"I love LttP and OoT but they're not my favourites because I don't really care for the pacing at the end. It seems once you get to the new "world" in those games it starts just being dungeons one after another. Link's Awakening and Majora's Mask have a more balanced pace. After every dungeon you usually have a few extra things to do before the next one. You get a break of sorts. I enjoy dungeons but find them to be very demanding. They're intense. I usually play games in sessions of a couple of hours and I virtually never play two dungeons in one sitting. I like to have some time to fart around and do something a little more relaxing in between the dungeons."
Exactly. Exactly. Actually, every time I replayed Ocarina of Time I stopped at the Water Temple because it became too dungeon-centric at that point. The pacing and side-quests were much more relaxed and gradual in the first half of the game.
I can see how it's good that he states his favorite Zelda for reference, but he compares it to Twilight Princess, saying that he prefers A Link to the Past. That could be excluded, or at least saved for the end. That's going to influence a person's mindset when they read it. I prefer to start on a blank slate with a game, and see how it compares when I'm done. Not the other way around.
EDIT:
Regarding the other review:
I really liked this, and now I'm really hyped. A few things about it bothered me (mostly his condescension toward Minish Cap and Wind Waker, calling their dungeons meagre and their side quests "fairly decent". That annoyed me. I liked the dungeons in both games, and they have some of the best side quests in the series. So that unnecessary criticism ticked me off), but I can pass that off to how SHEERLY UNCOMPARABLY AWESOME Twilight Princess will be, so I'll let it go.
His review of the graphics is fair, but I get a nasty taste in my mouth when people say that crap like Oblivion looks better than Twilight Princess. Is it more technically capable? Yeah, but the art direction is sh!t. It's like comparing chicken scrawl to Van Gogh or Monet. It's disgusting.
Anyway, pretty good review. Really, I'm just naturally opposed to reviews in general: I hate movie reviews, game reviews, everything. I like to discover things for myself, and I don't trust reviewers at all. Trust me, they seldom ever know what they're talking about. I view the profession as fundamentally flawed, and therefore pay no regard to it.