josh_manga wrote:When Link enters the inner chambers of the golden pyramid the Triforce comes down to him in three separate pieces before unifying. However since they are all in one place and not geographically separated, i suppose one might assume that Ganon had not split them.
i guess Link has the Triforce of Courage in AoL
where is it in TP?
if it was split in OoT, was it reunified at the end?
Also, what happens to the Triforce after the end of LttP? Does it go to Hyrule or stay in the Sacred Realm?
And for that matter, is the Triforce really powerful enough to grant a wish of eternal peace in Hyrule?
We don't see Link make that wish, the ending seems to imply he merely wished for the revival and healing of Hyrule.
But if the Master Sword sleeps forever, that might imply that there's no need for it to awaken again, in which case there would be peace, or at least conflict that doesn't need the Master Sword to be resolved. Enter the Four Sword.
I'm looking forward to the Skyward Sword, but i don't own a Wii... I'm hoping it will be a new weapon, but in all the art i've seen it looks identical to the Master Sword.
Midori wrote:I don't think it ever says that a person with an impure heart is the only thing that can split the triforce.
I don't think Wind Waker has to be set in an alternate future where Link left the timestream. I think it makes more sense taking place after all the other mainline Zelda games.
Wind Waker was declaring itself (not by words, but by emotions) to be the last real Zelda game, making all the later Zelda games no more authoritative than fanfics.
If Ganon acquired the triforce and wished to rule Hyrule, but then Link defeated Ganon and overrode his wish by wishing for peace, I think it's possible then that Link's wish can also be overridden later by somebody else acquiring the triforce.
I guess since LttP is the (only?) one where Link gets his hands on the whole triforce
WW can't come after it either because of the Master Sword and the Triforce of Courage is split in it as well.
Midori wrote:There's nothing saying the sages did not still become sages after Link went back to the past.
In fact, the story about the sages had to have gotten out, because in LttP's intro, it mentions that the seven sages were responsible for sealing Ganon away.
when you look at the main Zelda timeline, Ganon was still sealed away after Link went back into the past.
I don't know whether it's inherited by blood or spiritually
You are assuming, for instance, that the OoT future and the OoT past are effectively completely seperate universes without any effect on eachother
You are also assuming that the literal texts must be completely and literally consistent, at the expense of any other connections between the games.
I must confess I don't understand what you're saying here. Which is not to say it doesn't make sense, but I really don't get it. It seems to me the question is not so much "what happened to Link after he went back in time" as it is "what happened to Ganondorf after Link went back". See, when Link goes back to time, everything else is back to how it was in the past. Only Link retains any memories of the future, because he's the one doing the time travelling. So, if Zelda is in her child state, and the sages are in their pre-sage state, then why isn't Ganon back in his pre-sealed state? And if he's still running around being evil, what was the point of travelling to the future anyway?Nate wrote:Well again, as I said, if you want to believe that Zelda sent Link back to relive his childhood, and then Ganondorf still took over the world regardless, that means one of two things: either child Link died when Ganondorf took over Hyrule, or there's a second Link just hanging out somewhere in Hyrule while the Link who was sealed away for seven years is running around saving the world. The first seems unlikely, and the second just seems silly. :p
Midori wrote:I must confess I don't understand what you're saying here.
So, if Zelda is in her child state, and the sages are in their pre-sage state, then why isn't Ganon back in his pre-sealed state?
And if he's still running around being evil, what was the point of travelling to the future anyway?
It seems to me like you're advocating 3, but I'm not sure. Which of these does your timeline theory include, or if there is another possibility, what is it?
If the reason they awoke was because they were destined to, they would regardless of if there's a villain to put down.
it's commonly accepted that OOT is the war mentioned in the prologue to LttP
Of course the king wouldn't believe Link, but it's likely that Zelda would believe him (considering she was the one going all "You're going to save Hyrule" to Link), and then later when she became queen or whatever, she would propogate the story.Nate (post: 1472721) wrote:You could argue Link told everyone about it, but um...are you seriously saying that the King is going to believe an eight year old or so child coming up and going "I went to the future and I stopped Ganondorf's evil plan to take over Hyrule but then I got sent back in time again by Zelda and so now I'm a kid again but I'm really the Hero of Time and I saved your kingdom!"
I was also under the impression that it was commonly accepted. Though as I said, I was always a proponent of the ZHQ theory (OoT -> LttP -> LA -> LoZ -> AoL), which, as far as I knew at the time, was the predominant timeline theory back in the late '90s, which accepts it. On ZHQ, and related Zelda fansites, the idea that OoT was intended to take place during the 'imprisoning war' existed even before OoT came out. I believe later there was a staff interview that confirmed it, and after a little searching today I found this:Commonly accepted? I don't buy that. I have no idea if that's the prevailing theory or not, but I would be willing to bet nobody thought that the prologue to LttP was talking about OoT, even AFTER OoT came out, until the GBA re-release where "wise men" was retranslated to "sages." I think then, and only then, did people think that, and that doesn't necessarily make it commonly accepted.
Of which I will make a rudimentary translation:「]
今回、ゼルダ姫を含めて
7人の賢者が出てくるんですけれど、
その6人はディスク版の「リンクの冒険」に出てくる
町の名前になっています。
スーファミ版のときに、ゲームのなかで語られていた
「むかし、封印戦争という戦争がありました」という話の、
「封印戦争」の時代にいた賢者の名前が、
町の名前になっているというような「ネタふり」を
全体的にしているわけです。
あのときの、あれが、これだった、というね。
[...]
(スクリプトディレクター・大澤 徹さん)
I'm not sure I translated everything well, especially the part about the 'easter egg', but the fact that the sages during LttP's Imprisoning War were the ones in OoT that were named after AoL towns is quite clear.[b]"Please show me some connections to previous games"
This time, in addition to Princess Zelda, 7 sages make an appearance, and 6 of them have the same names as towns that appear in the Disk System's "Adventure of Link".
In the Super Famicom [SNES] game, there is in-game text that says "Long ago, there was a war called the 'Imprisoning War'". That the sages during the era of that 'Imprisoning War' had the same names as towns was a kind of easter egg we wanted to show throughout the story. As if to say "That thing, from then, was this".
[...goes on to mention Talon and Malon's similarity to Tarin and Marin...]
(Script Director Oosawa Toru)
Midori wrote:it's likely that Zelda would believe him (considering she was the one going all "You're going to save Hyrule" to Link), and then later when she became queen or whatever, she would propogate the story.
On ZHQ, and related Zelda fansites, the idea that OoT was intended to take place during the 'imprisoning war' existed even before OoT came out.
I'm not sure I translated everything well, especially the part about the 'easter egg', but the fact that the sages during LttP's Imprisoning War were the ones in OoT that were named after AoL towns is quite clear.
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