The original LOZ just pushes my "this isn't as good as everyone says".
I get bored by the 3rd dungeon and just walk around aimlessly until I turn it off.
It helped to be eight years old at the time.
There was just nothing else on consoles quite like it.
I'll go further than that and say "there was nothing else on any platform quite like it". But I think you are both right: it's one of those games that you kinda had to be in just exactly the right age/historical moment to get why it was such a big deal. (Sort of like FF7 in that respect.) I recall there was one summer that I evenly divided between playing NES and wandering around the woods in my hometown and for me whenever I see/play tLoZ nowadays I feel like I'm back in those woods; similarly, the few times I've been back to my old town even though almost everything else has changed those woods still feel like Hyrule to me. It helped that I grew up in New Mexico where we have lots of dry tan dust and small, round bushes. ^_-
Gameplay may not be all that hot these days, but I still do appreciate the icon-like art style: it's not so much showing you a picture of one particular tree as it is suggesting that there is
some tree in this place, inviting you to imagine it for yourself.
Yeah, that's the weird thing when I play games like Starglider. They look so basic, but somewhere in my head I am seeing a cool sci-fi world.
For me, some Atari games have that quality to them, too, but the next best example I can think of is the 8-bit Dragon Quest titles. Whenever I play those I don't see the boxy grey mountains or identically tiled castles. Something in my mind fills in valleys & rivers, the feel of the wind, the sounds of the grass crunching under the travellers' feet, all sorts of small organic details that aren't there in the picture. Few newer games have ever done that for me.
Maybe I'm a little crazy for getting that carried away by it, but reading the reviews in the ezine for games like Trashman or Olli & Lissa I can see myself having the same sort of experience. Although, maybe a bit less poetic in the case of Trashman. ^m^