Boiling the frog" is a common idiom for making a negative change slowly enough that no-one reacts. It perhaps comes from the (incorrect) notion that if you add a frog to water and bring it to a boil very gradually, it won't notice.
bryanrasmussen
I just thought it was going to be a funny mashup of For Whom The Bell Tolls (Hemingway) with Michigan T. Frog (Looney Tunes)
CM30
Oh hey, it's the game I remember from the cameos in Link's Awakening and the Wario Land series. Honestly, I don't think anyone associates Mad Scienstein with this game anymore, given his appearances in Wario Land 3, 4 and Dr Mario 64.
jezzamon
For me personally this is one of my all time favourite games. It has a lot of charm and humour.
It looks like it's a zelda-like game, but because combat is deterministic rather than skill-based, it's really more of a puzzle game
ginko
It's a really fun little game with lots of character. I played the translation and picked up an original copy on my last trip to Japan.
ralfd
> despite a few twists at the end: the Princess does not escape her fate
Which is? What fate?
SethMLarson
You'll have to play to find out ;) haha!
'While game’s title is a reference to “For Whom the Bell Tolls” by Ernest Hemingway...'
This is actually much, much older than Hemingway.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Donne