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File:Legend-of-neil 4240.jpg
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 "The last thing that Neil remembers, he was drunk, playing a game of Zelda..."

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Click Here to Watch it

The Legend of Neil is an Affectionate Parody of the original 8-bit The Legend of Zelda game for the NES, taking the "sucked into a video game" concept of quite a few kids TV shows and turning it on its head by introducing a grown man (in this case also a loser), and throwing him into the often nonsensical world of Hyrule. Hilarity Ensues, of course. Written by Sandeep Parikh and Tony Janning, it stars the latter as Neil, while the former sings the theme song accompanied by a mandolin. An ensemble cast (including Felicia Day, of Doctor Horribles Sing Along Blog and The Guild fame) and a variety of special effects ranging from So Bad It's Good to surprisingly not bad add to not only a pretty funny show, but a great deconstruction of Zelda, and the action-adventure video game genre as a whole.

Each episode is around seven or eight minutes long and begins with a cold opening, followed by the theme song, followed in turn by a sung description of what happened previously on the show, which grows longer and longer as each season progresses. The first season serves mainly to set up the plot and deals with Neil's efforts to beat Level 1, while the second season opens with a flashback of Neil's life before getting sucked into the game, and his continuing impatience and reluctance with his quest; the third and final season shows Neil accepting his role as Link, the hero of Hyrule, and overcoming various trials to finally defeat Ganon.

Tropes used in The Legend of Neil include:


Cquote1

 He whipped out his member / and he masturbated to the fairy in the game because she was kinda hot / then he asphyxiated himself with the Nintento game controller / and that somehow transported him into the game!

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  • Call Back: You finally learn what "Dragon Style" is in "Restart of the King."
    • By season 3, the Old Man has also perfected his ability to go *poof* and disappear.
  • Clingy Jealous Girl: The fairy is very.... insistent on her claim to Neil.
  • Curse Cut Short: Played straight in the first episode, subverted in two second season episodes where one ends on a cliffhanger like this and the other opens with the completion of said curse.
  • Distressed Damsel: Zelda
  • Did Not Do the Research: Just a tiny one, but worth mentioning nontheless: Hylians are called "Elves" in the show, for obvious reasons. However, given that it has never been officially stated that Hylians aren't the same thing as Elves (and that Hyrule has a tendency to Call a Rabbit a Smeerp) it could actually be correct.
    • Then again, this IS Legend of Zelda from NES, before we knew they were Hylians. Back then, we did just call them elves.
    • They also say that there are 9 pieces of the Triforce, while there are 9 dungeons there are only 8 Triforce pieces.
      • The ninth triforce piece appears after Neil/Link beats Ganon and saves Zelda as the key to her chastity belt, which the other eight pieces inside Neil/Link then unlock.
        • Except that the Triforce from Ganon in the game is a different, whole one.
    • Neil's Link outfit appears to be based on Ocarina of Time or Twilight Princess, not the green and brown one from the first few titles.
    • When Neil gets a gameover and later tries to restart the game, he hits select instead of start.
  • Drunken Montage: "Gettin' High in Hyrule"
  • Expy: Pippi is an obvious, seemingly intentional expy of Beast from X-Men.
    • "GLORM!"
  • Evil Laugh: Ganon. Often. Lampshaded in the final episode.
    • "I never knew evil was so hilarious! AHAHAHAHA!"
  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: What does the Graveyard of Living Nightmare contain? Living nightmares. Not cups. You would find those at the Den of Cups.
  • Fog of Doom: Lampshaded in Map Questing. Revealed to actually be useful in the finale.
  • Genius Bruiser: Pippi
    • Shh, it's a secret.
  • Genre Blindness: Ganon, to the point where may not just be blind but completely idiotic, as he believes that leaving items for Link/Neil to pick up scattered around the dungeons will somehow help evil prevail.
    • His reason for leaving the Map lying around was particularly stupid. He left it there so that his minions, the ones who constructed and inhabit the damn place, wouldn't get lost while they were inside.
  • Gilligan Cut: Old Man says that the three day training course is hard, and you can't just montage your way through it. The scene immediately cuts to them montaging their way through it.
  • Here We Go Again: Super Grimsley Bros. "Coming Never"
  • I Have a Family: The Octorok in Episode 2 of Season 1. Since he's kind of like an insect or octopus or something, it's "I have a family of MILLIONS!" This is referenced later on a 'Missing' poster in a pub.
  • In the Blood: Pippi. Good freaking LORD, Pippi. To the point where, when trying to aid Neil on his quest with helpful advice and polite conversation, he spends half the time trying to resist the urge to rape, kill, and devour him like the other Moblins want to do. And he warns Link to leave quickly once their business is concluded, so that Link can leave with his limbs intact. This is after Pippi saved Neil's life and nursed him back to health, mind you.
  • In the Style Of: Episode four of Season 2 has this during the "party montage!" in the style of 80's rock'n'roll, specifically Don Henley's "Dirty Laundry". Except the lyrics are more about getting completely wasted.
  • Insistent Terminology: "Call me Old Man!"
  • The Jimmy Hart Version: None of the original game's graphics, music, or sound effects are used, with soundalikes and original sketches employed instead.
  • Look Behind You!: "I'm distracting you!"
  • Medium Awareness: In the musical episode, the Fairy, when asked to sing with him by another fairy, replies that she's not fond of online musicals.
  • My Girl Is a Slut: While she isn't Neil's girl (despite what she make think to the contrary,) the fairy is most definitely a slut.
  • My Species Doth Protest Too Much: Pippi
  • Motor Mouth: Co-creator Sandeep Parikh's intro and "Previously On..." summations are the fastest (but not briefest) series breakdown you'll ever hear.
  • Musical Episode
  • N-Word Privileges: All the classic clichés about the differences between whites and blacks are reversed in Hyrule. Tod objects to being called a "Welver", Tyrelda and Constance point out that "you people" are always using that word in your songs.
  • Only Sane Man: Wizrobe. He seems to have read at least some of the Evil Overlord's Handbook.
  • Or Was It a Dream?: Season 2 finale
  • Our Fairies Are Different: Fairies have litters, apparently. And eat their young within the first day if not stopped.
  • Refusal of the Call: For most, if not all of season's 1 and 2, Neil really doesn't care about the quest, and just wants to get home. Princess Zelda being hot is a bit of an incentive, however.
  • Sequence Breaking: Neil attempts this. It does not end well for him.
  • Shout-Out: The show has many, especially in the final episode.
  • Sink or Swim Mentor: Both Old Men.
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 Old Man: Grow a dick, Link.

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  • Sorting Algorithm of Evil: Invoked, Wizrobe is Genre Savvy enough to wander why he lured Neil to level 1, when he could have lured him to level 7 instead and had him face the much tougher evil minions that live there.
  • Stunt Double: In the final episode, during the hand-to-hand fight with Ganon:
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 Fairy: He looks... a little bit asian.

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  • The Game Come to Life: Deconstructed. All the usual aspects are there, with Neil taking the role of the hero character, and the quest being generally the same (Get Triforce! Defeat "GANNON"! Save Princess). However, Neil isn't as entranced by this notion as much as a kid would be, and often reacts to the general weirdness around him the way any normal person would: as a Deadpan Snarker. Also, the seedier underbelly of Hyrule, not explicitly referred to in the game, is emphasized by places like the "Money Making Game!" bar and Mirth's Pub. In addition, most of the characters are given much more characterization beyond what the capabilities of the NES could express. The Old Man with the sword is a jerk, the Moblins are a bunch of drunk fratboys, Ganon is a "mental invalid", etc.
  • Token White: Tod, he even calls himself one.
  • Tough Love: Definitely Old Man, who spends half of his time giving Neil helpful items and half of his time floating in a little bubble above Neil's head tormenting him, comparing him to a girl scout and advising him to go buy a training bra.
    • It gets to the point where the one time he was genuinely trying to be helpful in a non-sarcastic way, Neil blows him off by saying that he just wants to get a drink, not be lectured to about "queefing in the wind, or whatever."
  • Tourettes Shitcock Syndrome: Old Man's brother, Old Man, suffers from this.
  • Unfazed Everyman: Neil/Link
  • What Measure Is a Non-Human?: Subverted and played for laughs from day one. Lampshaded by the Old Man, "Eat the heart cookie, it's delicious. You deserve it after committing murder."
  1. which is actually just a criminal front for Money Making Game
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