Neither Zelda III nor the Neutopia games are RPGs.In an RPG, the primary way of advancing the player character's power is through levels, usually through obtaining experience points. Zelda and Neutopia are adventure games.
Toss up between Soul Blazer and Ys Books 1&2.
I don't remember adventure games like Zelda being refered to as RPGs during the 8 or 16-bit eras. It only seemed to come up often after retro gaming became popular in the past decade. Too often I've seen the same people who call adventure/misc non-RPG games "RPGs" also include war sims and digicomics.
I've never understood the appeal of Illusion of Gaia. It was a dud at a local rental store bitd and quickly got liquidated for $9.99. I bought it and played it to death (like I did every game) and it was not enjoyable even the first time through. It really feels like a crude simple unfinished game by an unprofessional team. The kind of homebrew some people might throw together today without putting much thought into it. It also felt like it must have been 4 megs tops. Even as a $10 game in 1995 it felt like it wasn't a worthwhile purchase.
Play Turbografx. Play the Turbografx. PLAYTHE TURBOGRAFX!!!!!!
Quote from: Black Tiger on May 05, 2015, 12:13:21 PMI don't remember adventure games like Zelda being refered to as RPGs during the 8 or 16-bit eras. It only seemed to come up often after retro gaming became popular in the past decade. Too often I've seen the same people who call adventure/misc non-RPG games "RPGs" also include war sims and digicomics.Game publisher promotional material and game magazines often called games with overhead views, medieval themes, overworld/underworlds and inventory screens role playing games.
That doesn't make it correct. By that criteria, King's Quest is a role-playing game, and surely you know that's not right.