The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild: Difference between revisions

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* [[Go for the Eye]]: Hinoxes, but they will cover it if Link make too much damage.
* [[Go for the Eye]]: Hinoxes, but they will cover it if Link make too much damage.
* [[Healing Hands]]: Mipha's special ability is to be able to heal wounds with her hands.
* [[Healing Hands]]: Mipha's special ability is to be able to heal wounds with her hands.
* [[Heroic Mime]]: While this is the first Zelda game to have voice actors, Link, as always, remains silent.
* [[Heroic Mime]]: While this is the first Zelda game to have voice actors, Link, as always, remains silent. This is emphasized in one scene where [[Action Girl| Urbosa]] asks him a question, but he does not vocally answer, and she says, [[The Silent Bob| "Yes, your silence speaks volumes."]]
* [[Hero of Another Story]]: All four of the Champions qualify, each having gained heroic prestige among their own peoples long before meeting Link.
* [[Hero of Another Story]]: All four of the Champions qualify, each having gained heroic prestige among their own peoples long before meeting Link.
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: The easiest way of taking down a Guardian is parrying their attack with a shield, reflecting their energy beam attack back on them.
* [[Hoist by His Own Petard]]: The easiest way of taking down a Guardian is parrying their attack with a shield, reflecting their energy beam attack back on them.

Revision as of 02:00, 2 January 2019

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild is a 2017 video game developed and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo Switch and Wii U. Part of the Legend of Zelda series, his story happens in a place of the timeline long after any other installments of the series.

As usual, Link wakes up at the beginning of the game. This time however, he seems to wake up in a kind of hibernation chamber. And when he goes outside of the cave where the chamber was, he discovers something bad happened to Hyrule. Apparently, 100 years ago, an entity known as Calamity Ganon devastated the kingdom of Hyrule. It has been contained inside Hyrule Castle, but the time for his escape approaches. Guided by a disembodied voice, Link decides to go towards the castle.

Tropes used in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild include:
  • Amnesiac Hero: Link wakes up barely remembering anything other than his mission, but gains bits and pieces of his memories during the story.
  • An Ice Person:
    • There's Lizalfos with the ability to spit balls of Ice at Link. Fittingly, Link mostly founds them at the top of mountains or other snowy areas.
    • Sacred Beast Vah Ruta uses ice objects it creates to attack Link and Sidon. As it turns out, this was Waterblight Ganon's power all along, since it uses its ability again when Link fights it directly.
  • Apocalypse How: Class 0, but Calamity Ganon wants to make it Class 4, if not even worse.
  • Back from the Dead:
    • Implied by the name of the shrine where Link was sleeping, "Shrine of Resurrection", though Purrah affirms he was only seriously wounded, averting the trope.
    • During the Blood Moon, Ganon resurrects enemies slain by Link so they can try to kill him again.
  • Badass Princess: Zelda has fit the Trope before, but this is, without a doubt, the most badass version yet. She's been fighting Ganon nonstop for the past 100 years!
  • Bad Moon Rising: The moon turns red when Calamity Ganon's power rises to its peak. During that time, known as "Blood Moon", the enemies who Link have slain are raised from the dead to fight for Ganon, between other nasty side effects.
  • Bare Your Midriff: Urbosa's midriff is exposed, along the remaining of her abdomen.
  • Bat Out of Hell: Keese, pests who appear at night, sometimes in large swarms. Electric, fiery, and icy versions exist too.
  • Blob Monster: Chuchus, blue blobs with yellow eyes. Also come in Electric, fiery, and icy versions.
  • Bloodless Carnage: To a cartoonish level: if Link kills a normal animal, the animal puffs and turns into a piece of meat.
  • Can't Get Away with Nuthin': Link has to go all way back to the beginning of a path towards a shrine if he damages the flowers surrounding it. Even if the damage happens accidentally, like while fighting an enemy.
  • Charged Attack: The Guardian in the Soh Kofi Shrine has as last resort strategy a charged attack that leads to it to fire four consecutive laser beams on Link.
  • Continuity Nod: During a ceremony, Zelda makes references to others Links' lives:

Whether skyward bound, adrift in time, or steeped in the embers of twilight, the sacred blade is forever bound to the soul of the hero...

  • Convection Schmocvection: A rare case of a video game where this is subverted. Link cannot survive the superheated air in the Lethal Lava Land area without magical protection (either potions or special armor) and any combustible items he carries burn quickly. The closer he is to the source of the heat, the more protection he needs.
  • Cordon Bleugh Chef: Purposely Subverted. Link can cook some pretty potent Power-Up Food when he follows his recipes, but if he tries to cook ingredients that obviously shouldn't go together, like put bat wings in with apples and rice, all he'll get is a barely edible mess. Putting more than one stat enhancing ingredient in one dish will likely ruin it too.
  • Dead All Along: The Old Man in the Great Plateau is a dead king. More exactly, King Rhoam of Hyrule.
  • Deal with the Devil: What got the entity inside the Horned Statue an eternity of imprisonment by the goddess Hylia; she didn't like he was making outrageous deals like exchanging life for money, or the reverse.
  • Dem Bones: The Stalkoblins are reanimated corpses made entirely of bone, without one piece of flesh visible.
  • Eldrich Abomination: Ganon does not even remotely resemble a human in this version. His first battle form might be more of a Humanoid Abomination being a large bug-like Cyborg made out of Guardian parts and other Sheikah Tech, the only trace of the original Ganondorf being his red bearded face. It's revealed that he was trying to reconstruct a physical body before the battle, but all he managed was a half-rotting corpse. Ganon's final form has the title of "Hatred and Malice Incarnate", and truly fits this Trope, with Zelda stating Ganon has given up on trying to reincarnate. At least in the English version, that is. In the original Japanese version, he become this as a result of trying - and failing - to reincarnate himself.
  • Exposed to the Elements: Again, subverted. Link needs warm clothing or magic to survive blizzards and high altitudes, and the colder it is, the more protection he needs.
  • Fingerless Gloves: Zelda wears them, apparently only because it looks cool.
  • Go for the Eye: Hinoxes, but they will cover it if Link make too much damage.
  • Healing Hands: Mipha's special ability is to be able to heal wounds with her hands.
  • Heroic Mime: While this is the first Zelda game to have voice actors, Link, as always, remains silent. This is emphasized in one scene where Urbosa asks him a question, but he does not vocally answer, and she says, "Yes, your silence speaks volumes."
  • Hero of Another Story: All four of the Champions qualify, each having gained heroic prestige among their own peoples long before meeting Link.
  • Hoist by His Own Petard: The easiest way of taking down a Guardian is parrying their attack with a shield, reflecting their energy beam attack back on them.
  • Humongous Mecha: The Divine Beasts are robots constructed to fight Ganon, to be piloted by Champions.
  • Improvised Weapon: Link can use wood sticks as weapons.
  • Large and In Charge: Dorephan, king of the Zora, is gigantic, despite the fact his race have more humanoid proportions.
  • Mecha-Mooks: Kind of justified: Calamity Ganon don't seems to have tried to make any allies and, in fact, seems to not desire one since it wants to kill every living thing in Hyrule; so his mooks are the robotic Guardians, and even then he seems to have enslaved them more because he didn't want to risk having them as enemies than because he desired them as subordinates, because apparently they helped in defeating him before.
  • Miniature Senior Citizens: Impa has the size of a small child.
  • Money Spider:
    • Talus are huge rock-monsters who yield lots of gems when destroyed.
    • Kill enough mobs, and eventually silver versions of them will appear that, while harder, drop gemstones. In Master Mode, Gold varieties appear that are even tougher but drop more.
  • Mook Maker: Pools of Malice spit out monsters of their mouths when you approach.
  • Ms. Fanservice: In a game that isn't that sexual, Urbosa walks around using a scarf as a skirt and using only small breastplates to cover her torso. Without mentioning the high heels.
  • Not So Harmless Villain: The evil Yiga Clan are decent fighters, but their obsession with bananas and over-the-top buffoon of a leader may lead you into thinking that they are just comical foes like the Bokoblins. But then you learn about Dorian's backstory as a former Yiga Clan member. The Yiga Clan, in response to his defection, killed his wife and now threaten to kill his children if he does not give up information about Link and Kakariko Village. Even when he complies to their wishes, the clan members decide to execute him for outliving his usefulness, and would have succeeded if Link had not intervened. Despite their goofy demeanor, they are still a ruthless and murderous cult carrying out Ganon's will.
  • Older Than They Look: Purah has the looks and the size of a preteen thanks to an experiment Gone Horribly Right.
  • Overly Long Gag: Sidon swings his arm, smile, and his teeth shine. From the time you first meet him until Link has to go inside Vah Ruta, he probably already did that 12 times.
  • Plant People: The Koroks.
  • Properly Paranoid: Brigo has really reason to fear the end of the world, and he notices the right signals for it.
  • Reality Ensues: Link isn't immune via Exposed to the Elements; his health will become lower and he can even die of cold if you don't keep a heat source(like a flame) near him, or make him wear adequate clothes for cold.
  • Reptiles Are AbhorrentLizalfos, for more than one reason. They're tougher than Bokoblins, and unlike Bokoblins, are good swimmers, often ambushing Link from water.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: The Entity inside the Horned Statue is a demon that makes deals with people. You could argue people were only foolish to make deals with her...until the point where she takes one of Link's heart containers to force him into a bargain.
  • Shock and Awe: Electrical Keese, Electrical Chuchus, and Lightning Wizzrobes, as their names make it obvious. They'll try to shock Link by contact, but don't have other forms of attack.
    • Lizalfoes and Lynels often carry Shock Arrows; Link can use them too, and they are useful against enemies in water. They are required for the battle against Divine Beast Vah Ruta.
    • Thunderblight Ganon is a lightning-themed boss.
  • Starfish Robots: The Guardians have way more than four limbs and have cephalopode-like heads
  • Super Drowning Skills: Link's ability to swim is handled rather realistically; he can swim as long as his stamina wheel holds out. However, he can swim just as well in plate armor as he can in a regular shirt and trousers. It's different for monsters. Bokoblins swim about as well as anchors, and it's relatively easy to defeat a group of them by luring them into water. Lizalfos, however, can swim like fish and often ambush Link from water.
  • The Undead: Stalkoblins, reanimated Bokoblins' skeletons.
  • Underground Monkey: Keese, Lizalfos, and Chuchus come in normal, Fire, Ice and Lightning varieties; Wizzrobes have the same types except "normal". Octorocks have normal, Forest, Rock, Snow; Water, Treasure, and Sky varieties. Talos have lava and ice variants.
  • Video Game Cruelty Potential:
    • You can force Link to suffer in cold areas by removing his warm clothes, leaving him shivering. Conversely, you can also make him trudge through deserts and volcanoes in full metal armor.
    • Unlike other games in the series, horses can actually die from being hit by attacks. While this mainly means that the monsters you encounter have another target, this doesn't stop you from murdering your own horse if you feel it's outlived its purpose, or if you find a horse with a nicer-looking design or even better stats. And it's ultimately unnecessary, since you can have up to 5 at a time in the stables, and can let go the ones you don't want. Also, if you try to bring it near the lava in the Eldin region, the poor thing will burst into flames unlike other damage-registering NPCs.
    • While NPCs can't be harmed, you can still swing your weapons at them to make them scared or annoyed. They'll have a different reaction to your bombs, where they'll look at it in terror, track where it goes if you toss it, and then freak out proper when you detonate the bomb. They also have a different reaction to your attempts at setting them on fire with the Fire or Meteor Rod.
    • Fighting monsters has so many ways you can utilize: blowing them up with explosives, shooting elemental arrows at them, setting them on fire with a torch, blowing them off a cliff with a Korok Leaf... the possibilities are endless! But what takes the cake is what you can do to skeletons: You can beat one with its own arm, then steal its skull and run away with it while the rest of the skeleton desperately tries to take it back, and finally kick the skull off a cliff, after which the skeleton throws a fit in frustration before collapsing into a pile of bones.
    • Want to catch a whole school of fish but you’re too ill-equipped/lazy to swim after them? Simply let loose a Shock Arrow into their general area and watch them all float up to the surface of the water!
    • An old lady in Kakariko Village yells at you for stepping in her garden where she's growing her plum trees. She'll also yell at you if you blow up a tree with a bomb. Blow up all the trees and she gets depressed that her trees are all gone.
    • Like most games in the series, attacking Cuccos earns you the wrath of the Cucco Revenge Squad. However, due to the open world nature of this game, it is possible to kill them without consequences by carrying one all the way up to the hottest parts of the Eldin region and then throwing it into lava.
    • An NPC will give you 500 rupees if you agree to meeting a Great Fairy and making an offering in his place. Nothing is stopping you from ignoring the request and just keeping the money for yourself, though doing so does deprive you of a means of further upgrading your armour.
    • When you find an NPC looking over the edge of one of the towers, you have the option of having Link sneak up behind him and shout, "BOO!" (Don't worry, he doesn't fall.)
  • Trick Arrow: Link can use arrows that have elemental powers, like ice, fire and lightning.
  • You Kill It, You Bought It:
    • Link can use the clubs of Bokoblins he kills, though sometimes you just need to knock the weapon from their hands.
    • A pair of Bokoblins is cooking a piece of meat. Link can kill them and take their meat.
    • Taken to a literal level with the purple skull chests: you have to kill all the enemies in that area to be able to open it. You can drop a Bokoblin off a cliff but if he somehow survives landing down below, you have to drop his health to 0 to be able to open the chest.
  • Weakened by the Light: Undead foes only come out at night, unable to stand the sun.
  • Wham! Line: Practically every time you meet a traveler, and you discover who they belong to Yiga Clan, they drop one. Because they are a clan of ninja assassins whose whole purpose is killing Link, and after dropping the line they attack you.