The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom



The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is the 20th main entry in The Legend of Zelda franchise, the 7th fully 3D installment, and the direct sequel to The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. It was released on Nintendo Switch on May 12, 2023, after being pushed back two years due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Several years ago (in Breath of the Wild), Zelda’s loyal guardian and retainer Link woke from a hundred-year slumber, having healed from Calamity Ganon’s onslaught a century ago. Finding Hyrule in shambles with Zelda locked in a continual battle with the villain, he sought to find and release the souls of his old allies while fighting Ganon’s dark minions in the ravaged land of Hyrule, before finally confronting and slaying the beast in an epic battle.

With hope among citizens finally restored and Zelda resuming her role as a benevolent ruler, Hyrule has started to heal and rebuild, regaining a semblance of its former majesty.

But evil has a tendency to return… And it seems this time, it never left

Picking up several years after the destruction of Calamity Ganon, reconstruction efforts are disrupted when a strange dark substance called "the Gloom" starts seeping up from the deepest depths of Hyrule, causing those who touch it to lose their strength and vitality. Delving into the depths beneath Hyrule Castle, Link and Zelda discover the ruins of a civilization called the Zonai, a people believed to hold divine power who ruled Hyrule ten-thousand years ago. Desceding further, they find the cause of the affliction, a tomb - or rather, a prison - holding the decayed but still-living body of Ganondorf, an ancient Gerudo King who sought to conquer Hyrule and remake the kingdom in his own image, only to be defeated by the King of the Zonai and sealed in this crypt through the efforts of the Seven Sages. But the seal keeping him in this state has slowly been weakening over the last ten millennia, his vile power leaking onto Hyrule, creating monstrosities like the Calamity and the Gloom to spawn from his bottomless well of Hate. As Zelda and Link enter, the seal holding Ganondorf is undone - part of a long-term plan put in place by his jailers, in hopes the two heroes would destroy him once and for all… But it all goes terribly wrong.

As Link attempts to protect Zelda from the ancient evil, he is horribly wounded, his body marred and the Master Sword is shattered. Ganondorf's release triggers "the Great Upheaval", a cataclysm that causes the villain’s dark army to be reborn, Hyrule Castle to rise into the air, rifts to open all over Hyrule leading to the dark Depths below, and Zonai ruins to appear among the clouds. As the tomb collapses around them, Zelda and Link are separated, Zelda plummeting into a dark abyss and Link being barely saved by the Sage of Light's arm. Awakening on one of the new sky islands, Link finds his corrupted right arm has been replaced with that of the ancient sage's, and is tasked by the Sage's spirit, a member of the Zonai named Rauru, to seek out Princess Zelda.

With only this, the near-useless Master Sword and what remains of the clothes on his back, Link must learn the secrets of the Zonai, rebuild his arsenal, and face Ganondof’s dark minions in order to put a stop to Ganondorf's millennia-old ambitions once more. But above all, he must find Zelda!

Like the previous game, Tears of the Kingdom is a survival-thened Action-adventure game, with more emphasis this time on the Wide Open Sandbox element, with not only an altered world map, but two new places to explore; the mysterious Sky Islands that have emerged above Hyrule, and the dark, Gloom-infested cavernous Depths down below. In addition, there is focus on Item Crafting, where Link manipulates physical objects and the miraculous technology of the Zonai with new game mechanics: Fuse, which can weld objects to Link's weapons, shields, and arrows to strengthen them and imbue them with special properties, and Ultrahand, which can pick objects up bind them together to create a wide variety of structures and devices, simple bridges to elaborate flying machines.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is a Spoilered Rotten game, so be warned, spoilers might be unmarked.

A

 * 100% Adoration Rating: You won't find many Hylian citizens with a bad word to say about Zelda. It does seem she has been very active during the Time Skip, volunteering her time and spending an impressive amount of funds and resources into the building that rule. Fortunately, it's also leads to a great deal of Undying Loyalty among the citizenry, never questioning her orders (and often misinterpreting them) and easily falling for
 * Eleventh-Hour Superpower:
 * Actionized Sequel: This is likely the most combat-oriented Zelda game to date, making this an Action Adventure game with some RPG elements. It tends to throw far more enemies at you than before and even with maximum Hearts and the strongest armor, some attacks hit pretty hard. Regular old hack and slash isn’t always effective in dealing with foes. Plus, Link recruits allies to fight alongside him!
 * Admiring the Abomination:
 * In the opening sequence, Zelda can barely contain her excitement upon finding hieroglyphics depicting the carnage caused by the Demon King during the Imprisoning War.
 * Also, Loone returns from Breath of the Wild, and this time her weird fixation is on the Leviathan Fossils, which she finds adorable. She requests for Link to accompany her as she travels Hyrule to observe and admire the giant skeletons. She is disappointed to find that the fossils are incomplete, but Link can make her happy by using Ultrahand to fix them.
 * Adorable Evil Minion:
 * In addition to the Chuchus making a return from the last game, we have the Little Frox, little frog-like rock monsters found in the depths, and curiously the only mobs in the Depths with no Gloom corruption. Unfortunately, it seems the reason they were put there was to foreshadow the appearance of their big brother, who is... not adorable at all.
 * Bokoblins. Be honest, it's hard not to love these guys, especially when you gain the Bokoblin Mask and are able to safely get close to them, especially iven how their actions at their strongholds when they don't know Link is watching - like dancing or squabbling with each other over fruit.
 * Horriblins; most would agree calling them "horrible" might be a little unfair. They may not be very adorable (and they are certainly very dangerous), but they can be rather funny at times, like the way bounce around yelping and clutching their buttcheeks when Link knocks them off the ceiling.
 * Airborne Mook: One of the new enemies introduced in this game is the Aerocuda, which the Bokoblins use for transport. Not very formidable, they can be destroyed with one hit from an arrow. They can, however, attack Link when he’s using his glider or a Zonai-built flying machine, making them slightly dangerous there.
 * Alien Sky: The roof of the Depths has a swirling miasma of motes and fumes that can become clearer as more Lightroots are activated, giving the area an eerie appearance of a strange "sky".
 * Amnesia Missed a Spot:
 * Ambiguous Situation:
 * Thanks to how surprisingly little this game touches upon the events of Breath of the Wild, it's hard to tell what sort of relationship Ganondorf had with Calamity Ganon. Was he directly controlling it, or was it an independent manifestation of his rage and malice? If Ganondorf could see what was going on through Calamity Ganon's eyes, he sure doesn't mention it, and he doesn't recognize Link either (While he does recognize Zelda,.
 * There’s also the issue of the exact nature of Link and Zelda’s relationship, where the story seems to be letting the players come to their own conclusion. Zelda was obviously using Link's house during the Time Skip, as made clear when Link arrives at his house in Hateno that he could purchase in the previous game, but there is no confirmation that they were living together or if Link gave it to her. On one hand, the table is set for two people, and Link seems to have no problem using the bed (which can be used to restore his health) and Zelda would not have needed the secret study in the cavern underneath if she had the house to herself. On the other hand, none of the townsfolk in Hateno seem familiar with Link, implying that he didn’t spend much time there, and there’s a long sidequest where he seems intent on getting a new house in Tarrey Town, which wouldn’t be necessary had he been living in Hateno.
 * Amplifier Artifact: According to Mineru, this is the purpose of the Sages’ Stones. They amplify existing power, but do not grant it. The new Sages (Tulin, Riju, Sidon, and Yunobo) use them to increase their own power and create spirit avatars of themselves to accompany Link.
 * Anachronic Order: More than likely, the player will uncover the Dragon Tear Memories in the wrong order, making the flashback stories incomprehensible until they can all be viewed as a whole. In fact, it is possible the player can discover exactly what happened to Zelda long before the plotline that involves tracking her down is resolved. Of course, Link will never relate this information to inquiring NPCs until the plotline is resolved, suggesting that he is learning them in the correct order even if the player is not.
 * Anticlimax Boss:.
 * And Your Reward Is Clothes:
 * Literally every Misko quest rewards you with a piece of armor, and in some cases a matching weapon, such as the Fierce Deity Sword.
 * Complete every Shrine, and your reward is the Ancient Hero's Aspect,
 * An Arm and a Leg: Link loses his right arm at the beginning of the game, an explanation for the Bag of Spilling plot point. He quickly gets it replaced by a prosthetic one, which had formerly replaced King Raruru’s destroyed arm.
 * Anti-Frustration Features:
 * Zigzagged with the Blood Moon. It no longer appears randomly, occurring every 168 minutes playing time. This means its appearance is what you predict, but it also means the player cannot "fast forward" it by having Link make camp or sleep at inns.
 * Like before, the map of Hyrule is mostly blank, and Link must activate a group of towers in order to illuminate the map. This time however, the towers have been modified, so the activation console is on the bottom, not the top, so Link no longer has to climb the entire thing to reach it. Plus, the process in which he activates them is much more fun than last time. While you'll often be forced to complete some sort of sidequest or clear hazards to activate them, it's a lot less repetitive than the samey climbs from the previous game.
 * Ask any fan what the most annoying feature was in Breath of the Wild, and they will most likely say it was the rain. This would happen at the most inopportune times, often while Link was climbing a mountain, causing him to fall. While this still happens, there is a potion called the Sticky Elixir that Link can use to save himself, plus the Frog Armor (gained from the Gazette quest) that provides a more permanent solution. You'll still slip occasionally, but it's a lot less frequent than normal.
 * Joy Con Drift is a common problem in most Nintendo Switch games, and this can be a big problem here, as a feature of the Ultra Hand involves wagging the R stick to separate items, which can make the drift worse. Fortunately (and the game does not tell you this) shaking the whole controller can do the same thing.
 * Any new recipe you discover is recorded in a cookbook, which lets Link gather up the ingredients for it with one button, assuming they are in his inventory.
 * If you need to cook but are far from a cooking pot, one useful Zonai device is a portable one. It’s one use, however.
 * If Link opens a chest with a weapon but lacks inventory space to take it, the game now presents an option to discard an item in the inventory to make room.
 * Autobuild is an unlockable ability that lets you construct any Zonai–made contraption you have previously built. You can even conjure up the parts by using Zonaite, but items created this way only last a few minutes.
 * Zonai devices require Zonaite charges to function, but fortunately, the ones you use in Shrines have unlimited power, so there’s no chance of failing the puzzle by running out of juice.
 * In the previous game, there were a wide variety of arrows Link could buy for specific situations, like Fire Arrows for ice-based enemies, Freeze Arrows for the opposite, Shock Arrows to deal damage to foes in water, and Bomb Arrows for, well, blowing things up. In this game, only regular Arrows are used, but Link can use the Fusion power to attach resources to arrows for those effects and more. Plus, arrows respawn much faster than they did in the previous game, and stores always restock them rather than wait until Link is low on ammo.
 * Also, Elemental weapons in Breath of the Wild tended to be the hardest weapons to obtain, making them Too Awesome to Use; the fire and ice weapons were useful not just for instantly killing enemies of the opposite element but also making it through hot and cold climates. The same can be said for any special arrows. With the Fuse power this time around, Link can quickly turn any weapon into an elemental weapon, with the proper materials. Elemental enemies drop parts that can add an effect to your weapon, gemstones now lend their stated elemental powers to your weaponry when Fused on, and certain fruits can be used as arrowheads to give them an elemental kick.
 * In contrast to the Stasis power in Breath of the Wild, the game world will freeze while Link readies the Recall power, enabling him to use it in tense situations, like when a Zonai-made contraption is about to fall off a cliff. Recall also has the furthest range of all of Link's Zonai skills, adding further to this quality-of-life.
 * In the same vein, Ascend doesn't immediately pop you out on top of a surface — Link peeks out the top and the game world also freezes while Link is offered the ability to emerge or descend back down the portal. This gives the player the chance to assess what's going on in the area they Ascended to and allows them not to engage in a situation they're not ready for.
 * The incredibly helpful Korok Mask (which acts up when the player is near a Korok) is now available early in the game, rather than being a DLC item. The Travel Medallion and Hero's Path can now be acquired at Robbie's lab, and with the Medallion feature, you can pre-set up to three player-placed fast-travel points instead of just one.
 * Mobs like Keese and Octorocks are still little more than annoyances, but the drops you get from them have new uses when attached to arrows, providing better range and accuracy.
 * Brightbloom Seeds are extremely useful in exploring the Depths while searching for Lightroots to illuminate the areas, since they can create patches of light where they're thrown to light the way. They’re easy to find, present in almost any cave.
 * The Ascend power has visual cues to show when the player is in position to successfully Ascend through an overhang, but it also has a chiming sound that immediately plays at the same moment. Thus you don’t always have to tilt the camera to use it.
 * Unlike the previous game, the Great Fairies and the Horse God get special map icons once they've been met, making it easier to remember where they are. Also, once you unlock the first Great Fairy, Tera, through the quest at the Woodland Stable, she'll tell the player the locations of her three sisters, giving their locations new map icons. While sidequests (rather than Rupees) are now needed to unlock them, making them all easier to get to, especially Tera, who was previously located in the dangerous Gerudo Desert.
 * In the previous game, you could only get one dragon body fragment per encounter, if you were lucky - dragon encounters were very random and they were very high up in the air, making getting their parts both difficult and very tedious. In this game, you can now encounter the dragons underground, and actually stand on top of them, allowing you to knock off as many parts as you want before they ascend back to the surface.
 * Unlike before, if you fall into water while your stamina is empty, you get back a tiny bit of extra stamina, allowing you to reach the shore if it's close by and preventing you from instantly drowning. Also, you use way less stamina while swimming, which actually makes it a practical method of traversal. The frequent swimming sections during the very beginning of the game almost feel like Nintendo is hosting an informal apology tour for how bad swimming was in the first game.
 * Rusty weapons and rocks will regularly spawn when you're smashing through dense rock walls in tunnels, providing the means to craft new rock hammers right away with the Fuse power if you run out of the ones you brought.
 * Zonai device dispensers (which are basically big Gachapon machines that use Zonaite rather than coins) have separate inventories, but offer a relatively high output for relatively few Zonai materials deposited, making it easy to travel from dispenser to dispenser and accrue a healthy supply of whatever Zonai parts you need to craft vehicles on the fly or get access to weapon devices that don’t have to be salvaged or searched for.
 * The ends of the minecart rails in the Fire Temple feature turntables and simple switches that allow the player to instantly flip the minecart the other way on the track to return without having to manually rotate the cart with Ultrahand.
 * Aerocuda parts will be automatically collected if they happen to fall towards the surface while traversing the Sky, making it worthwhile to take them down even while gliding between islands.
 * The sensor feature now beeps downward and says a target is "nearby below" when you're walking directly over the target, if it’s inside a mountain, hill, or cave; this prevents the player from walking in circles trying to determine where the shrine, creature, monster, or item they're tracking is. Conversely, it also beeps upward with a "nearby above" note for a target that's over your head somewhere.
 * It can be very useful to understand how the three map layers relate to each other, and even to navigate with one map while in the layer of another, so the game doesn't lock the map display to wherever you are and you can switch to the map of another layer quickly on the minimap. This is particularly useful with the Depths, where Lightroots are always right below some Shrinesand some map structures are replicated. Using the surface map as the minimap in the Depths can help you navigate even completely dark areas of the underground once you know how the two maps relate.
 * Shooting arrows in midair has been reworked to be more manageable: Instead of rapidly draining your stamina while aiming like in Breath of the Wild, the stamina meter essentially stops draining entirely during aiming, instead having a chunk of the meter highlighted that will be spent once the arrow is fired. This way, players no longer have to feel rushed when lining up their shots, although Link still slowly falls during midair aiming.
 * Korok Forest has a new "exit shortcut": it's an ogre tree in a location that's much more integrated into the sanctuary, and is now easier to find and remember than before. The original exit tree is still there, but can't even be entered now since it is within the lost fog around the forest.
 * Gloom-infected monsters do far less damage than the same type of monster does normally, an even trade-off considering that Gloom-inflicted wounds cannot be healed normally.
 * Apocalypse Not:
 * Regional example. Sometime during the Time Skip, Death Mountain erupted, requiring Goron City to be evacuated and later rebuilt. This has, in fact, been of a benefit to them and Hyrule at large, as the City’s location no longer requires visitors to wear heat proof armor to survive.
 * Also, Hyrule seems to be reacting to the most recent crisis far better than they did during the calamity. While Zelda being missing is a grave concern, the Hylian volunteer army is making a conscious effort to locate her and root out Ganondorf's minions. These efforts are a constant reminder to Link that this time, he is not alone.
 * Arc Symbol: Tears are an omnipresent symbol in this game. The gemstones worn by the Zonai and the Sage Stones are all tear-shaped. Plus, a vital part of the plot has Link looking for "Dragon Tears", mysterious pools of water within the geoglyphs that unlock Memories; it is eventually revealed that
 * Art Evolution:
 * Many returning monsters have more horns on their heads than before (or have them now if they didn’t before); this is not simply cosmetic, as the horns are monster drops and can be used to make Link’s weapons stronger.
 * Tulin was a hatchling in BotW, and his now an early adolescent, with "hair" tufts that make him resemble his father, larger wings, and larger eyes with noticeable sclera.
 * The Blood Moon looks a lot larger in the sky and is far more detailed. Consequently, the normal moon is also larger.
 * Artistic License Chemistry Complete the “Message in a Bottle” quest and give the recipe for Hateno Cheese to Kojin, and she will have a batch at the dairy farm for sale as soon as you next arrive there. While it is possible to make homemade cheese in as short a time as an hour, fine cheese (which it supposedly is) can take anywhere from three weeks to two years to make as aging is required for best taste.
 * Ascended Extra: In Breath of the Wild, Teba’s son Tulin’s was a minor NPC, who does little but watch Link shoot archery targets as part of an optional side quest. Tears of the Kingdom has an older Tulin replacing his father in the role of the Rito’s regional hero, as he has developed a new wind-gust technique that leads to him becoming Link’s partner for the Hebra portion of the main line quest where he and Link explore the Wind Temple, aiding Link in the boss battle as the Sage of Wind.
 * Ascended Glitch:
 * In Breath of the Wild, it was possible to construct flying machines with some creativity and Loophole Abuse of the physics engine, such as by stacking two minecarts together and then using Magnesis on the bottom one. The Ultrahand ability allows for such vehicles to be built deliberately, the developers going so far as to demonstrate the building of one during the March 2023 Gameplay Demonstration.
 * The Ascend feature of the Pad (ironically) was originally a glitch, but the developers loved the idea so much, they made it an actual game mechanic.
 * Assist Character: Much like the last game, Link has a sidekick for each Temple mission, but after completing each Temple, the sidekick is bestowed with the powers of an Elemental Sage, meaning he is accompanied by a spiritual avatar for the rest of the game. (Except during the key moments in the endgame, where they show up in person.) The sidekicks are:
 * Tulin, a Rito and the Wind Sage. He can fight alongside Link with his bow and arrows and can create a powerful gust, letting Link fly farther with his glider without losing altitude.
 * Yunobo (Link’s partner in the Goron chapter of the last game) is this for the Fire Temple; a decent close quarters fighter, his charge attack can smash through breakable stone, including tough bedrock that cannot be broken by anything else. If he's active while you're driving a vehicle, he acts as a glorified cannonball with unlimited uses.
 * Prince Sidon (again from the previous game) is this for the Water Temple, his ability covers Link in a bubble of water, which augments any Zorua weapon, making Link's attacks with them stronger and doing Water damage (more useful than it sounds). It also protects him from one attack for use, no matter how strong that attack is.
 * Riju returns and is this for the Lightning Temple. As the Sage of Lightning, she can call lightning down from the heavens to smite monsters, but she needs Link to help her aim by using his arrows. It's a slow attack, but very powerful.
 * Attack Its Weak Point: Many, seeing as this Trope is a staple of the franchise:
 * Like the previous game, Hinoxes can be stunned by aiming for their single eye, Stalnox (the undead variants) can only be defeated by destroying their eyes once it is separated from its body, and Taluses can only be harmed by striking the ore deposits on their backs,
 * Like-Likes are nearly invulnerable most of the time, but if you get close enough to it for it to bite you, it will expose its "tongue" with a bulb-like protrusion; hitting this tongue once will stun the Like-Like and leave it vulnerable. With Rock Likes, even achieving that requires destroying the rocky armor that shields it.
 * A Frox shares traits of both a Hinox and Talus, it can be stunned by striking it in the eye or throwing an explosive into its maw, and the ore deposit on its back must be then be destroyed.
 * Marbled Gohma can only be harmed by striking its huge, single eye; this requires Link to first use Yunobo’s charge attack to destroy two of its legs, which stuns it and makes it vulnerable.
 * Colgera Wind Temple cannot be harmed except by striking the three icy disks on its body. Link can either shoot them with arrows or position himself above it and skydive through them (more dangerous, but far more fun).
 * A Twinkle in the Sky:
 * Audience Surrogate:
 * Automatic New Game: Much like the previous games, the beginning of the game is practically a cutscene with Link and Zelda exploring under Hyrule Castle, with the player having limited control of Link as a tutorial on the basics.
 * Awesome But Impractical:
 * Fusing Zonai devices to your shield can create some cool accessories, like a flamethrower, or high-power flashlight, but it also expends the durability of the shield quickly.
 * The Sage spirits provide much-needed backup in combat, especially against large groups, but other than that, their abilities are situational and often get in the way, their abilities often quite cumbersome in some areas.
 * The White Sword of the Sky, which is gained via the quest "The Mother Goddess Statue" or the Skyward Sword Amiibo. This weapon gives an improved Sneakstrike Ability, and let's be honest, using the original version of the Master Sword is pretty cool. However, unless you use the Amiibo, you can only have one at a time, and fixing it once it breaks (you must offer a claw from each of the dragons to all three springs again and then pray at the Mother Goddess statue) is a big headache that is just not worth it. Most players simply use it as a decorative trophy for Link’s new house.
 * Ancient Arrows (the insta-kill weapons from the previous game) can be crafted by Fusing an Ancient Blade to an arrow; unfortunately, even one Ancient Blade requires giving 50 Zonite to a Smith Construct at the, a location that is (assuming the player doesn’t do any Sequence Breaking) only two steps before the endgame, On top of it, while they instantly kill any enemy they hit, the slain monster drops no loot, so it’s ultimately pointless outside of getting a really annoying enemy off your back.
 * A few Armor sets count:
 * The Charge Set makes Link look like some anime thunder god, making him glow with electric energy. It increases his Attack power during thunderstorms, makes his attacks faster, and causes his attacks to do Lightning damage at the end of a combo or charged attack. Each piece has a base Defense of 3 and a maximum of 20 with the final upgrade. Unfortunately, this is very situational, as it depends on a weather condition and as such, only works outdoors. There are a few ways to force that condition, but they aren’t very practical. The bonus combo damage isn’t as much a benefit as it seems, and the set gives you no resistance to electricity, something you kind of need in a thunderstorm.
 * The Ember Set is similar to the Charge Set, again with the design of an anime deity, but with a fire theme. It increases his Attack Power in hot weather and causes his attacks to do Fire Damage at the end of a combo or charged attack. The biggest difference is, each piece has a base Defense of 2 and a maximum of 16 with the final upgrade, making it less than the Charge Set and slightly less than average. Not as situational as the Charge Set though, it’s slightly better, but not by much.
 * Rounding out the anime deity armor is the Frostbite Set. As a god of winter, Link’s attack power increases in cold weather, and his attacks do Cold Damage at the end of a combo or charged attack. Like the Ember set, it has Defense of 2 and a maximum of 16 with the final upgrade, and no actual immunity from Cold. Seeing as cold weather is common in two regions, it’s the least situational of the three, but still not very good.
 * The Desert Voe set, which makes Link look like a male Gerudo, gives some Heat Resistance (essential for surviving the Gerudo Desert), and once you have the whole set, some Shock damage. Unfortunately it gives no offensive capabilities and its defense is only mediocre, so outside the Desert it’s not very remarkable.
 * The Climbing Set was incredibly useful in BotW, given how often Link has to climb, but in this game, not so much. While still somewhat useful, there are much better and faster ways for Link to make vertical ascensions, like the Ascend skill, Zonai Rockets, hot-air balloons, and flying machines of all shapes and sizes.
 * The Evil Spirit Armor Set. Aesthetically, this is wicked-cool, making Link look like Phantom Ganon from Ocarina of Time. Equip a spear or similar weapon and Fuse a Silver Lizalfos Horn and Link looks like the Grim Reaper. Unfortunately, this set cannot do anything the Radiant Set cannot. They have the same set bonus, but only the Radiant Set can be upgraded by the Great Fairies. What’s more, getting the Evil Spirit set requires completing the three Labyrinths, each of which is three times longer than the ones in BotW.
 * The Dark Set, as its name implies, makes Link look like Dark Link from Ocarina of Time, which is pretty cool, but sadly, a disappointment. All it does is increase your movement speed at night, and while the player could simply have Link sleep during the day and only travel at night, this is something many other Sets do better. Also, like the Evil Spirit set, it cannot be upgraded at all.
 * The Miner Set looks kind of cool, but its effect - makes Link glow, letting him see where he’s going better in the Depths - isn’t as useful as it seems. Most of the time, you’re better off using Seeds, and those can be found in almost any caves.
 * The Divine Helms are an interesting throwback to Breath of the Wild, but the elemental resistances they give can be gotten from other sets and food buffs, plus they have lower defense than most other helms, so they aren’t worth it.
 * Downplayed with the Rubber Set. The resistance to Lightning Damage does seem very situational, but you will be very glad to have it when up against an Electric Lizalfos.
 * The Phantom set is good to have early in the game. Each piece comes with a base stat of +8 defense (compared to the standard +3 defense you’d find on most sets). And it boosts your attack, and makes you look like a scary armored devil monster. Again, however, it can’t be upgraded, so while you start off with better defense than the Soldier set, the Soldier set will quickly bypass it in terms of usefulness.
 * The Royal Guard set is the most stylish-looking armor in the game, making Link look like one of the Vatican’s Swiss Guard. Its full-set bonus increases Link’s Stamina and power of charged attacks, but not his overall attack power, making the Barbarian and Fierce Deity much better. It can be gained relatively early, but so can the Soldier set, and in many ways, you are better with that.
 * Some Zonai Devices are this, while none are truly useless, many are far less useful than others:
 * Zonai Time Bombs: These can be used much like the Bomb Flowers, and while powerful and useful when many are used at once, the Bomb Flowers are always much better and easier to obtain.
 * Zonai Hydrants: these devices create a limitless supply of water. This has two practical uses, washing away the sludge during the Zora scenario (a problem that is no longer there after you kill Mucktorok) and turning lava into solid rock in order to cross it or use the rock with Ultrahand. That’s it. If you truly need water, it’s easier to use Splashfruit or Sidon’s ability.
 * Zonai Lights can give your Ultrahand-crafted vehicle a headlight, which is pretty useful, especially while exploring the Depths. However, Brightbloom seeds are much more powerful in this regard, much more common, much easier to use, and won’t drain your battery like the Zonai Light does.
 * The Zonai Hot Air Balloon has uses, as there are many cliffs in the Depths that are impossible to climb without Stamina-enhancing food or elixirs. Unfortunately, The Hot Air Balloon is slow as molasses, and needs to be attached to a platform for Link to stand on and a reliable source of fire. Both Rockets and Springboards are more practical and faster.
 * Zonai Mirrors. Fuse one of these to your shield and you can reflect sunlight - that’s about it. It can also be used to destroy the undead, but since this can only be used during the day, that effect is only good when you’re dealing with Gibdos. Ultimately, there are far better things you can fuse to a shield.
 * Some of the Zonai Emitters are very useful, and when used properly can take out a group of enemies with the ease of mowing a lawn. However, the Lightning Emitter isn’t as good. It can maybe stun-lock a foe, but in most cases, you’re better off inflicting damage.
 * The main selling point of the Zonai Sled is that it has less friction than a cart and can be used to move at high speed over snow, sand, grass, or even Gloom. However, it can’t do anything on its own, and like the Hot Air Balloon, needs something to propel it (usually a Fan) and a Steering Stick in order to control.
 * Downplayed with the Zonai Small Wheels. When used to build a vehicle, the vehicle is very fast, at least over flat ground. Unfortunately, the vast majority of the ground in Hyrule is not flat. The Large Wheels may be slower, but they are safer and more maneuverable.
 * The Zorai Cannon is one of the best Zonai Devices (see below) but while placing it on a sword (creating a magical boomstick) is outright hilarious, it not only eats through the batteries fast, the projectiles are very likely to hit Link if he tries to use it on a moving target. An immobile target is safer, like using it to batter down a breakable wall, but it’s much easier (and safer) to use Yunobo for that.
 * The Amiibo Function of the Skill Wheel. This is an okay ability that lets Link gain some stuff easier, assuming the player has the right Amiibo, otherwise its worthless. But it really doesn’t encourage anyone to go and get an Amiibo either. There is nothing you can get with this skill that is not obtainable in the game - the skill just makes it easier, and as anyone who has played an online game can attest, putting in-game items behind a paywall is never a good idea.
 * Awesome Yet Practical:
 * The Ascend ability. Use this and so long as there is a proper ceiling above Link and a space above it, he will phase through it and emerge above. You can use this to sneak into enemy encampments and get the drop on them before they can react, use it to ascend through caverns and find hidden caves, use them to make a quick escape from a cavern, or even use it at specific points in the Depths to access hidden areas on the surface, like the Underground Lost Woods, which is the only way to get into Korok Forest. Not exactly a flexible ability or one with much variety, but still incredibly useful.
 * The Recall ability. Use this on a moving object or an object that was moving a minute ago, and the object starts moving in the opposite direction. The game’s ability to remember the movement patterns of any object that this ability could conceivably be used on is uncanny, testament to the incredible attention to detail put in by the developers. The ability itself is incredibly versatile, and can be used, for example, to recover something you built that falls into rapid water or off a cliff, on a chunk of fallen debris in order to ride it up to the sky islands, or on a thrown projectile to propel it back onto the thrower.
 * In Breath of the Wild, an omnipresent game mechanic was defeating enemies in order to collect drops in order to enhance your gear. This time around, this mechanic is further extended with the Fuse ability. If Link can pick it up, he can use this ability to fuse it to his weapon or shield for a wide variety of effects, to simply fusing a boulder to an old sword in order to turn it into a sledgehammer, to fusing a ruby to it in order to make it a flamethrower. He can fuse a Zonai rocket to his shield in order to propel himself into the sky, fuse an explosive barrel to it to make a nasty booby-trap for those Bokoblins, or even a minecart to turn it into a skateboard! And of course there are the various trick arrows you can create with it; this ability is almost addictive. Best of all, each and every fused object has its own custom icon!
 * Of course, there is Ultrahand. Like an Erector Set that builds real vehicles, the possibilities regarding this power are limited only by the player’s imagination, and as Youtubers have shown, players have very vivid imaginations.
 * Autobuild makes Ultrahand even more awesome and more practical, as it lets you re-construct the previous 30 Zonai–made contraptions you have previously built with Ultrahand. You can also save 10 of them in a list of favorites and construct them from Zonai schematics found in the depths. You can even conjure up the parts by using Zonaite, but items created this way cannot be disassembled and only last a few minutes.
 * Many armor sets fit the Trope well:
 * The Barbarian Armor set - looks pretty decent, giving Link the Skeletons in the Coat Closet look, gives a bonus to Attack and decreases the Stamina used with charged attacks, plus a baseline Defense of 3 with a maximum of 21 when fully upgraded. The only downside is that these bonuses do not stack with food power-ups, but it's still a pretty decent set overall.
 * The Fierce Deity set is pretty much identical to the Barbarian set as far as gameplay goes, and is even more aesthetically pleasing, making Link look like a cross between his classic self and a ghost samurai warrior.
 * The Depths Set. Of all the Evil Is Cool armor sets, this one is the coolest, making Link look like some sort of evil cultist. This armor only gives mediocre defense, but the benefit is, it gives you some Gloom resistance, giving Link extra Heart Containers (1 to 3, depending on the upgrade level) that absorb the Gloom Damage before any of his actual Hearts do. As anyone who has spent any time exploring the Depths knows, this is a huge benefit.
 * The Mystic Set is again, incredibly cool looking, giving Link a mane of white hair and an outfit that makes him look like a Dragonball Z hero. Its efficiency depends on where you are in the game, and with the right preparation, can be game-breaking. It has no offensive boost and cannot be upgraded, but the benefit is, instead of losing Hearts from battle damage, you lose Rupees instead. So if you’ve accumulated several thousand Rupees from constant hunter-gathering activities or used duplication glitches, Link is practically invincible.
 * The Radiant Set is another game-breaking armor set. Advertised as a set that increases Link's stealth and movement speed at night, plus prevents Stal enemies from attacking Link, its true power lies in enhancing the attack power of weapons made of bone. Fuse Gibdo parts to a Lynel bow and a Molduga Jaw to a Gerudo Scimitar, and the damage Link does is ridiculously high. It is far easier to obtain than most high tier armors, purchasable in one armor store, and unlike the Evil Is Cool sets, it can be fully upgraded, up to a stat of 20.
 * The Glide Set. One of the coolest armor sets in the game, it is leather armor with a bird-like theme and mask. It can be obtained very early in the game by completing a relatively simple minigame, and is quite valuable when traveling through the air. Its base effect, in a nutshell, makes Link more maneuverable in mid-air while skydiving. The part that is not so practical is the full-set bonus; it keeps Link from taking any damage at all from falling. While it seems pointless at first since it's very easy to break your fall, it's a godsend for more impatient players who want to hit the ground as fast as possible and just keep going.
 * The Zonaite armor is one of the toughest sets to find, the Shrines where they are located being the hardest to get to and arguably the hardest to solve, although theoretically, you can get the whole set after only completing the Wind and Water Temples. Once you get it, however, the end result makes Link look like an Aztec high priest with Magitech Bling of War. The max defense bonus is 28 (tying with the Soldier set and Ancient Hero set for best defense in the game) and has the added effect of doubling the battery power of Zonaite devices, and given how Ultrahand is the most useful mechanic in this game, it is likely the most practical armor in the game and one of the most awesome.
 * As awesome as it is for Link to wear armor made from Zonaite technology,
 * Many Zonai Devices qualify:
 * Zonai Rockets. Fuse one to your shield, and Link can use it to boost himself upward into the sky! Of course, this is a one-use effect, but it’s awesome and very useful when you need to get to a high spot in a hurry, or if it’s raining.
 * Zonai Flame Emitters. In BotW, fire had three attributes: it was powerful, spread very fast, and was very easy to generate if you knew what you were doing. These devices give Link an infinite supply of fire, and they're exactly as overpowered as you'd expect. It’s not the best of the Emitters and tends to set fire to everything in the immediate area when activated, but if you want to sow a little chaos, this does that well.
 * Zonai Big Wheels. They may be slower than the Small Wheels, but they're far more durable, and a device using them able to maneuver well over rough terrain or lava. Or, you can attach Beam Emitters to them, then attach them to a Floatstone, giving you a rotating engine of destruction to cut the enemy down.
 * Yet another Emitter, the Frost Emitter is one of the better versions. Fuse this to a weapon, and you can freeze a bunch of mooks solid in one swing. Because Link’s weapons do triple damage to frozen enemies, you can dish out serious damage, or use Tulin’s gust ability to blow them off a cliff or into water - don’t forget, with the exception of Lizalfos, most mooks in this game swim as well as an anchor.
 * The best Zonai Emitter is, by far, the Beam Emitter, the closest Link will ever come to using a Ray Gun. This is almost broken, the range is limited only by sight, the damage it does is considerable, and while it doesn’t have any elemental advantage, it puts out continual damage to any unfortunate mooks who stumble into the path of the beam.
 * Zonai Cannons, however, are better than any Emitter. These things are ridiculously powerful, and turn anything you attach them to into a force of destruction. For Massive Damage, this is the strongest weapon in the game, can be fused to almost anything, and you can often fuse more than one at a time! The Video Game Cruelty Potential here is so intense that using it makes you wonder if the ICC would be coming after Link. Only drawback here is, bombs of any sort have splash damage that could easily kill Link if he is careless with them.
 * The Homing Cart. These are Cute Machines which, if turned on, slowly wheel themselves towards enemies. On its own, this is useful as a distraction, because monsters will attack the cart, but cannot harm it so long as the battery has power, letting Link launch a surprise attack. Attach a weapon to it - like the Cannon or any of the Emitters - and you have a lethal combat drone to send after them! Of, and it wags its “tail” when there are no enemies for it to home in on. The Construct Head is similar, except it is a stationary rotating platform rather than a Cart.
 * The Stal Horses were something of a novelty in the previous game; Link could tame them, but not keep them, as the Stables refused to house undead horses. While the same is true here, they have a useful ability if tamed in the Depths. They are not covered in Gloom the way most enemies in the Depths are and Gloom does not harm them, so Link can ride on them and gallop right over large patches of Gloom without taking any damage.
 * Ax Crazy: Ganondorf. While he does a good job at hiding it at first, the Dragon's Tear showing.
 * The Homing Cart. These are Cute Machines which, if turned on, slowly wheel themselves towards enemies. On its own, this is useful as a distraction, because monsters will attack the cart, but cannot harm it so long as the battery has power, letting Link launch a surprise attack. Attach a weapon to it - like the Cannon or any of the Emitters - and you have a lethal combat drone to send after them! Of, and it wags its “tail” when there are no enemies for it to home in on. The Construct Head is similar, except it is a stationary rotating platform rather than a Cart.
 * The Stal Horses were something of a novelty in the previous game; Link could tame them, but not keep them, as the Stables refused to house undead horses. While the same is true here, they have a useful ability if tamed in the Depths. They are not covered in Gloom the way most enemies in the Depths are and Gloom does not harm them, so Link can ride on them and gallop right over large patches of Gloom without taking any damage.
 * Ax Crazy: Ganondorf. While he does a good job at hiding it at first, the Dragon's Tear showing.

B

 * Back Stab:
 * The Stealthstrike ability returns, enabling Link to kill or badly injure a sleeping or otherwise unaware enemy. The Eightfold Blade is designed with just such a use in mind. Puffrooms even make this easier, their smokescreen letting you do it to multiple enemies before any of them notice.
 * Ganondorf is shown killing
 * Bad Moon Rising: The Blood Moon, the odd phenomenon that causes monsters to respawn and resources to replenish, returns in this game, but it is easier to anticipate. It occurs every seven days, game time (168 minutes real time) at midnight. However, this means the player cannot cause it to happen faster by having Link camp out for a few days, the 168 minutes must pass before a new Blood Moon occurs.
 * Bad with the Bone: Link was pretty bad in the previous game using the limbs of undead enemies as weapons, but in this game, he’s even badder with it. Bokoblin Arms are fragile and break quickly, but have an Attack power of 20 (pretty much better than anything else available early in the game). Even better, you get two from each slain foe, and Fusing them together gives Link a whopping 40 Attack power.
 * Badass Adorable: Tulin. A precocious Rito tween, he’s an Adorably Precocious Child of the sort you can’t help but want to hug, but his archery skills and gust ability make him arguably Link’s most valuable ally.
 * Badass Baritone: Ganondorf sounds every bit as powerful and authoritative as you'd expect him to to, thanks to the dulcet tones of Matt Mercer.
 * Badass Finger-Snap: Link does this if the player deactivates a Recall effect prematurely.
 * Badass Transplant: Link’s prosthetic arm that replaces the one that is nearly destroyed in the opening cutscene. Formerly belonging to King Rauru, it provides new abilities that replace the runes of the Sheikah Slate.
 * Bag of Spilling:
 * The game starts with Link armed with the Master Sword and the best armor from the previous game, 30 Heart Containers, and 15 Stamina Vessels, the maximum obtainable. However, after delving into a tomb with Zelda and awakening an ancient evil, Link is horribly wounded, losing an arm, his armor is destroyed (causing him to lose all but 3 Hearts and 5 Stamina Vessels), and the Master Sword is "corrupted", becoming only barely better than a club. While Link's arm is replaced by a prosthetic one (courtesy of a Mysterious Backer) he must start from the beginning.
 * Link also has to reacquire every piece of armor he gained in the previous game, regardless of the likelihood he had canonically kept and stored them all. Justification is given for two specific pieces, the Champion Leathers (which wore out, according to Zelda’s logbook) and the Zora Armor (a gift from Mira which is currently back in Zora hands for repairs, implying he gave it back to them). The only piece of armor he can regain due to Zelda storing it was not even truly an armor piece before - the blue hairband you can use to give him the same ponytail hairstyle on his previous default model.
 * Hetsu has lost all his Korak Seeds from his maracas again, and Link must search for more so Hetsu can again expand his inventory.
 * Bait and Switch: Siyamotsus Shrine. This looks like a “free” Shrine, where there’s no puzzle involved, often the case when the challenge is getting to the Shrine itself (this one would definitely qualify, as you need to solve a labyrinth to get to it), but then you then you notice the shrine's name is Unlit Blessing. When Link approaches the reward platform, it pulls away abruptly. Fortunately, the puzzle is easy to complete - simply light the unlit torches on the platform with Fire Fruit (which are provided near the chest, which also has a bow) to get to a launch platform that brings you to the altar.
 * Bare Your Midriff: Like in the previous game, literally every Gerudo not named Ganondorf has her belly exposed. There's also Kiana of Lurelin Village and the Great Fairies, who wear a crop top and a Seashell Bra respectively. We also get a male example in Rauru, who wears an odd midriff-baring garment that looks vaguely Meso-American in nature. His sister Mineru, meanwhile, combines this with an Impossibly Low Neckline. Must be a Zonai thing.
 * Base on Wheels: A Battle Talus is a giant Stone Talus that Bokoblins have managed to build a base upon, arming it with ranged weapons. Ironically, the Talus will likely survive the battle far longer than the Bokoblins will.
 * Bat Out of Hell: The Keese still aren’t very formidable, but swarms of them will often fly out of caves when Link approaches them, giving the player quite a scare.
 * Beard of Evil: Ganondorf, of course, and in this case, the more evil he gets, the fuller it becomes.
 * The Beastmaster: One of the Dragon Tear scenes shows that Ganondorf had a glorified snake charmer play an important role in his army. But instead of summoning snakes when she played her flute? She summoned Moldugas.
 * Beautiful Void: The “free” Zonai Shrines (as in, no puzzle in the actual Shrine, just an altar with Rauru's Blessing) is a bridge leading to an altar in the center of a sea of rippling astral light.
 * Beneath the Earth : One of the ways Hyrule was massively expanded was via the addition of the Depths, a subterranean realm roughly equal to Hyrule itself which can be entered via ominous chasms in the overworld. These dark caves have an alien ecosystem with a high monster population, strange trees and plants, giant mushrooms, Zorai ruins, and patches of the dangerous Gloom spawned by Ganondorf’s foul magic.
 * Benevolent Architecture: Whenever you need to use the Ultrahand to construct something, the materials are usually close by. (With a sign saying anyone is welcome to take them.) The hard part, of course, is figuring out how to use them.
 * Beyond the Impossible:
 * Big Bad: Ganondorf takes center stage as the game's main threat, and unlike his previous appearances? He's a flesh-and-blood Gerudo this time instead of a boar monster or an Eldritch Abomination made of Malice.
 * Big Beautiful Woman: Kiana, the Great Fairies, and the middle-aged Gerudo count once again. And as far as new examples go, there's Hateno Village's resident fashionista Cece. Being very visibly overweight doesn't make her any less attractive, and her form-fitting wardrobe does a good job at highlighting her... um, assets.
 * Bilingual Bonus: If you understand Japanese Kanji, you can notice that the symbols of the Sages powers correspond to the appropriate element: Rauru is “light”, Sonia and Zelda (on the Recall icon) is “time”,, Sidon has “water”, Yunobo “fire”, Tulin “wind”, Riju “lightning” (harder to read, as it’s upside down for some reason), and Ganondorf is “darkness”.
 * Big Damn Heroes:
 * Link does this a lot, coming across a Hyrulean traveler fighting a lone monster, usually a Bokoblin or Lizalfo. Running in and helping out will earn Link a food item or advice. One notable example is where he comes to the rescue of a frightened Gerudo shopkeep who has been treed by a hungry Molduga.
 * This happens
 * Bigger on the Inside: Unlike the Sheikah shrines from the last game (which seemed to be entrances to underground complexes) the Zonai Shrines seem to work this way. This is emphasized with the Crystal Retrieval quests, where bringing the Crystal to the right place causes it to grow and become the actual shrine.
 * Bittersweet Ending:
 * Blackout Basement: The Depths are pitch-black. Instead of Shrines, they have Lightroots that Link must activate to transverse the eerie darkness.
 * Also true with one of the Proving Grounds Shrines; not only is Link have to improvise without his gear, he has to do so in the dark.
 * Blade on a Stick: Polearms return as weapons in this game, but Link can go Not Hyperbole here, using Fuse to attach almost any sharp object (like a Moblin Horn or another weapon) to a weapon to enhance it, creating a literal Blade on a Stick. You can even fuse a polearm with another polearm, creating a Blade on a Stick on a Stick!
 * Blazing Inferno Hellfire Sauce: In one quest found in Lurelin Village, an NPC - Ralera - wants you to bring her Seafood Curry - made from Goron Spice, Hyrulian Rice, and any variety of Porgy. She’s happy when she gets it, but the spice is so overpowering, she needs Link to use a fan-weapon to cool her off!
 * Blinded by the Light: Fusing a spotlight (a Zonai device) to his shield lets Link blind and stun foes for a few seconds. Dazzlefruit does the same thing, like a flash grenade.
 * Bling Bling Bang: Link can use the Fuse ability to attach almost anything to a weapon, and if he does so with some gemstones, the weapon gains elemental properties. Doing so to Shields grants Link protection from the element. Rubies are Fire, Sapphires Cold, and Topazes Electricity.
 * Blow You Away: Tulin’s power over Wind is supposed to be used to boost Link’s distance with the paraglider, but it can also be used against enemies to blow them off of cliffs or ledges. Or for more mundane uses, like blowing fruit off of trees.
 * Bloodless Carnage:
 * Body Armor as Hit Points: Link will often encounter Mooks (mostly Bokoblins) who are covered with stone or wearing plate armor. This gives them a second Life Bar that Link first must destroy using a blunt weapon before their true Life Bars can be depleted.
 * Body Horror: According to the item description for Moblin Horns, the Red Moblins gained those horns through intentional body mutilation to encourage unnatural growth. More than likely, they aren’t the only ones.
 * Body Motifs: Hands. Symbolic of creativity, ingenuity, and cooperation, they play a major role in several parts of the story:
 * Link loses his right arm, and gains a Magitek prosthetic; hand symbols mark places where Zonai technology is activated by a palm scan. The first skill he uses, Ultrahand, lets him move objects via telekinesis, and he can also learn Earthquake, a Yiga technique that lets him fight with bare fists.
 * The Sages swear alliance to Link via shared contact with their hands, and their powers are activated via rings that are fused to the artificial hand’s fingers.
 * The Gloom Spawn is likely Ganondorf’s deadliest creation, a living pool of sludge with demonic, grasping, clawed hands.
 * Bonus Level of Heaven: The Sky Kingdom is, in fact, where Link’s journey starts, and he’ll have to explore more and more of it as the game progresses. The ruined and mostly-abandoned home of the Zorai, it contains foes, hazards, and a wealth of the rare Zonaite, plus the secrets of the Zorai’s miraculous technology.
 * Book Ends:
 * The opening cutscene ends with Link futilely trying to reach for Zelda with his damaged right hand as she appears to fall to her doom - he fails, and she vanishes into darkness.
 * Meta example; the music and odd chanting that plays during the Final Battle is the same as the music played at E3 in 2019 when the game was first announced.
 * Boomerang Comeback:
 * Breather Boss:
 * Yunobo. For an NPC who proved himself a capable warrior in the previous game and proves it again later in this one, the boss fight against him (where Link has to Beat the Curse Out of Him) is remarkably easy. You dodge his charging attack, which leaves him stunned and vulnerable to attack, then hit him, and then repeat that two more times. Why this Boss Battle even needed a health bar is a mystery.
 * The Sludge Like in the Water Temple chapter. This is supposed to be a tutorial on how to use Sideon’s ability, but said ability is clumsy and unreliable, so you’re really better off using Splash Fruit. And once you do that, this Like-Like variation isn’t much harder than all the other Like-Likes you’ve gone up against in this game.
 * Bullfight Boss: Yunobo; defeating him while he's still under the mask's control is pretty simple, you dodge his charge attack, causing him to crash into a wall, which makes him dizzy and vulnerable; then hit him until he recovers, then repeat two more times.
 * The Bus Came Back:
 * The most relevant example is the Big Bad himself, Ganondorf (Ganon's original, humanoid form) who not counting remakes, remasters, or non-canon games last appeared in in 2006's  Twilight Princess.
 * Phantom Ganon appears as an actual boss, having not appeared since Four Swords Adventure in 2004.
 * Like-Likes are monsters that last appeared in Link to the Past, returning in this game. Gleeox, on the other hand, are sub-bosses that were last seen in Phantom Hourglass, appearing here as bosses. Gibdo are enemies last seen in A Link Between Worlds, appearing here during the Gerudo questline.
 * Bomb Flowers make their debut in the main series, last appearing in Tri Force Heroes. Poes also appeared as enemies in that game; here they are wispy collectibles.
 * Something of an Easter Egg, as the story does not draw attention to it, two Gerudo appearing with Ganondorf in a Dragon Tear Memory are Kotake and Koume (evidenced by their names on their shoulder straps) who last appeared in the Oracle games in 2001.
 * The Arbiter’s Grounds did appear in Breath of the Wild, but didn’t seem to have a purpose; here, it leads to an unlockable dungeon, the Gerudo Cemetery, and given the layout, it seems like it was once a prison, as it was in Twilight Princess.
 * Players might remember Calyban from Breath of the Wild, a Gerudo who was binging on Hydromelons and carelessly throwing the rinds into the town’s irrigation canals. Here she’s older and looking for a boyfriend - believing she has found one when she meets Link…
 * Magda the crazy flower lady returns too, and again, she will get upset if Link (or anyone else) steps on her flower bed. She is, however, thankful if Link uses a Zonai Hydrant to water her flowers, but if he tries to do so when it’s raining, she gets upset because he is over-watering them. There's also a picture of her on the wall of Link's house.

C
""Za-pow!""
 * Call Back:
 * Like the previous game, Link wakes up in an unknown area at the start of the game location after nearly dying in combat.
 * Using a Tunic of Memories and Old Hairband makes Link look like he did in the previous game, the only (unavoidable) difference being his arm.
 * As the flashbacks show,
 * Link can change his appearance into the design from BotW using the Old Hairband and the old version of the Champion's Tunic, now called Tunic of Memories.
 * Came Back Strong: Link is, in effect, Brought Down to Normal at the beginning as a result of nearly being killed, losing all his Heart Containers but 3, all his Stamina Vessels but one, barely surviving the assault. However, if he does all the Shrines, he’ll be entering the Final Battle with both of these surpassing what he gained in Breath of the Wild.
 * The Master Sword too, at least by an in-story standpoint. Ganondorf effortlessly destroys it in the opening scene; Link then
 * The Cameo:
 * It's not immediately obvious, but Twinrova (or rather, Koume and Kotake) of all characters is present in the Dragon's Tear memories. Two Gerudo with the exact same skintone as Ganondorf can be seen flanking him in a few scenes, and they wear muted reds and blues that correspond with the elements they wield.
 * In one of the memories that shows Zelda receiving the Master Sword via Recall, she hears a female voice, assuring her that Link is still alive and urging her to find a way to fix the sword. It is heavily implied that this is Fi, the personification of the Master Sword, who appeared in Skyward Sword.
 * Cartoon Cheese: A new food ingredient, Hateno Cheese, a typical wedge of cheese with holes. It isn’t exactly the most useful ingredient, but one of the more interesting, as you can use it to make things like pizza and cheesecake.
 * Cast From Hit Points: Gloom Weapons, dropped by, can be used by Link and are among the strongest in the game for base attack power. However, they not only damage Link, they inflict Gloom Damage, meaning you cannot heal said damage while using the weapon and apply the usual methods to cure Gloom.
 * Catch a Falling Star:
 * At the start of the game, Link tries to catch Zelda with his wounded arm, but fails. At the end of the game
 * Nearly literal example, you can catch Star Fragments while they are in free-fall when Link is skydiving.
 * Catchphrase: Penn gives us 2: the incredibly memorable "Soar long!" when he flies off, and its spoken counterpart.
 * Catchphrase: Penn gives us 2: the incredibly memorable "Soar long!" when he flies off, and its spoken counterpart.


 * Cave Behind the Falls: Many examples. In fact, you find the Vah Ruta Divine Helm behind a waterfall in a cave that is behind another waterfall!
 * Cherry Blossoms: There is one cherry tree for each region, with an empty bowl at the base. Put any sort of fruit in, and Satori will appear and put large glowing wisps by all of the map region's cave entrances to show where they are.
 * Clipped-Wing Angel:
 * Gloom Spawn are terrifying enemies, and the first few times you encounter them, the best strategy is to get the hell out of there before they literally squeeze the life out of Link. But if you are confident enough to stand your ground and skilled enough to defeat one,
 * Chaos Architecture: Downplayed. Most of Hyrule does look the same as it did in the previous game, but the Upheaval has caused quite a bit of its geography to change due to the falling debris from the Sky Islands. There is also the matter of the complete absence of the Sheikah Shrines and Towers, an issue that is not addressed in the game.
 * Chekhov's Gun:
 * The most vital example, in the beginning of the game, where Link and Zelda delve into the tomb, there is an area of breakable rock, but Link lacks the means to break them. If he goes back there later and does so,
 * When you first use the Purah Pad’s Camera function, there are already three saved photos - the ones Zelda took in the opening cutscene.
 * Also, in the opening cutscene, Zelda can be seen dropping her torch when she falls into the abyss. If Link returns to that spot later and para-glides into the Depths, the torch is still there.
 * Collection Sidequest: For starters, the Korok Seeds and Spirit Orb quests return (the latter called Lights of Blessing now, which are pretty much the same) but there is a lot more of both.
 * Bubbul Gems, dropped by Bubbulfrogs, and there is one for every cave. Gather them and give them to Koltin to get unique items. Eventually, he will run out of items to give you, and the only reason to collect them is for completion’s sake. Well, that and so he can fulfill his lifelong dream of turning into a Satori for whatever reason.
 * Poes. These odd wisps are located in the Depths, and can be given to Bargainer Statues for rare items, making them a sort of alternate currency.
 * The Old Maps found in the Sky Islands. There are 31 of them, and when each is found, the map is marked with the locations of the bandit Misko’s treasure, all of it special and rare armor.
 * Link can also find a total of 12 Schema Stones and 34, all of which aid in the construction of devices using the Autobuild skill. Getting all of them unlocks two more schematics that can be found on the surface.
 * There are 20 Sage’s Wills to find in the Sky Islands, four of which can increase one of the Sage Avatar’s powers.
 * There are 228 unique recipes to find to register in Link’s cookbook.
 * Link can increase the power of Zonai devices by collecting energy cells, to increase his battery gauge from 3 to 24, with each cell costing 100 crystallized charges. He can then double that power by collecting 47 upgrades.
 * There are also similar quests to be done that involve going to several locations. An NPC named Fera wants you to investigate and survey every well in Hyrule (there are 58) and she will pay 10 rupees for each. Also, there are 46 locations where you can help Addison secure his signs; there is a small reward for each, but no reward for getting them all.
 * Color-Coded Timestop: Using Recall causes all items not affected by it to become a desaturated beige color.
 * Color Motif: In Breath of the Wild, blue was symbolic of heroism, with red a sign of evil. This game, however, uses Green as the benevolent color. The Constructs and Zonai devices are all green, Link’s arm and standard clothing designs have green trim, and all the Champions have some green incorporated into their appearance.
 * Combinatorial Explosion: This game takes the concept of Wide Open Sandbox Up to Eleven as the developers seemed to encourage the player to take advantage of loopholes and rewards ingenuity. With the amazingly versatile power of the Ultrahand, Link can create whatever crazy contraption the player desires to explore Hyrule, from magical cars, boats, flying machines, and even a Mini-Mecha.
 * Composite Character: The Frox is a boss that seems to combine aspects of the Stone Talus and a Dodongo from the previous games. Like the Dodongo, it is a hulking draconic beast that you hurt by tossing bombs into its mouth. Like the Talus, it has a large ore deposit on its back, which is the only part of it that is vulnerable to damage.
 * Confused Question Mark: Get close enough to enemies that they might notice you and this indicates they are on alert. You will know if they actually see Link, as it then changes to an exclamation point.
 * Console Cameo: The Purah Pad is obviously a Nintendo Switch with Magitek enhancements. Using it to start scanning from a tower even resembles plugging it into a USB-C cable charging port.
 * Conspiracy Theorist: The Rito journalist Penn seems to suspect Zelda herself might be the mastermind behind the Upheaval - most of the Potential Princess Sightings quest line consists of Link investigating rumors of her showing up in odd situations (like a siren trying to convince travelers to follow her or a blonde woman riding a monstrous steed) or giving strange orders to the Hyrulian army (like giving them a recipe that makes them sick or telling them to do their jobs in their underwear) and seemingly malicious acts (like spooking the circus performers’ horse and making their wagon crash when they were trying to reach the Great Fairy to convince her to come out of her flower). Fortunately, Penn isn’t the type to publish such rumors without confirming them.
 * Continuity Nod:
 * Purah, who in the previous game was a child due to an accident that reversed-aged her, has now grown into a teenager via the Time Skip.
 * Tulin has grown from a child into a teenager, having fully developed his Wind powers that he started to develop in Hyrule Warriors Age of Calamity.
 * If you go back to the Temple of Time on the Great Plateau at the spot in Breath of the Wild where King Rhoam (Zelda’s father) gave you the paraglider, you will find a custom cloth that changes the paraglider to the original design. Also, Rhoam’s headstone is still where it was before, with a Royal Claymore (the weapon he had in Age of Calamity) stuck in the ground marking the site. No clue as to who put it there, but most fans surmise it was Zelda, placing it there to pay her respects.
 * Breath of the Wild a child named Shanae told Link a story about a kingdom in the sky; this was initially meant as a Mythology Gag regarding Skyward Sword, but now that the Sky Islands have been included to this game, Shanae is very happy when Link tells her she was right.
 * Continuity Snarl: Some weapons in the previous game could only be obtained via the amiibo; they still can in this game, but those same weapons can be found in-game, so whether they can be considered canon to Tears of the Kingdom is debatable. The worst example is the Goddess Sword, which, in Skyward Sword, is the weapon that eventually evolved into the Master Sword, but in this game can be obtained in addition to the Master Sword.
 * Contrasting Sequel Character: much like the Guardians from Breath of the Wild, the Constructs are Mecha Mooks built by ancient artificers (in this case, the Zonai) and like them, they have a single large eye and Tron Lines. But that is where the similarity ends. Guardians were huge, massive, hulking, robots with smooth, rounded designs, who fought with Magitech energy weapons and walked on multiple long legs. Constructs, on the other hand, are human-sized (other than those that qualify as bosses) use mostly improvised weapons, and have no legs, hovering rather than walking. Also, while the Guardians were corrupted by Ganon’s dark magic, the Constructs are still following their original orders, which unfortunately, causes them to view Link as a trespasser.
 * Conveniently Interrupted Document: In the opening scene of the game, Zelda and Link are exploring a cavern deep beneath Hyrule Castle and find elaborate carved hieroglyphics detailing the origins of the royal line of Hyrule and the rise of the Demon King. However, a big part of it has been covered by a rockslide, meaning they cannot read the second half of the story. When Link eventually returns here he can break the stone and read them, although by then the player has likely already seen the whole tale in much greater detail.
 * Cool Airship: The Zonai had an entire fleet of them, resembling Viking longships that surround and circle the Wind Temple. Surrounding them and the cyclone are smaller ships with sails that Link can use like trampolines to bounce into the air and board the larger vessels. The Temple itself is a huge, flying battleship.
 * Cool Horse: The unique horses from Breath of the Wild are back, and a few new ones, including Zelda’s Golden Horse (which was Zelda’s mount before she disappeared), and the Giant White Stallion, which is like the Royal White Horse but bigger.
 * Cool Sword: Well, the Master Sword, of course, but there are others:
 * The Hero Sword, part of the Hero set (that gives Link his iconic green tunic and cap) is found in a chest in the Depths, and once you gain it, it is available from the evil statue after finishing a quest line, and is purchased for 100 Poe (in case it breaks).
 * The Dusk Claymore is this and a BDS, it has 50 durability, does 32 base damage, and even the scabbard it comes with looks badass. Unfortunately, the questline that you must finish to get it requires completing all four Temples.
 * The Corruption: Gloom is like Malice, but is poisonous and corrupting to both living beings and objects. The opening of the story sees it destroying the Master Sword and reducing Link’s Heart Containers from 30 to 3, literally causing his right arm to rot. Rauru later tells Link that had he not grafted the prosthetic limb to Link’s body the Gloom would have spread until it consumed him. As Link obtains Heart Containers and Stamina Wheels in the game, the dark corruption is shown being purged from his body, suggesting he is, in fact, gaining back what he already had.
 * Cosmetic Award: Many well-hidden chests contain fabric that can be used to change the pattern on Link’s glider.
 * Crate Expectations: Any time you find a box, barrel, or crate, it’s a good idea to break it open, as there tend to be objects inside, often arrows or fruit.
 * Critical Status Buff: Weapons with the “Knight” nomenclature grant more attack power when Link has only one Heart Container remaining.
 * Curb Stomp Cushion: The opening scene is a Curb-Stomp in Ganondorf’s favor, wrecking the Master Sword and mauling Link. However, it seems Ganondorf did not escape unscathed, as a shard of the Master Sword is embedded in his arm, possibly the reason he could not kill the two heroes right there.
 * Cute Monster Girl: Yona, Sidon's fiancee. She looks more visibly bestial than the more conventionally attractive Zora women thanks to her wide manta ray face and tendency to show off her fangs, yet she's still incredibly pretty despite, or perhaps even because of it.
 * Cutting Off the Branches: Many implications in the game show that questlines that were optional in the previous game are considered canon:
 * It is possible in Breath of the Wild to fight Calamity Ganon immediately after leaving the Great Plateau - the developers even confirm that it is possible. This game, however, confirm that Link canonically fought all four of the Divine Beasts and freed the Champions’ spirits before doing so.
 * The Koroks have new puzzles and are in different places, implying Link found all of them in the previous game. Just try not to think too hard about Hetsu, and the way he somehow completely forgot about Link's existence.
 * Building a house in Hateno, helping construct Tarrey Town, and helping a couple plan their wedding are all part of an optional questline. The house and Tarrey Town are there, with Hudson and Rhondson still happily married, so the questline has canonically been finished. Again, try not to think too hard about how Bolson could have possibly forgotten about Link.
 * Wabbin and Perdo are now also married with a young child, meaning the sidequest where Link reunited them at Lovers’ Pond was canonically completed. Finley and Sasan are still together, indicating that sidequest was completed too.
 * One odd aversion is the group photo that Link receives if the player completes the "Champion's Ballad" DLC in Breath of the Wild. In this case, it is tied to an Old Save Bonus and is only in his house if the player has completed the DLC.
 * Cutscene Power to the Max: Used many times:
 * At the end of the opening act,
 * Also, in one flashback scene, Zelda uses the Purah Pad to teleport herself, Rauru, and Sonia to escape Ganondorf. In the actual game, Link can only use it to teleport himself.
 * Cutting the Knot:
 * There are many examples of ways the player can take shortcuts with some challenges:
 * Whenever you meet Addison trying to hold up one of President Hudson's signs, you are supposed to aid him by fixing it so it stays up right, ostensibly by using the nearby building material to construct something to brace it. However, if you have a Zonai Float Stone on hand, this can race most of the signs much easier.
 * While you cannot use any Zonai device inside a shrine, you can use Octorok balloons. Fusing one of those on Link’s shield can let him get to a high place easily, bypassing many puzzles that require doing so.
 * Whenever you meet Addison trying to hold up one of President Hudson's signs, you are supposed to aid him by fixing it so it stays up right, ostensibly by using the nearby building material to construct something to brace it. However, if you have a Zonai Float Stone on hand, this can race most of the signs much easier.
 * While you cannot use any Zonai device inside a shrine, you can use Octorok balloons. Fusing one of those on Link’s shield can let him get to a high place easily, bypassing many puzzles that require doing so.

D

 * Damsel in Distress: This game puts an extra twist on it. Link and Zelda are separated in the beginning, but Link (and the player) are constantly kept guessing as to where she is, whether she is there via her own free will or at the villain’s mercy, what she is doing there, or why the villain wants her (if indeed he does). All Link knows is, he must find her to prevent... something bad from happening.
 * Played straight however with three of the fashionable NPCs
 * Damage Sponge Boss:
 * Dangerous Forbidden Technique: Draconification. A Sage who willingly swallows his or her Secret Stone undergoes an instantaneous and painful transformation into an immortal dragon, gaining incredible might and immortality, at the cost of their soul and memory, cursed to wander Hyrule forever as a mindless beast.
 * Dark Is Evil: Ganondorf, who spreads an even deadlier strain of Malice called Gloom around Hyrule, and is so in tune with unholy dark magic that he comes off as a demon in human form.
 * Dark Is Not Evil:
 * The Bargainer entities speak through creepy statues that are found in the Depths, but they at least claim that the reason they want Link to collect Poes (which are lost souls) in order to send them to the afterlife to receive their rightful reward (or punishment). Because they can also speak through a Goddess statue, they may be her allies, servants, or even darker aspects of the Goddess. This may, however, be a case of Good Is Not Nice, as
 * The same goes for many of the items they sell, including the Dark and Depths Armor sets.
 * Link himself can gain many sinister-looking armor sets, like the Evil Spirit Armor, Dark Armor (makes him look like Dark Link), Phantom Set, Radiant Set, and Depths Set, but he uses them for good purposes.
 * King Rauru is a tall, intimidating Beast Man with black skin, horns, and bony spurs on his face, who wields incredibly powerful magic. But he is The Good King and a potent ally. Though as the Flashbacks show, Good Is Not Soft with him.
 * Also in the Depths are shadowy entities that give Link a weapon if he interacts with them; their basic shape seems to resemble Hyrulian Soldiers from previous games like Ocarina of Time.
 * Dark Reprise: The first time you visit any given area, the background music is gloomy and morose to reflect the crisis at hand. When the crisis is resolved, the music returns to the cheerier upbeat score.
 * Dark World: In many ways, the depths are a negative image of the surface of Hyrule. First off, the place is dark, infested with Gloom, and Ganon’s minions are more aggressive and more dangerous. There are also weird trees and other twisted plant life, plus giant fungus. No fruit grows here, but many useful plants like Bomb Flowers, Muddle Buds, and Puff Shrooms are common. Many places in the Depths are often geographically the opposite of the surface directly above. A mountain on the surface might have a chasm under it in the depths (and vice versa) while bodies of water on the surface are impassible floor-to-ceiling cliffs in the depths. Also, certain landmarks also have vertical correlations. Each Shrine has a Lightroot directly under it (making one easier to find if you have registered its counterpart), towns are above abandoned mines, while each Bargainer Statue is underneath a Goddess statue on the surface. Stables on the surface are right over Lionel lairs in the depths, and commemorative monuments on the surface have groups of the dark spirit warriors underneath in the Depths.
 * Darker and Edgier: The game's pre-release trailers really made the game's tone out to be this way, what with the creepy reversed music, zombie Ganondorf rising from the dead, and lifting Hyrule Castle into the sky in the crimson light of the Blood Moon. While Ganondorf is an intimidating villain who is a force to be reckoned with, the game's tone isn't that much different from Breath of the Wild (if anything it's a bit lighter, since aside from the issues caused by Ganondorf and the Upheaval, post-restoration Hyrule has a much more optimistic and hopeful vibe than the more overt post-apocalyptic Hyrule from the first game).
 * Death Mountain: The iconic Trope Namer is still there, and it plays a more important role in this game than last time. During the fire temple quest, Link and Yunobo have to enter the depths through the mountain's crater, and before they do, they have to fight Moragia, a dragon made of rock, that spews lava from its three mouths, looking like nothing less than Death Mountain come to life! Fortunately, it's not as difficult as it looks.
 * Decoy Damsel: Princess Zelda is allegedly sighted by plenty of people all around Hyrule, sometimes doing uncharacteristically cruel things, sometimes doing uncharacteristically bizarre things.
 * The does this many times in order to trap Link:
 * In one of the "Potential Princess Sightings" quests,
 * In "The Beckoning Woman" the woman pleads for Link to follow her so he can help her friend, the claim that this friend has blonde hair suggesting it is Zelda.
 * There is also
 * Delicious Distraction: Anyone who has played the previous game might remember how Yiga could be distracted by Mighty Bananas.
 * Demoted to Extra: Poor, poor Teba. He was already the least fleshed-out of the new champions in Breath of the Wild. But here, he's the only one to not awaken as a Sage. That honor goes to his son Tulin, while Teba himself stays in Rito Village to keep things running as its new chief.
 * Determined Defeatist:
 * Deus Est Machina:
 * Difficult but Awesome: Put "Ultrahand" into YouTube's search engine and you’ll see plenty of examples of players who built complex vehicles and contraptions via Ultrahand. Doing this takes a lot of trial and error to get right, but once it is mastered, Link will be able to build weapons that can tear through King Gleeok himself in a matter of seconds.
 * Discard and Draw: Even before he and Zelda first encounter Ganondorf, Link no longer has access to the Sheikah Slate, and thus can no longer use the Cryonic, Stasis, Remote Bombs, or Magnesis runes he used in the previous game. The replacement device - which Zelda is seen using in the opening cutscene - is the newly invented Purah Pad; when Link obtains it, he still lacks access to his old runes, but can upgrade it to use new abilities granted by the Sage of Light - Fuse, Ultrahand, Ascend, and Recall, plus Autobuild after upgrading it later. Robbie also programs it with new features later, the Sensor, Hero’s Path, and Travel Medallion features.
 * Link also no longer has the Champion’s Blessings, replacing them with the Sages Vows, which not only give him new abilities but summons avatars of his allies to fight by his side.
 * Divergent Character Evolution:
 * The Sages in this game have roles and powers more specific and individualized than they were before. In previous games, they were generic wizards who only used their magic in cutscenes, such magic limited to rays of magical energy. Here, each Sage has unique powers and have both story and gameplay elements, including abilities used to aid Link as Assist Characters. The four dungeon sages have assist Link in combat and use elemental powers (for instance, Tulin, Sage of Wind, can create horizontal gusts of wind that can propel Link further on his glider without losing altitude); Zelda, as Sage of Time, ends up traveling back to the past and experiencing ten millennia of linear time as the Dragon of Light in order to restore the Master Sword, while Mineru, Sage of Spirit,.
 * Even the simplest weapons have added functions that cause them to stand out from their equivalents in BotW. For example, a weapon with “Soldier” in its name has faster charged attacks and “Royal” weapons strengthen Flurry Rush. There are also racial weapons that have special bonuses, like the Gerudo weapons, which increase bonuses bestowed by items fused to them.
 * Does Not Like Shoes: Everyone is barefoot in King Rauru’s time period; possibly, shoes had not been invented yet.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?:
 * A once prosperous city has fallen on hard times thanks to a sinister figure circulating a highly addictive substance that messes with people's minds around the community, turning them into lazy oafs at best and violent thugs at worst. The kids are scared, the elders are disappointed, and many able-bodied young men are, for the most part, high out of their minds. As many fans gleefully proclaim: the crack epidemic has reached Goron City!
 * In the Regional Phenomena quest line, the Zora are plagued by black goo falling from the sky that pains them and impairs their ability to swim, not unlike an oil spill would affect aquatic wildlife.
 * The towers in this game look disturbingly like rocket silos, and indeed, activating them requires using Link as the rocket. Hard to blame him for looking so scared when he first does so.
 * Draconic Demon:
 * As far as lesser examples go, there are the Gleeoks: powerful, frightening-looking three-headed dragons who can generate dangerous elemental auras when they initiate combat. They're easily the toughest overworld bosses, and are widely feared by players and in-game characters alike.
 * Draconic Divinity: The Spirit Dragons from Breath of the Wild return, this time with a fourth dragon in tow. The mysterious Light Dragon is eerily beautiful and serene even by their standards, and the way she isolates herself high in the sky truly makes her feel like an unknowable divine being.
 * Double Meaning Title : Triple meaning, actually. Tears of the Kingdom could either refer to the tear-shaped motif, or the fact that Hyrule Kingdom has been torn apart by the Upheaval. It also could refer to the three “tiers” of Hyrule itself, the surface, Depths, and Sky Kingdom.
 * Double Take:
 * Happens when Hoz first sees Link - it takes him a few moments to realize who it is.
 * Drama-Preserving Handicap: It is stated repeatedly how in the past Ganondorf was far too powerful to defeat, and that not even the seven greatest warriors of Hyrule could slay him. It seems, however, that ten millennia of imprisonment in that tomb has reduced him to a withering husk, and he requires some time to regain his full health and power. Riju notes that the reason they survive the encounter in Hyrule Castle’s throne room is because he is still not strong enough to face them all, which means they still have a chance.
 * Dramatic Irony: When the Zonai ruins appeared among the clouds and started falling from the sky a massive effort was started to study and research them. However, from the point of view of the player, this research becomes obsolete fast, between Link’s ability to use the Zonai devices and the flashbacks from the geoglyphs. They do help a little due to their translations of the steles (which Link cannot read) but Link barely needs that to uncover the mysteries of the Zonai of his own.
 * Dressing as the Enemy:
 * Disc One Nuke: It is possible to get the Champions Leathers armor very early in the game, once you finish the quest that activates the tower to Lookout Landing.
 * Dude, Not Funny:
 * Dying Race: The Zonai are quite likely an extinct race judging by Ganondorf's passive-aggressive statements during one of the memories -
 * Dude, Not Funny:
 * Dying Race: The Zonai are quite likely an extinct race judging by Ganondorf's passive-aggressive statements during one of the memories -

E

 * Early Game Hell: Just like in Breath of the Wild, even the lower-tier enemies do a ton of damage to you thanks to the meager equipment you have access to. The higher-tier ones, as a consequence, will most definitely one-shot you the second you walk into their line of fire. But once you get your hands on better gear, craft better weapons, and get used to making Zonai constructs, you'll even the odds before you know it.
 * Easter Egg:
 * Shooting a Zonai Beam Emitter into a Zonai Stake will create a sound effect whose pitch can be changed by altering the stake's orientation, how deep it's inserted, and attaching/removing another stake. Arrange them right and Link can play a song!
 * The Lightning Helm is a duplicate of the Gerudo Thunder Helm created by ; after Link wins it in a mini-game, if he enters Riju’s throne room while wearing it, she says, "That helmet..."
 * Eldritch Abomination: The terrifying Malice hands that will seek you out and try to kill you when you visit certain areas.
 * Elemental Rock-Paper-Scissors: Like in Breath of the Wild, enemies with a fire element are weak to a weapon with an ice element and vice-versa. This is pretty much required for fighting Gleeoks, as one hit from an arrow of the opposite element will instantly disable that head.
 * Escort Mission: Several sidequests, most notably the quests to unlock the Great Fairies, will have Link having to use a horse to pull a cart with Hylian NPCs in order to get them to their destination. The Stable Trotters sidequests mainly involve their troupe's horse cart (which they seem unable to keep from wrecking), where Link has to fix it, hitch it to horse and/or modify it with Zonai Devices. Unfortunately, the Trotters tend to get motion sick very easily…
 * Some Koroks can be found wearing huge backpacks that make them exhausted and unable to move on their own. Each of them is trying to reach another Korok a fair distance away from where they're found and often in dangerous territory. Seeing as there is no way to kill or otherwise harm the little guys, and you can stick them to your vehicle with Ultrahand to make it much easier to bring them to the other Korak’s camp; doing so earns Link two Korak seeds. (Fuse does not work on them, however, so you cannot simply Fuse them to your shield to carry them that way.) Unfortunately, this imperviousness has also resulted in quite a lot of Video Game Cruelty Potential…
 * Eternal English: Zigzagged. While the Zonai clearly had a different language than the one spoken in modern Hyrule (which Link is unable to read), some of the millennia-old steles are inscribed with modern Hyrulean. This is easy to explain, as
 * Ethereal Choir: Much like the previous games in the franchise, the soundtrack in the trailers use this to perform the series original theme
 * Every Ten Thousand Points: In the Depths, Link can collect crystallized charges, either via drops, chests, or trading Zonaite to forge constructs; gather 100 of these charges, and you can add a new energy well to the battery he uses to power The zone I devices. The battery can hold a total of 27 energy walls maximum (including the three you start with) but after maxing it out, the crystallized charges can be treated for Zonai devices directly.
 * Everything's Deader with Zombies: The Gerudo section of the regional phenomena quest line involves defending Gerudo Town from Gibdos, strange, lumbering, insectoid zombie-like creatures that seem to be made partially from sand.
 * Evil-Detecting Dog: Or in this case, a horse. One of the "Potential Princess Sightings" side quests has Link tracking down Zelda's Golden Horse. According to the stable hands, Zelda's beloved and usually loyal steed was terrified when she approached it, breaking free of the stall and running out into a blizzard.
 * Evil Makes You Monstrous: While Ganondorf's evil creations were pretty monstrous to begin with, they become far more so this time around. Many of them have sharp, twisted horns on their skulls, which seem to have been put there through self-mutilation. The ones in the depths are far more savage and scary, due to gloom literally growing on their skin like a horrible rash.
 * And of course,
 * Evil Redhead: Ganondorf, as usual. The same goes for the mean, edgy-looking Gerudo who served him in the distant past, with a new incarnation of Twinrova being among their ranks.
 * Exact Words: A side quest you can take involves a Seward construct on the roof of the Temple of time, challenging Link to light four bonfires in the Sky Kingdom, without eating anything or touching any part of the ground except that roof.
 * Expansion Pack World: Hyrule is much bigger this time around, but rather than literally expanding it, new maps are added above and below the surface, with the Depths underneath and the Sky Kingdom above.
 * Exploding Barrels: Much like the previous game, these red barrels are often found in enemy encampments, causing damage to Link (or the enemies) if they explode. In addition to throwing them or triggering them with arrows, Link can Fuse them to his shield, giving any of the mobs trying to strike him in melee combat a nasty surprise. There are also cube-shaped explosives that go off after a few seconds after being struck by a weapon.
 * Exploding Barrels: Much like the previous game, these red barrels are often found in enemy encampments, causing damage to Link (or the enemies) if they explode. In addition to throwing them or triggering them with arrows, Link can Fuse them to his shield, giving any of the mobs trying to strike him in melee combat a nasty surprise. There are also cube-shaped explosives that go off after a few seconds after being struck by a weapon.

F

 * Fantastic Flora: In addition to the fruits and vegetables that Link can harvest and use, there is Sundelions, flowers found in the Sky Kingdom that hold solar power within, and are able to cure the debilitating effect of the Gloom. The Depths are covered with forests of strange twisted trees with fronds resembling peacock feathers, and strange purple grass. They're also gigantic mushrooms and weird fern-like plants.
 * Fantastic Fruits and Vegetables: The stat boosting fruit and mushrooms return from the previous game (except Hearty Durans), with a lot of new ones appearing, such as elemental fruit that can be bonded to weapons in order produce bursts of flame, frost, electricity, water, or flashes of light. There are also muddle buds, whose pollen disorients living creatures, puffshrooms, whose spores create obscuring smoke, and the explosive bomb flowers.
 * Faux Affably Evil: When Ganondorf swears fealty to Rauru, he speaks politely to the honorable king... but that politeness is insincere and dripping with poorly-hidden contempt for the man, his wife, and his kingdom. Unsurprisingly, Rauru knows that he's full of shit, but plays along so he can keep a closer eye on him.
 * Fat Bastard:
 * Hinoxes are as grotesquely fat and brutish as ever, but now we have Boss Bokoblins thrown into the mix. They're the bigger, fatter, meaner King Mooks of the Bokoblins and lead hordes of their lesser brethren into battle. When they're not patrolling the Hylian wilderness, Boss Bokoblins can be seen lazily lounging around and doing nothing.
 * And of course,
 * While it doesn't last, Yunobo goes from a Cowardly Lion and bonafide Nice Guy to an abrasive, slimy Jerkass who gladly spreads the highly-addictive Marbled Rock Roast throughout Goron City.
 * Feed It a Bomb: Much like Dodongos, you can do some serious damage to Froxes by hurling bombs into their open maws.
 * Fighting Your Friend: At Goron City, Link has to fight Yanabo to free him from the evil mask that has rendered him brainwashed and crazy.
 * Fighting Spirit: Each of the Sages’ Vows except Mineru’s enables Link to call forth an avatar of the sage, which fights by his side.
 * Final Boss Preview: Phantom Ganon is the boss at the end of the Hyrule Castle part of the mainline quest (and he is also fought if Link defeats a Gloom Spawn) his fighting style and diligent attack patterns giving a brief preview of what Link will encounter against Ganondorf himself. Once Phantom Ganon is defeated, the real Ganondorf shows up briefly, but flees when the four Sages arrive to give Link backup.
 * Flechette Storm:
 * Fling a Light Into the Future: A major point of the plot. Ganondorf was far too powerful for the sages to defeat, but they managed to seal him away, which they knew was a temporary solution. Knowing he would eventually break his bonds, they did all they could to leave warnings, instructions, and other aid through their descendants, in hopes Link could succeed where they failed.
 * Floating Continent: The Sky Kingdom above Hyrule, an archipelago of floating islands holding ruins of the Zonai civilization
 * Flunky Boss: Queen Gibdo. Like any queen insect worth her salt, she sics hordes of Gibdo drones on Link and Riju during her boss fights.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * The game's logo is an ouroboros symbol composed of two dragons eating each other’s tails. This foreshadows
 * When Ganondorf wakes up in the opening scene, he clearly recognizes Zelda (although she has no idea who he is) but not Link, only assuming it is him because he has the Master Sword. The reason for this -
 * When Link receives the Recall ability from Zelda, it foreshadows his alliance with the Sages and how he will gain their Vows; Zelda is later revealed
 * On a similar note, the game at first implies that there are four Sages, one for each Elemental power, their oaths given to Link via rings on Rauru’s prosthetic hand. But… the hand has five rings…
 * At the end of the Great Sky Island section (the tutorial level, more or less) there is a strange cutscene that foreshadows many important events in the game:
 * First, when Link places the broken Master Sword in an orb of light; Zelda briefly appears, takes it, and vanishes. Astute players will notice how this scene resembles how the surroundings change when Recall is used. This subtly implies that Link is sending the Sword into the past so Zelda can retrieve it, although exactly how far into the past he sends it is not revealed until much later.
 * Second, after sending the sword to Zelda, the Light Dragon flies upwards through the nearby clouds, revealing the land of Hyrule below and eliminating the Broken Bridge that prevented Link from going there. The Light Dragon is later revealed to be Zelda herself, having sacrificed her mind and personality in order to nourish the Master Sword with divine light over ten-thousand years so it would be at full power when Link was able to obtain it. Her actions in this scene hint that a small trace of Zelda’s true consciousness still remains, which becomes evident in the Final Battle.
 * Third, before Link can take this newly-opened route to the surface, Zelda’s voice calls to him, telling him he must find her. Once the whole story is revealed, and it becomes definite that this is the real Zelda, . While the player might realize that on his own, gameplay wise there is no way to make the connection and consider her “found” until many of the memories are obtained from the Dragon Tears.
 * Also, there are many hints that foreshadow the identity of the Light Dragon:
 * First, the mere existence of the Dragon of Light is suspicious, as it was not one of the dragons in the previous game (all three of whom return in this one). Also, unlike those dragons, this one is not given a name. If Link gains a scale, horn, or claw from it, the description text says it exudes an “oddly familiar” power.
 * The quests to collect memories from the geoglyphs involves finding pools of water in the shape of glowing water, which become droplets that allow Link to view the memories from Zelda’s perspective.
 * Even the trailer has some hints to this. The second trailer ends with “Zelda’s Lullaby” played on an ehru,
 * "Friend or Idol?" Decision: In the opening cutscene, Link drops the Gloom-ravaged Master Sword in his attempt to catch Zelda as she falls; he doesn't succeed, but fortunately Rauru manages to pick the Sword up.
 * Free-Fall Fight: Colgera's boss fight mostly takes place in the sky, where a powerful updraft keeps Link afloat. Bonus points for being able to hurt the colossal monster through free-falling!
 * Fungus Humongous: Towering stalks of fungi grow like trees in the Depths. The caps of this giant fungus can be used as platforms for Link to use with Ascend in order to reach high cliffs.

G

 * The Ghost: Bizarrely, Kass of all characters is nowhere to be seen, but is instead alluded to by his daughters and Penn at the end of his sidequest chain.
 * Ghost Town:
 * Giant Spider: Marbled Gohma, who combines this trope with Giant Enemy Crab in true Gohma fashion.
 * G-Rated Drug: Marbled Rock Roast, a suspicious-looking cut of maroon-colored Rock Roast that messes with the minds of Gorons that eat it. They tend to either become lazy and lethargic, or aggressively try to push it onto other people, but the unifying thread is that they can't stop eating the stuff, and end up with red eyes to coincide with their addiction.