100 Rupee Advance Shop
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| '''Country''' || '''Name''' | | '''Country''' || '''Name''' | ||
|- style="background:beige;" | |- style="background:beige;" | ||
− | | Japanese || ... | + | | Japanese || ... ショップアドバンス ('... SHOPPU ADOBANSU') |
|- style="background:beige;" | |- style="background:beige;" | ||
| English || 100 Rupee Advance Shop | | English || 100 Rupee Advance Shop |
Revision as of 12:52, 5 February 2006
A special shop that will only be open when you play on a GBA. Also called the Advance Shop in short.
Contents |
Description
Also know as the “Advance Shop”, this is mainly due to the abbreviation used when viewing the shop on the world map. Everything is priced at 100 rupees in here. These Advance Shops exist in both Oracle games and can only be entered when playing on a Gameboy Advance. The one in OoA is located in Lynna Village in the Past, next to the Shooting Gallery. The other in OoS is on the left of the “know-it-all-birds” hut on the west side of Horon Village.Miscellaneous Notes
Inside you can find a shopkeeper who sells you one Gasha Seed and two rings all for 100 rupees each. In the Oracle of Ages one ring is the GBA Time Ring and in Oracle of Seasons one of the two rings is the GBA Nature Ring. The second is any randomly selected common ring.
The Oracle of Seasons’ Advance Shop also has a little boy inside who will tell you about his life has been ‘advanced’. The Linked game of the Oracle of Ages will have Nayru and Impa outside the shop at the end of the game, waiting for you to beat Ganon.
Relevant Quotes
Oracle of Ages / Seasons
From the shopkeeper inside:
”Welcome, sir... to the 100 Rupee Advance Shop. I'm amazed you found us! We're only found on Game Boy Advance! Everything is 100 Rupees. Don't let our secret out!”
Translations
Country | Name |
Japanese | ... ショップアドバンス ('... SHOPPU ADOBANSU') |
English | 100 Rupee Advance Shop |
French | 100 Rupee Echoppe Advance |
German | 100 Rupee Advance-Shop |
Spanish | 100 Rupee Tienda Advance |
Spanish | 100 Rupee Advance Shop |
The translations are as close as they can be, nothing special to note about. Other than that Japanese people don’t really have an letter ‘v’ therefore it is mostly replaced with a ‘b’, hence the shop was named Shoppu Adobansu.