The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom: Difference between revisions

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** If Link tries to enter the Gerudo Shelter before getting permission from Riju (which requires doing part of the mainline quest) the guards will kick him out like they did in ''BotW'', but if the player decides to truly tempt fate and sneak in after taking off all his armor, they’ll actually throw him in jail until her gets dressd. (The snarky jailer saying, “I know the desert is hot, but it’s not ''that'' hot!") They aren’t the only female NPCs who will notice if Link is only wearing his skivvies.
** Also, items you can pick up from bedside tables in both Gerudo inns - Goat Butter and Oil Jars. Draw your own conclusions.
* [[The Ghost]]:
* [[The Ghost]]:* Bizarrely, [[Ensemble Darkhorse|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.
** The Bandit Misko (assuming still alive) is never seen. Nothing is known of his (or to be fair, her) past or motivations.
* [[Ghost Town]]: {{spoiler|This is the state Gerudo Town is in when you first arrive: unrelenting sandstorms and ferocious Gibdo have forced the native Gerudo into an underground shelter, allowing the creepy zombie-bugs to roam freely above ground as they try to think of a way to drive them off for good.}}
* [[Giant Spider]]: Marbled Gohma, who combines this trope with [[Giant Enemy Crab]] in true Gohma fashion.
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* [[Glowing Eyelights of Un-Death]]: Ganondorf's decomposed form, which Link and Zelda encounter in the prologue, sports orange glowing eyes made of Malice upon becoming aware of their presence and turning to confront them.
* [[Godzilla Threshold]]: {{spoiler|Over the course of the story via the completion of specific quests, it is revealed that with Ganondorf assassinating Queen Sonia and claiming her Secret Stone for himself to become the Demon King, the Sages failing to defeat him, which forces Rauru to sacrifice himself to seal him away, Mineru sealing her soul within the Purah Pad, and with the Master Sword still destroyed from the beginning of the game, Zelda ultimately decides to swallow her Secret Stone and become the Light Dragon (a process that robs her of her humanity) to restore the Master Sword over countless millennia, until Link is ready to claim it once more.}}
* [[Good Bad Bugs]]: One way to benefit from the Blood Moon is to save all your cooking until it occurs. Anything cooked between 11:30 and midnight on the night of a Blood Moon will be a critical and the results will be maximum efficiency, and it’s possible to see it around 10:30 or so. However, should you need more than 30 minutes to cook everything in your inventory, there’s a useful glitch that can help. When it’s 11:50, teleport to a Shrine and enter the Shrine. This will cancel the actual Blood Moon effect until the next night, giving you an additional 30 minutes to use the cooking effect.
* [[Golden Ending]]: If the player completes all the main quests and views all the memories, {{spoiler| there is additional content in the end credits where Link and his allies say their goodbyes to Mineru, with the Sages promising to abide by their alliance and maintain peace in Hyrule.}}
* [[Good Bad Bugs]]: One way to benefit from the Blood Moon is to save all your cooking until it occurs. Anything cooked between 11:30 and midnight on the night of a Blood Moon will be a critical and the results will be maximum efficiency, and it’s possible to see it around 10:30 or so. However, should you need more than 30 minutes to cook everything in your inventory, there’s a useful glitch that can help. When it’s 11:50, teleport to a Shrine and enter the Shrine. This will cancel the actual Blood Moon effect until the next night, giving you an additional 30 minutes to use the cooking effect.
* [[Gory Discretion Shot]]: {{spoiler|In the flashback cutscene where Ganondorf murders Sonia, the shot is framed in a way that makes it impossible to even see how it happens or what sort of weapon he uses. Despite this, it is still'' terrifying'', adequately expressing that this is the ''exact'' point where he crosses the [[Moral Event Horizon]].}}
* [[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.
* [[Gravity Screw]]: some areas of the Sky Kingdom, most notably the Water Temple and the aria leading up to it, have a low gravity effect, enabling Link to clear much larger distances by a jumping.
* [[Green Rocks]]: Zonaite is a literal example, a glowing green mineral that is instrumental to the Zonai's miraculous technology. Link uses it to “glue” items (including Zonai technology) together via his Ultrahand ability, and to power his Autobuild ability, using the zonite to conjure the parts out of thin air. Zonite is also used to both fuel the battery used to power them, and upgrade the battery itself.
* [[Grievous Harm With A Body]]: Hoblins and Boss Bokoblins often attack by throwing things at Link, usually rocks or explosive barrels; they also tend to throw the regular Bokoblins at Link if there’s nothing else to throw.
* [[Ground Pound]]: Both Frox and Lynels have this as an attack.
** {{spoiler|Link himself can do this by infiltrating the Yiga Clan and learning the Earthquake technique. Having done that, by using the Attack command with no weapon equipped, he can cause the ground to shake under enemies, knocking them down.}}
* [[Guest Star Party Member]]: During the main story, Tulin, Yunobo, Sidon, and Riju will each accompany you to their respective dungeons and help you fight the monsters inside. While they leave your party once they awaken as Sages {{spoiler|aside from a few moments later in the story}}, they leave aspects of their powers with you that play the same role as they did.
* [[Guide Damn It]]:
** If you didn't learn it from the previous game, the game has nothing to tell you how to use the Rock Octorocks to repair weapons. It's certainly does not tell you about the trick you can use repair unique weapons either.
** A few items are tricky to use because the way they work is not immediately obvious. Hover Blocks for example. They negate up-down momentum (meaning, that if you place one in water, a buoyant object underneath will not push it aside) but not lateral momentum (if pushed from the side by an impact, it will movie in the direction it was pushed and not stop until it reaches an obstacle).
** All of the Shrines on the surface have a corresponding Lightroot underneath them in the depths, each Lightroot’s name being an [[Sdrawkcab Name| inverse of that of the corresponding Shrine]]. This makes the Shines invaluable for finding well-hidden Lightroots, and vice versa. The only clue you get to figuring out this system is a brief remark in one of the research notes during the quest to unlock the camera feature.
** Overlapping with [[You Have Researched Breathing]], Link's official signature look for this game pairs the Champion's Leathers armor with the Hylian Hood, with the hood worn down. In order to wear it that way however, you have to go speak to Cece after the election quest while wearing the hood. Do so, and she will adjust it so it is worn down. Nothing about the item’s description even suggests this.
** Speaking of which, the Champion's Leathers is pretty much a revamped version of the Champion's Tunic from the previous game, but unlike that older set, it does not let you see the exact hit points of opposing monsters. Its new effect, which is not mentioned anywhere in the items description, is to use the beam casting ability of the Master Sword even when Link is not at full health.
** The questline, "A Call from the Depths". Simply ''starting'' the quest is a puzzler. The Goddess Statue tells in the Temple Ruins tells you “I am trapped… under the water… behind the stone gate… of the Great Plateau.” Most players assume this stone gate is on or near a body of water on the Plateau itself, but… where? The Great Plateau has ''many'' lakes, rivers, ponds, and one waterfall, but none seem to have any stone gate, and many players have searched the whole area for hours without finding what they are looking for. {{spoiler| To find the solution, you actually have to ''leave'' the Great Plateau, find a breakable stone wall on the cliffside of it, and then break it, an action that causes the Reservoir to drain, revealing the gate (more of a dam or sorts) and the small Collector Statue. This also grants you an easier way to access the Plateau, by the way.}}
 
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