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#The Legend Of Zelda: Sprit Tracks
zerochancool · 9 months
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Spirit Tracks Is my new fav Zelda game
...hell I didn't put my signature-☠️☠️
translation:
Toon Link(ST): W-What!?
Toon Zelda(ST): dont worry!! I-im not going to look!!
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snowymountain · 2 months
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Imagine Warriors going home with the chain and then needing his train and the first thing the spirit train does is yell at him for leaving her!!! But not in common oh no no no Scottish Gaelic and legend is just in the background pissed because he doesn’t know the language. 
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go-learn-esperanto · 2 years
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I have heard that Legend of Zelda Sprit Tracks is one of the worst games to play in the series however can we talk about the story just for a moment?
So, you are telling me the hero of Hyrule, the warrior who is known for being good with a sword, is in this life a train conductor???
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And last time I checked the world of the Legend of Zelda series is one of fantasy and magic heavily based on medieval times. There is technology but it's very magical. Where did the trains come from????
Also, this game starts with princess Zelda being murdered but then she spends the whole game with Link as a ghost that possesses iron armours occasionally.
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She is, I believe, the only Zelda that is playable in the canonical series (so not counting Hyrule Warriors).
If I didn't know anything about the Zelda series I would've believed someone was fucking with me or very drunk if they told me the plot of this game. This sounds like someone's fever dream.
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Give it up for the best (very low definition) legend of Zelda duo: these idiots.
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Just stumbled into this video of a guy who didn’t play the original game until like... after Sprit Tracks and Skyward Sword and it’s a pretty good watch if you feel like you need to be sold on the original Legend of Zelda, or if you already love the original Legend of Zelda and you just want to feel vindicated ( like me )
I always give people who are trying to get into this game a ton of gameplay tips, like how you can only find one secret per screen and no secrets if there’s already a cave or dungeon there,  or how you can only bomb dungeon walls directly in the center, or how different enemies are more likely to drop different items...
But this guy’s perspective offered some tips I never thought to give that aren’t gameplay related at all but are just as important and it’s something I can kind of struggle with, and is something I didn’t really struggle with until I grew older and was able to buy and download a ton of games.
The tip being that you have to make the decision to sit down and play the game with the intent to finish it.  Not to just pick it up and play it a bit. Because you have soooo many games at your finger tips, so why bother learning how this one works when you can just walk away forever at the first moment of frustration or a lull in the action/progression?   Now that I have a huge game library of both new and old games, i’ve fallen into that trap countless times and just never sat down with intent to finish unless it was a game I was already familiar with, or a new game I was hyped for after months of marketing and trailers. 
That tip is pretty brilliant, because it’s true, today, it’s easier than ever to amass a huge library of games and not have to commit to any of them.  And I don’t think that’s a good way to experience gaming as a hobby at all.
I talked about this on my general gaming blog, but I have started a project that has been a big help with this problem.  I’ve downloaded as many issues of Nintendo Power Magazine as a I can, and I’m going in chronological order ( though I suppose you could also pick at random ) and I’m choosing at least two games from the issue to play, with intent to finish those games. I cannot move on to the next issue without finishing at least one game featured in an issue.  And i’ve played a ton of games to completion that I never really would have finished otherwise.  And I’m having fun with them too... not to say I haven’t rage quit a few times as well.  Ikari Warriors can suck a fat one, and while Air Forrtess is fun, it got a little too tough half way in.  But more often than not, i’m able to stick with these games.
Anyway, just watch the video I guess.  Or go play Zelda.
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nicoducon · 1 year
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Ep. 1 of explaining how long Ganondorf has been sealed under Hyrule Castle before Tears of the Kingdom and trying to figure out what timeline the game belongs to.
The common answer here is 10000 years, referring to the prophecy in Breath of the Wild, but it's not that, not even close. It's much more than that actually, since the cutscenes in botw talk about Calamity Ganon, not Ganondorf himself*. In the timeline, Ganondorf hasn't been seen since The Wind Waker or Twilight Princess, both of which are the same Ganondorf from Ocarina of Time.
At the time of Breath of the Wild, these events have become nothing more than myths, tales so old that historical facts have become impossible to tell apart from fairy tales. The series gives so little clues as to how much time has passed between games that it is impossible to determine how much time has elapsed. The only basis we have is that there is 10000 years before BotW and the events of OoT/TP/WW had already been almost forgotten by then. BotW is probably so far in the future compared to the events of other games that it is impossible to tell which timeline it belongs to. But we can try :)
The Downfall timeline doesn't feature a Ganondorf, instead he turns into Ganon when he is sealed in the Dark World and remains as Ganon throughout the timeline until he is killed in The Legend of Zelda.
The Adult timeline starts with the same Ganondorf from OoT in the Wind Waker breaking his seal after ages of being imprisoned. Hyrule is then flooded by the gods after Ganondorf brought darkness over the land. Multiple hundreds of years after the flood, Wind Waker happens and Ganondorf gets stabbed in the head with the Master Sword, turns to stone and is left in old Hyrule to be flooded and forgotten.
Not Ganondorf not Ganon are heard of after Wind Waker and Link and Tetra go on a search for a new Hyrule elsewhere with Phantom Hourglass and Sprit Tracks happening later. I find it hard to believe that BotW could be in this timeline because Hyrule (and therefore Ganondorf and the Master Sword ) is sunken deep below the great sea and new Hyrule is in some other place far away.
The Child timeline starts with Majora's Mask but since it takes place in Termina it doesn't affect anything in Hyrule. The first major events in Hyrule are OoT Ganondorf's failed execution and sealing in the Twilight realm. The events of Twilight Princess take place and Ganondorf is killed "for good" by Link. Four Sword Adventures happens hundreds of years later and the Links seal Ganon within the Four Sword. BUT this isn't the same Ganondorf as in OoT, it is a reincarnation, a "new iteration" of the character, which means that the original Ganondorf's corpse could very well still be around.
I find this timeline to be the most plausible simply because most of the adult timeline happens in other lands far away and the downfall timeline doesn't feature a Ganondorf after the one from OoT turned into Ganon and was killed.
But BotW and TotK could be so distant in the future that this could be an entirely different Ganondorf that we haven't seen or heard of yet. In this case the story doesn't connect with the other ones and is so distant that the timeline literally doesn't matter because anything could've happened. The great sea could've dried out and Hyrule restored, this Ganondorf could be from another story similar to TP's failed execution but thousands of years later with a totally different story. We know so little about the setting of BotW & co. compared to the other games that anything could be possible. It could even be another timeline in itself where Ganondorf was successfully executed. Or it could even be in between two games that had an arbitrary amount of time separating them that ended up being far longer than we thought.
This ended up being longer than I thought, as always.
*The difference between Ganondorf and Ganon is important. Ganondorf is his gerudo form, like in OoT, WW and TP. Ganon is the giant boar from, a physical manifestation of his power and hatred.
These are Ganondorf
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And these are Ganon
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I'm not including Calamity Ganon and Dark Beast Ganon here because they might actually be a sort of Phantom Ganon, akin to the ones from OoT and WW, and like the blights too. Not actually Ganon nor Ganondorf, but a puppet controlled by him.
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phoenix-quinn · 3 years
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OMG its February 2015 AGAIN and I just bought my FIRST DIGITAL GRAPHICS TABLET. And I was redrawing my cartoon Link UwU. I was using the tool which lets me draw over a finished picture so all I really did was copying the nintendo splash art (?) idk what it was really. It was my first attempt haha. Also look at the hell of a laptop i got back then ufffff
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flightyfinch · 5 years
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we're finally getting it lads
legend of zelda sprit tracks vr
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krisispiss · 6 years
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Hot take:
None of y'all appreciated The Legend of Zelda: Sprit Tracks enough
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bennycoram · 7 years
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If anyone want to buy Legend Of Zelda: Spirit Tracks demo game I’m selling it on eBay right now, if you live outside of the uk message me. HERE —> https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/272790934559
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wazafam · 3 years
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In the Legend of Zelda series from Nintendo, Ganon is often depicted as the final “big bad,” desperately trying to take over the Kingdom of Hyrule. From 1986’s The Legend of Zelda to 2020’s Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity, Ganon is continuingly trying to spread his corruption across the peaceful lands of Hyrule.
While others have also attempted to take over Hyrule, such as Chancellor Cole in Sprit Tracks and Ghirahim from Skyward Sword, none have made such an impression as that of the flame-haired Gerudo King. Thankfully for the many races that inhabit this vast fantasy world, Link is always there to ready his weapons and put Ganon back in his box time and time again.
Related: Zelda: How Old Link Is In Breath of the Wild
As the Legend of Zelda series has developed over the 35 years since its debut on the NES, so has the character of Ganon. His plots, and incarnations, have become more convoluted, extravagant, and cinematic. Here is every time Ganon has attempted to take over Hyrule (and every time Link has prevented him from doing so).
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The game that started it all. 35 years ago, gamers were first introduced to the Kingdom of Hyrule, its plucky hero Link, and the porcine Ganon in The Legend of Zelda. During the game’s introduction, players learn how "Prince of Darkness" Ganon stole the Triforce of Power. To prevent Ganon from finding the piece of Triforce in her procession, Princess Zelda broke the Triforce of Wisdom into eight pieces. Before she is captured by Ganon, Zelda sends her nursemaid, Impa, to find a hero (enter Link) to collect the eight fragments before embarking on defeating Ganon. Link will only come face to face with Ganon in the game’s climatic final battle in Death Mountain. On defeating Ganon, who ends up being an especially difficult foe given his penchant for turning invisible for most of the battle, Link will collect the Triforce of Power from his remains, thus saving the Princess, the Kingdom, and the day.
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While Ganon does not feature per se in this installment of the Legend of Zelda series, his minions are still alive and well, and doing his bidding from beyond the grave following on from his demise in The Legend of Zelda. Should the player receive a Game Over while playing The Adventure of Link, however, Ganon’s henchmen will take the blood of the now fallen Link and sprinkle it over their Master’s corpse to revive him. On doing this, players will receive the sinister message “Game Over. Return of Ganon.”
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Despite being the third time that players will have to save Hyrule from Ganon, chronologically A Link to the Past serves as a prequel to The Legend of Zelda. In this game, Ganon is already sealed away in the Dark World (formerly The Legend of Zelda's Sacred Realm that has now become corrupted with Ganon’s dark influence) after he invaded it and obtained the Triforce. While Ganon is stuck in the Dark World, a wizard called Agahnim captures Princess Zelda in the Light World (Hyrule) and uses his power to send Zelda and Link to the Dark World with Ganon. This all part of an elaborate plan to break the seal that confines Ganon to this realm.
Related: Zelda Breath of the Wild 2 Leaked Names: Every Fake One So Far
Meanwhile, in the Dark World, Ganon controls an avatar of Agahnim within Ganon’s Tower, using this influence to build up his strength before he can proceed to overcome the Light World of Hyrule. When Link finally defeats this avatar of Agahnim in the Dark World, Ganon will rise from the wizard’s now useless body, turn into a bat, and fly to the Pyramid of Power. Here, Link will fight Ganon in his typical hog-esque appearance. When Ganon is finally defeated, Link will be able to touch the Triforce and use his essence of good to return Hyrule and the Sacred Realm to its former splendor. A Link to the Past is also notable for being the first time that the famous Master Sword appears within the Zelda series.
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Perhaps one of the most famous incarnations of Ganon, in Ocarina of Time players learn more about the King of Evil’s history and finally see him in both his human (Ganondorf) and eventual porcine form. This time, Ganon uses Link and Princess Zelda to uncover the three Spiritual Stones within Hyrule to unlock the Door of Time by cursing, releasing monsters into, and infecting the Great Deku Tree, Dodongo’s Cavern, and Lord Jabu-Jabu’s belly. These stones act as a key to the Sacred Realm, where the Triforce is kept.
Not realizing Ganon’s plan, Link uses the stones to unlock the door while Ganon lays siege on Castle Town. As soon as Link pulls the Master Sword from its pedestal, which is hidden behind the Door of Time within the Temple of Time, he is plunged into a seven-year slumber. Ganon takes this opportunity to enter the now open Sacred Realm and steals the Triforce. What Ganon did not count on, however, was the Triforce breaking up into three pieces due to the unbalanced nature of his desires. While Ganon maintains the Triforce of Power, the pieces of Wisdom and Courage go to Princess Zelda and Link, respectively.
In the seven years that Link is in his magical slumber and Princess Zelda is in hiding, Ganon rules over Hyrule while searching for the final two pieces of the Triforce. Once Link awakens as an adult with the power to wield the Master Sword, he sets off to undo the evil that Ganon has allowed to take over Hyrule during his rule. Eventually, Link is able to obtain enough power with the help of Princess Zelda (who has been hiding behind the pretense of being an enigmatic ninja named Sheik) and the newly awoken Sages (who are revealed as Link cleanses certain areas of Hyrule) and can head to Ganon’s Castle to do battle for Hyrule.
Related: Ocarina of Time Beta Leak Explained: What Zelda Fans Know Now
After defeating the human form of Ganondorf, and destroying Ganon’s Castle, however, a beast rises from the ruins; Ganon, his dark and powerful final form. Even though Link wins this battle, Ganon still possesses the Triforce of Power and ultimately cannot be killed. Instead, the Sages use their powers to seal Ganon away in the Dark Realm. Before he is fully sealed away though, Ganon vows to “exterminate (the) descendants” of Zelda and Link.
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While this game initially starts on the islands that are scattered across the Great Sea, eventually The Legend of Zelda players will be taken under the waters to the submerged Kingdom of Hyrule. In The Wind Waker’s history, Hyrule was flooded by the goddesses to contain Ganon, and its people fled to higher ground. But a little bit of water will not stop the mighty Ganon from trying with all his might to claim the power that he believes should to be his.
In this game, Ganon is shown several times on the islands above Hyrule, although it is not revealed to be him at first. Instead, he is shown to be the master of the Helmaroc King, who is kidnapping “girls with long ears” for a mysterious reason (which ends up being a bid for Ganon to find the descendant of Princess Zelda). Eventually it transpires that this incarnation of Ganon is a “returned Ganon.” Soon, Ganon recognizes Tetra, the feisty pirate comrade of Link’s in The Wind Waker, as the descendant of Ocarina of Time’s Princess Zelda.
He kidnaps Tetra / Zelda in the hope of uniting the pieces of the Triforce and finally securing his rule over Hyrule. After battling Link and revealing him to be the ancestor of the Hero of Time, Ganon manages to claim the three Triforce pieces and asks the Gods to “expose (Hyrule) to the rays of the sun once more” and to “give Hyrule to (him).” Obviously, he is ultimately unsuccessful. With the help of the King of Hyrule and Princess Zelda, Link once more takes the Master Sword and, after an intense subsea duel, plunges it into Ganon’s face. This results in Ganon being turned into a rocky edifice.
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In the GameCube offering of Hyrule, Ganon once more uses others to do his bidding before his true intentions are exposed. In the case of Four Swords Adventures, it is Shadow Link and Vaati who initially pose a threat to the Kingdom of Hyrule. As the game unfolds, Ganon is revealed to be the brains behind the nightmares that have gripped Hyrule, having stolen both a trident that was full of a powerful magic as well as a Dark Mirror, which he used to create the evil counterpart of Link.
Related: Complete Legend of Zelda Franchise Timeline Explained
Using Shadow Link to kidnap the powerful shrine maidens within Hyrule with the hope that he could add their power to his, Ganon proceeds to murder the Knights of Hyrule and trap their souls in the World of Darkness. Thankfully, Link possesses the Four Sword, and creates three additional clones of himself to battle the forces of evil. Once the Link quartet free the shrine maidens, Link uses their power and the help of Princess Zelda to overcome Ganon and seal him inside the Four Sword. Once more, peace and prosperity are brought back to the Kingdom of Hyrule.
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Again, Ganon uses others to do his bidding in Twilight Princess, this time using Zant, King of the Twili, to reign darkness over Hyrule. Zant and Ganondorf made a pact to grant each other the power they desire by overthrowing Hyrule and the Twilight Realm of the Twili. As the story progresses, it is revealed that the Sages of Hyrule once banished Ganon with the Mirror of Twilight after he tried to steal the Triforce. Zant tried to break the Mirror of Twilight, but instead just scattered the pieces across Hyrule as he is not the true ruler of the Twili (it is actually Midna, who is Link’s companion throughout Twilight Princess).
After a lengthy series of quests and temples, Link and Midna defeat Zant before heading to Hyrule Castle to take on Ganondorf. When they find him, Ganondorf possesses Princess Zelda to act as his puppet, before finally turning into a gigantic boar-like beast. Once Link slays this beast, Hyrule Castle begins to collapse. Midna uses her powers to transport Link and Zelda to Hyrule Field, and to safety. This safety does not last long for the heroes, though, as Ganon once more rises up in his human form to do battle with Link. On horseback, and with the help of Princess Zelda and some well-placed Light Arrows, Link knocks Ganon to the ground. Using the always-faithful Master Sword, Link finally plunges it into Ganon’s chest, once more releasing Hyrule from his evil grasp.
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In the most recent games in the Legend of Zelda franchise, Ganon is depicted as a beast of malice and machine. For the Switch era, Nintendo switched it up and created a Hyrule that was already under a significant threat from Ganon and his cronies. In Breath of the Wild, Ganon has already taken Hyrule under his control with the help of the Blight Ganons and hordes of bokoblins and lizalfos when the player's adventure begins. As the story is revealed through unlocked memories, it is shown that Ganon initially tried to conquer Hyrule 10,000 years before the game’s narrative.
Related: Zelda's 35 Anniversary: What Nintendo SHOULDN'T Do
At that time, he was locked away by four Champions of Hyrule in their Divine Beasts, a Princess with the blood of the goddesses, and her appointed knight. 9,900 years later however, Hyrule has unevolved and no longer commands the ancient tech of its predecessors. Princess Zelda, along with Link, Impa, Purah, Robi and the other races within Hyrule, have recognized signs that Ganon is once more going to attempt to break free of his seal and reign supreme over their Kingdom. In effort to stop this from happening, the heroes endeavor to learn the ways of their ancestors and control the mechanical beings that won the battle against Ganon 9,900 year prior.
Sadly, Ganon is wily, and manages to possess the Divine Beasts and the Guardians, and Hyrule falls to his malice. During the battle that eventually becomes known as the Great Calamity, Princess Zelda manages to seal Ganon in Hyrule Castle with her newly revealed magic, and a wounded Link is sent to the Chamber of Resurrection. After sleeping for 100 years, Link awakens to a derelict and fearful Hyrule that lives in the shadow of Calamity Ganon, who is trapped within Hyrule Castle and only being kept at bay by Princess Zelda, who is trapped there with him. As Link gets stronger and learns more about the world that he now inhabits, he is able to free the Divine Beasts from Ganon’s power and uses them to fight the malicious beast once more. Soon, Calamity Ganon transforms into his final form of malice and hatred; Dark Beast Ganon. With the added help of Zelda’s Bow of Light, Link defeats Dark Beast Ganon on Hyrule Field, and Zelda is once more free from her entombment within him. Using her magic, Zelda seals Ganon away, and peace is restored to Hyrule.
Age of Calamity, meanwhile takes place before and during the Great Calamity itself. Here, players meet Astor, a Prophet of Doom and follower of Calamity Ganon. Astor uses a Diminutive Guardian that is infected with Ganon’s malice to create Harbinger Ganon. Throughout Age of Calamity, Astor uses Harbinger Ganon to see the future, witnessing the devastation that Calamity Ganon is destined to bring to Hyrule. However, in his final moments Astor is consumed by malice and absorbed into Harbinger Ganon. This combination of powers results in Astor and Harbinger Ganon becoming the game’s ultimate boss; Calamity Ganon. While the end results of this rendition of the Great Calamity differ from how they play out in Breath of the Wild, this final incarnation of Ganon that players face during the games' finales is the same for both Legend of Zelda games available on the Nintendo Switch (so far…).
While Ganon has appeared or been mentioned in other The Legend of Zelda games, he is often being used as part of a greater plan by other antagonists, such as within Oracle of Ages and Seasons. Needless to say, he is certainly one of the most iconic and terrifying baddies in gaming today. Thankfully for the Kingdom of Hyrule, though, Link and Princess Zelda also happen to be two of gaming's most reliable heroes.
Next: Breath of the Wild 2: The One Zelda Character Who NEEDS A Voice Actor
Zelda: Every Time Ganon Tried To Take Over Hyrule, Explained from https://ift.tt/39pRmps
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snowymountain · 3 months
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So I saw a head canon for linked universe awhile, ago and I can’t get it out of my head so I’m going to share it with you all Warriors is sprit tracks link and I love that idea and that is now Canon for me and you cannot tell me otherwise 
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snowymountain · 2 months
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Some headcannons for wars aka our pretty boy!
* she/him pronouns 
* she joined the war at fourteen and lied about it and said she was sixteen
* she was fifteen during the war and it lasted for three years
* warriors is 18 during linked universe (nobody knows)
* she is sprit tracks link and can still have a full conversation with ghosts!
*she is not ok with flirting and she hates it
*link is not his first name it’s his middle name her real name is Athene
* the war trio (wind warriors time) can all remember each other
*she loves long hair but because she is in the military she’s not allowed to but Zelda is working on that policy to surprise him!
*she has the best handwriting in the chain
* while she was with the chain she let his hair grow out and now it’s just a little shorter than her mid back
*wind likes to braid her hair 
*she hates to be cold
* his scarf was a gift from Niko
*he likes to talk to winds ghost a lot and she visits every chance she gets 
*she’s not a natural blonde
* he has an accent and not just a country accent, a thick Scottish accent 
*helen of Troy
*she can draw really well!
* swears more than wind and in a Scottish accent
*he has curly hair!!!!
*Master at chess and beat legend multiple times 
* ghost king but he doesn’t know that the spirits have just elected him without his knowledge 
* too flexible like acrobat flexible
* loves dresses
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snowymountain · 2 months
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So I’m starting my own Links meet Au called Linked fates so meet number one on my list and tell me if you want more!
Eras.
*18.
*she/he
*was a captain in the army but was moved to bodyguard for the queen and can fight really well especially with her throwing knifes. 
*sprit tracks link and I will die on this hill.
*flexible (more flexible then legend and he’s so petty about it.)
*doesn’t like to talk and as a result he hangs out with tears and Hyrule as those two know more sign then the rest of the group!
*more clam then the rest of the group.(she still has problems and a lot of them..)
*the big sister of the group.
*really close to Time and Tune still.(and their Zelda’s ghosts!)
*hates public places with a lot of people.
*dies inside when legend calls him pretty boy.
* heterochromia
*has long hair and keeps them in -very long- braids!
*after the war and when she was promoted to the queen’s bodyguard she had to stop using her hair dye and now her hairs a red.
*she has a fiancé! Named melody. their queer platonic partners!
*Melody and eras live in a cottage in the middle of the woods together with dogs and cats.
*she might have PTSD from cia……..
*loves to draw!!!
*Brazilian, german snd Scottish (she can speak all three languages but legend can’t and she loves to rub it in)
* common was the hardest language to learn and she still has trouble speaking it and speaking in general.
*Niko gave her the scarf.
*Niko adopted her after her parents died and her grandmother took Linkle in.
*terrified of heights 
*sensitive to loud noises 
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