If I'm not mistaken didn't someone post a poll on this exact same topic last year. I mean I feel this is a clone of that thread with the exact same wording and everything.
Yeah, clear back on page 5-6 of this thread I stated I think the Timeline is bullshit thrown together to shut fans up. It is pretty obvious. However, at least I could concede that it was official so my personal take on it was invalid. I find it funny that the "pro-femLink" side was using the timeline to defend and support the notion that there is no reason Nintendo can't or shouldn't do it. Now that someone listed a reason why the timeline actually leans towards "Link can't" suddenly the argument is "Well, the timeline is shit anyways". Seriously, go back and read those pages.Dragonbums said:You do realize that it wasn't up until now that Nintendo even so much as gave a shit about the Zelda timelines right? They even said years ago that they never really cared about which game took place first. However so many people bitched and cried about it to them that they finally slapped something together so people would leave them alone about it.Savagezion said:Well if you pay attention to the timeline Skyward Sword is where she is stated to be a goddess reincarnated.
That goes back to a previous argument I made about doing that now makes the characters even more generic than they already are. I couldn't give a shit about the timeline personally as I said before I see it as an excuse rather than lore. If you do this, now there are no more iconic characters in the series. Final Fantasy suffers because of this IMO. Right now Zelda and Links are iconic and that is what is so great about the series to me. Changing them and making them be able to be a bird or a fox makes them generic idle avatars that have a lesser value on what the image attached to the title looks like. When you say Zelda I picture the Zelda in SSBB and her early version on the first game and OoT. Just as I do with Link.But branching off is still branching off. When something deviates from the norm that means something different happened from the thing it originated from. Therefore it doesn't automatically invalidate a female Link at allThis is stated at the beginning of the timeline before any branching occurs and all branches come from that.
A person reincarnated into another form. That can be anything you can possibly imagine. I can reincarnate into the body of a fox. So what would happen if the Goddess reincarnated as a bird? There will obviously still be a Zelda. She will just not be the triforce of wisdom.However, that said, what do you guys think reincarnation is? A soul (the thing that makes you, you and me, me) is transferred from one body to a new one.
Sorry, I hadn't replied Asita but I have thought quite a bit about your reply. This response was a valid list of pros gained but all cons are left off the table. It's not so much a reason why they should gender bend Link but just some positive possibilities. None of which couldn't be used in a similar way to empower Zelda and successfully spin off. However, you have to spin Zelda off so well that little boys will want to play it. Hell, little boy culture is changing thanks to Pokemon and its clonage ironically enough. Link has been who he is for decades he grew up with me. Eventually he stopped aging and I was old enough to have responsibilities that made it hard to keep saving Hyrule with him. He is like an old best friend. Please don't cut off my friends genitals. There is nothing wrong with being a woman but he isn't one. The guy is so manly he can dress like a faery literally and make it look so bad ass. I was promised this wouldn't happen if Anita made that damned video. "The femenist agenda isn't trying to take your video games away"Asita said:In and of itself? Not much is gained. Ultimately it boils down to how it affects other aspects of the story being told. Hence why I suggested making a Link/Linika/Lyn/Lina from the Gerudo tribe because that has the potential to change the games' formula in interesting ways both in gameplay and lore[footnote]Part of me even wants to suggest that she might have a companion who's a dead ringer for the classic hero of time as a bit of a bait and switch[/footnote]. Conversely, there could also be a tale where Link is Zelda's bodyguard, confidant and body double in the event that the princess is indisposed or at risk. Again, in and of itself a gender switch is insignificant, but it does open up a few interesting possibilities in the stories that can be told.Savagezion said:The argument you are failing to notice is "Why?" What is gained by doing this? Variety? Hardly. A new perspective? Yeah right, it will still be silent protagonist saves Hyrule and the inept ruling family. Nothing is gained here. Ah, I know, it will break ground in the female protagonist movement. Oh wait, no it won't because it's LoZ one of if not the most famous and top selling franchises of all time. SO the argument remains "Why?" What does it serve?
That wiggle room is exactly why Link doesn't need to be a girl. I don't see a reason why you must change Link's gender to add depth here. The story isn't deep, pretty much anything'll do. The game isn't being sexist if it doesn't change Link and to do so would be pointless. Since the story can definitely see depth added and has plenty of available sources to draw upon (How awesome would a Total War: Hyrule be where you play as Zelda and you have Generals like Valkeria Chronicles? Yeah, pretty bad ass is right) Gender bending Link by itself isn't some genious or in depth writing tool and it brings nothing to the table. It is shallow with nothing supporting it. Gender bending is every bit as shallow as those saying the writing in the game already is.Dragonbums said:If Zelda wasn't the reincarnation of the Goddess, then that simply means she does not hold the triforce of Wisdom. She doesn't stop being "Zelda". Zelda's entire existence does not and should not hinge on a single aspect that she has.Savagezion said:If you are not the reincarnation of the goddess you are not Zelda.
Alternate timelines will affect that because they are alternate timelines. In an alternate timeline it is very possible for the Link, holder of the triforce of courage to be the ruler of Hyrule, and Zelda to not.That is either true of a character or not. Alternate timelines wont effect that.
Which will automatically put you in the position where we basically have a playable female "link" the only difference is that she is Zelda.
You keep acting like everything is set in stone and nothing can change, but there is far too much wiggle room for that to happen.
This on top of the fact that Nintendo does whatever the hell they want for the Zelda series anyway. The timeline theory only matters to people who spend far too much time looking into this stuff.
Well, not necessarily if you consider Avatar: The Last Airbender's take on it. Communicating to a past self is actually a strong aspect of reincarnation in Buddhism kind of. An enlightened man/woman will know all of their previous lives - thus know themselves and draw upon the wisdom of a past life. That is not to say that the monkey wrench is now solved but it didn't break it. The problem is that is more of something the Triforce of Wisdom would probably be able to do for you.Asita said:Problem is that you're invoking a premise that is not a given. Each Zelda is a different character with few obvious connections to one another. That Zelda in Skyward Sword is the reincarnation of a goddess does not immediately translate to Zelda in A Link to the Past being a reincarnation of that same goddess unless you can establish that the Zelda of A Link to the Past is the reincarnation of the Zelda in Skyward Sword. The same principle holds true for Link. While this is often implied to some extent, Twilight Princess throws a monkey wrench into the idea by having the Hero of Time's spirit persist in the world through the events of the game (That spirit who teaches you new moves? Strongly implied to be Ocarina of Time Link in game, flat out stated to be so in Hyrule Historia) thereby making a clear break in any hypothetical reincarnation chain, establishing that the reincarnation relation between installments is not a hard and fast rule that must be adhered to.Savagezion said:Well if you pay attention to the timeline Skyward Sword is where she is stated to be a goddess reincarnated. All alternate timelines branch off of that one. This is stated at the beginning of the timeline before any branching occurs and all branches come from that.
However, that said, what do you guys think reincarnation is? A soul (the thing that makes you, you and me, me) is transferred from one body to a new one. If you are not the reincarnation of the goddess you are not Zelda. That is either true of a character or not. Alternate timelines wont effect that. Your soul is your soul. Without souls, no reincarnation. I don't see what is so hard to grasp about that.
I told you to read up on lore because, to that point, you hadn't written any lore supported factual argument. You chose to take it as an offense, rather than me genuinely trying to share my interest and passion for this subject with another person.OlasDAlmighty said:You told me I should read up on Zelda lore. Your exact words were:garcian67 said:In now way did I call you ignorant. I have no idea of your knowledge of the lore, as you have never made an argument, citing examples from the lore, that includes the LoZ universe in a substantive way.OlasDAlmighty said:Okay, first of all I'm far more familiar with Zelda lore than you probably think. I'm maybe not quite as invested as you are, but I'm not some outsider looking in, so there's no need to tell me that I'm too ignorant to understand you or that I need to educate myself
"Please, I implore you, read some LoZ lore, digest it, make your own arguments from the source material."
So excuse me for misinterpreting that as a statement on my knowledge of the series.
It certainly makes it rather easy to refute an argument when you dismiss the entire thing offhand. Gender stereotypes were added as small anecdotes at the very end of my post on LoZ lore, they were added in an attempt to make what is a rather long post somewhat more colloquial in nature, so as to make the point more clear.OlasDAlmighty said:What arguments? Your gigantic post was more an analysis on themes you believed you had found in the series than any sort of straightforward argument. For some reason you decided to apply gender stereotypes to these themes so as to explain why Zelda and Link had to be female and male respectively.garcian67 said:Please respond to the arguments I made in the post where I actually argued, most of what you have quoted as fallacy have been clarifying statements not designed to stand on their own, but act in conjunction with my other post.OlasDAlmighty said:Okay, with that out of the way I'll respond to your arguments
It is sexist to say only certain genders could embody certain things. That statement, taken alone, is sexist by it's very nature. Which is why I make no such claims in isolation. I attempted to explain, strictly using the source material, why the cyclical nature of this history and the themes contained within make a female link a hard twist for the canon to accommodate.OlasDAlmighty said:If you'll recall I already challenged that point, saying it's borderline sexist to imply that only a woman could embody wisdom and only a man could embody courage.
In skyward sword, it is stated explicitly that this cycle, the goddess, the hero, and the evil, will continue ad infinitum. Unlike many of my points, this has been directly told to us by Nintendo.OlasDAlmighty said:According to who? You? That sounds like an assumption you've made?garcian67 said:This point is where our disagreement is, apparently. Zelda, in any game (except maybe spirit tracks, never played that one so no clue) is always Hylia.OlasDAlmighty said:Only the Zelda in Skyward Sword is specifically stated to be the reincarnation of Hylia, the rest are just descendants who inherent some power through the royal bloodline. I don't think it says anywhere that EVERY Zelda is a reincarnation of the goddess. Not that it even matters since there's no rule saying you can't reincarnate as someone of a differnet gender anyway.garcian67 said:Zelda is a the reincarnation of the goddess Hylia. This is the first reason "Zelda can't be a guy".
No. Hylia only takes on mortal form when she is needed to combat the evil. This is her role in destiny. This, again, is explained, directly in skyward sword. It is told to the audience by Hylia herself.OlasDAlmighty said:That assumption also brings up the problem of what happens when Zelda births a daughter, because both mother and daughter should inherit the Hylian power, yet they're alive at the same time. Are they somehow both Hylia?
If you refuse to budge on this point, despite any argument to the contrary, we have an impasse and further argument will only lead to frustration on both sides. If this is the case, then let this end. If it is not the case, then state Why you don't see this connection, and I will repeat/rephrase my argument to make the reasons that I believe this to be the case perfectly clear.OlasDAlmighty said:Anyway, even if this were to be true, I still don't believe it necessitates that Zelda always be female. And even if it DID, that wouldn't necessitate Link being male.
There is a difference. Link, for example, in most adventures does not appear to possess the spirit of the hero for much of his life. He is a simple boy/man until something spurs him to heroism, and he then becomes the hero. In the case of Zelda things operate differently. The hylian royal family has an intimate connection with the goddess, being that the progenitor of the line was the first reincarnation. Hylia does not use every family member as a vessel, though it is likely she acts as a kind of conscience or advisor as hinted at in A Link to the Past. When she takes direct physical form, it is as princess Zelda. It is always as princess Zelda, but that does not make every Zelda hylia, merely all of the Zeldas we have seen.OlasDAlmighty said:It seems like there's a difference between being possessed by a spirit, and actually being the literal reincarnation of a goddess, which is what you are claiming every Zelda is.garcian67 said:Just as Link always possesses the spirit of the hero, and Ganon/Gannon is Demise's malice given form. This is nigh on indisputable, as laid down, explicitly, in skyward sword.
This is correct. In Link's case, the connection is that it is the Spirit which holds the triforce of courage, and in Ganon's case that he is literally the physical manifestation of powerful evil.OlasDAlmighty said:I fully agree that Link and Ganon possess a spiritual connection to their former incarnations, as evidenced by them having the triforce of courage and power, and I don't believe that Zelda is any different.
Bolded the part that I will emphasize here. While, logically, you are completely correct, correlation does not equate to causation, in the analysis of a story, it is rather rare to be told such a point explicitly. We must then infer based on the evidence available, as I have.OlasDAlmighty said:What are you even talking about? Gods can be male or female. In some cultures certain genders may be more attributed to divinity than others but what does that matter to the Zelda series or the matter at hand?garcian67 said:The second is the long standing connection between feminine and divine.
This connection between femininity and divinity is explicit in the LoZ universe, which is what I was referring to. At no point did I bring in outside cultures. If you would like to refute the point that femininity and divinity are equated in LoZ, please present evidence.
How can I present evidence that something doesn't exist? I can't prove a negative. That's like trying to disprove God, or bigfoot. You're the one asserting a claim, the burden of proof lies on you. Yes it's true that there are lots of female characters in Zelda who are also divine or connected to divinity, but that doesn't mean that femininity itself is devine.
You began to talk of various cultures on Earth, which is what prompted my comment on outside cultures having no relevance. I hope I have addressed your skepticism regarding my claim between women and the divine.OlasDAlmighty said:I'm not trying to bring anything outside the series into it. I only assumed that you were because you kept claiming that femininity and divinity were closely connected, which is true in some pagan religions and cultures, but not in Zelda as far as I can tell.garcian67 said:Again, at no point have I brought in outside cultures. The only rules a story has are the ones it sets for itself, and it is those rules which I am arguing from.OlasDAlmighty said:It seems like you're taking a bunch of old cultural stereotypes and treating them like they're some sort of unbending set of rules for how a fictional story is allowed to work.
I would appreciate you doing the same.
Precisely. I agree absolutely. This is a fantastic point and we should all keep it in mind. As I have said, it is entirely possible Nintendo could announce a fem link tomorrow, which could work if they gave it the canonical support it would need to stand on its own. All I am trying to say is that the current backstory/frontstory for the series has a solid mythos surrounding it which strongly precludes the presence of a female hero.OlasDAlmighty said:Anyway, my point is that you can't take these general conceits and treat them like unbending rules laying out what can or can't happen in a Zelda game.
I assume you meant a female link here, it's rather easy to type one thing and think another. It would, undoubtedly, bring energy to the series. I worry it might also bring a rather large amount of negative attention, mostly as it could be seen as a P.R. stunt by Nintendo simply trying to drive sales with manufactured controversy, and the community of gamers as a whole seems rather sensitive to gender issues lately.OlasDAlmighty said:When an archetype becomes worn out from overuse it can sometimes be good to turn it on its head. That's why I think a female Zelda would bring some energy to the series.
That's just the thing though, Zelda did stop ganon by herself. In OoT, after link returns to the past. He warns Zelda about what will happen if ganon is left unchecked. She uses this knowledge to prevent his rise to power and ganon is executed. She didn't do this on her own, without the hero, because she lacked the courage to take such a brash action (ganon was already influential and well-liked at the court). This is a perfect place to include a discussion of Link's reaction at this point as well:OlasDAlmighty said:I don't think stopping the (arguably) most powerful being in Hyrule is a fair requirement for proving that one has courage. Ganon can only be stopped by the power of the triforce, but he's special.garcian67 said:Sheik is Zelda's power focused into action. I ask you though, why she didn't use this power to prevent Ganon's rise to power? It is because she lacked courage, as explained in link's first talk with Zelda in OoT. Indeed, she has more than enough influence to stop ganon in those early years, as shown by the timeline branch where link succeeds, returns to the past, warns Zelda, and thereby presents Ganon's rise. Zelda didn't do this on her own, because she lacked the courage. She didn't act soon enough and bad things occurred. This, if you are familiar with LoZ lore, is the entire story.OlasDAlmighty said:Would you describe Sheik as being timid and weak? Would you describe Tetra as being timid and weak? Zelda has often appeared as strong and independent throughout the series, and I don't think her entire character and personality immediately changes the minute she puts on different clothes. In most of the Zelda games I've played she actively helps Link fight Ganondorf, often by firing arrows at him with Link's bow. Of course none of this has anything to do with the gender of the characters, I just thought it was something to point out.
Link is most certainly not the only person in hyrule to have courage. There are countless others. What link has over them, however, is that his courage is his defining trait. Link doesn't think things through, he follows blind passion and does things other would consider foolish. The first hero shows this completely, when he ventures, alone, to the monster infested surface to rescue a friend who most people would write off as dead or not worth saving. It is this blind courage that separates the hero from the other characters.OlasDAlmighty said:I'm talking about one's general personality, not the magical forces they have locked away inside their hand. Anyone can have courage, Link has the triforce of Courage but that doesn't mean he's the only person in all of Hyrule to have any courage.
I wouldn't go that far. What Zelda has shown, through gameplay with the certain boss fights, and in OoT with sheikh, is that when she must act, she will, and she will take a wise action. What she hasn't shown, is the blind courage of the hero. Zelda, as the vessel of a goddess, is blessed with almost prescient wisdom. She mentions seeing ganon destroy the world in her dreams in OoT, yet she still doesn't act until it is too late. This is what separates her and the hero, and why Hylia and the hero need each other.OlasDAlmighty said:Zelda has proven in many instances that she can be a bold, daring character
Of course she isn't always timid (saying she was weak was a comment on her physical nature, not her personality). A character needn't display a trait at all times for it to be an important character trait. As above, when Zelda is forced to action, she acts. When she has the option to wait, however, she bides her time. Even as sheikh, all she was doing was concealing her location from ganon. She didn't awaken the sages or attempt to turn Nabooru into an informant, she waited for the hero.OlasDAlmighty said:At the very least she isn't always "timid and weak" like you described.
Link does not appear cowardly in any sequence involving enemies, to my knowledge. Your comment about redheads I assume is directed towards to light flirting that occurs in the series? in which case bashful might be a better word? I am not sure of your meaning here.OlasDAlmighty said:Vice versa there are certainly instances where Link appears cowardly. (see anytime he encounters a redead)
There is no burden of proof, because we aren't trying to prove anything. It is impossible, with the evidence we have, to say decisively one way or the other what is possible. What I am trying to do is explain that the lore does not currently support a female incarnation and it would require revision should such a change be made.OlasDAlmighty said:That's what I'm trying to do, however it's difficult when you're so vague and longwinded about what your points actually are. Plus you're asking me to provide evidence and examples when the burden of proof really does lay on you to explain why a female Link can't happen.
Unless I have missed places, which is possible, I always mention which game I am referring to when I make a claim. This I have been very careful about. If there is a certain point I made that you would like me to source I would be more than happy to.OlasDAlmighty said:Not to mention the fact that you yourself have rarely provided any sort of specific examples to back up your points. I'm still waiting to see the evidence that every single Zelda is the reincarnation of Hylia.
I don't see how zelda would be more boring then link. Link's a completely blank slate whereas zelda actually says things and does things on her own valition rather then just being railroaded towards it by other characters.OlasDAlmighty said:Zelda would be a very boring playable character wouldn't she? I mean unless her character was completely changed at which point it might as well not be her anymore. Also, it's not really gender swapping if there's no rule saying Link can't or shouldn't be female in the first place.
In regards to the fanbase comment, I think I am in error as I don't really know the fanbase that well so I made an assumbtion and I apologize.OlasDAlmighty said:I'm a member of said fanbase, and I certainly wouldn't get up in arms. Nor can I see the rest of us. In fact I think it would be met rather positively, if it made a stir at all.
And lastly, I question why you think Nintendo isn't progressive. What exactly is your reasoning behind that belief? Nintendo does have a strong sense of tradition, but they also like to combine old ideas with new ones. Take Kirby Epic Yarn, a classic Nintendo character with a completely new aesthetic and play style. Or even the most recent 3D Zelda, which had a reworked set of combat mechanics. It's not like they don't like to experiment with new ideas, and this would be a relatively harmless one.
No it hasn't. Yes, the CYCLE will repeat. The cycle of Ganon rising and Link defeating him with the power of Zelda and the triforce. This doesn't mean that Zelda will be always be a reincarnation of Hylia each time.garcian67 said:In skyward sword, it is stated explicitly that this cycle, the goddess, the hero, and the evil, will continue ad infinitum. Unlike many of my points, this has been directly told to us by Nintendo.OlasDAlmighty said:According to who? You? That sounds like an assumption you've made?garcian67 said:This point is where our disagreement is, apparently. Zelda, in any game (except maybe spirit tracks, never played that one so no clue) is always Hylia.OlasDAlmighty said:Only the Zelda in Skyward Sword is specifically stated to be the reincarnation of Hylia, the rest are just descendants who inherent some power through the royal bloodline. I don't think it says anywhere that EVERY Zelda is a reincarnation of the goddess. Not that it even matters since there's no rule saying you can't reincarnate as someone of a differnet gender anyway.garcian67 said:Zelda is a the reincarnation of the goddess Hylia. This is the first reason "Zelda can't be a guy".
Then why is Zelda's power passed down through her bloodline as stated in the games and every wiki page about her or the royal family?garcian67 said:No. Hylia only takes on mortal form when she is needed to combat the evil. This is her role in destiny. This, again, is explained, directly in skyward sword. It is told to the audience by Hylia herself.OlasDAlmighty said:That assumption also brings up the problem of what happens when Zelda births a daughter, because both mother and daughter should inherit the Hylian power, yet they're alive at the same time. Are they somehow both Hylia?
Please provide evidence of this assertion. I've already provided my counter evidence above.garcian67 said:There is a difference. Link, for example, in most adventures does not appear to possess the spirit of the hero for much of his life. He is a simple boy/man until something spurs him to heroism, and he then becomes the hero. In the case of Zelda things operate differently. The hylian royal family has an intimate connection with the goddess, being that the progenitor of the line was the first reincarnation. Hylia does not use every family member as a vessel, though it is likely she acts as a kind of conscience or advisor as hinted at in A Link to the Past. When she takes direct physical form, it is as princess Zelda. It is always as princess Zelda, but that does not make every Zelda hylia, merely all of the Zeldas we have seen.OlasDAlmighty said:It seems like there's a difference between being possessed by a spirit, and actually being the literal reincarnation of a goddess, which is what you are claiming every Zelda is.garcian67 said:Just as Link always possesses the spirit of the hero, and Ganon/Gannon is Demise's malice given form. This is nigh on indisputable, as laid down, explicitly, in skyward sword.
But why? you ask, are all of the zeldas Hylia?
In three sentences: Hylia is necessary to defeat the evil which threatens the land. Were she to not appear, the hero would fail and the world would be conquered/destroyed/enslaved and so on. This hasn't happened (with the exception of one branch of OoT) and thus every Zelda we have seen is Hylia.
You're still missing the point. I'm not talking about her possessing the courage to stop Ganondorf. I'm just talking about courage in general. You were basically describing her as a big pussy who couldn't do anything physical or dangerous on her own. And I think that's untrue in at least several of the games.garcian67 said:That's just the thing though, Zelda did stop ganon by herself. In OoT, after link returns to the past. He warns Zelda about what will happen if ganon is left unchecked. She uses this knowledge to prevent his rise to power and ganon is executed. She didn't do this on her own, without the hero, because she lacked the courage to take such a brash action (ganon was already influential and well-liked at the court).OlasDAlmighty said:I don't think stopping the (arguably) most powerful being in Hyrule is a fair requirement for proving that one has courage. Ganon can only be stopped by the power of the triforce, but he's special.
You can call it "wise action" if you want. It doesn't change the fact that she often puts herself in dangerous situations that a more fearful person would shrink away from. She may be doing it for a logical reason, but it still requires courage I'd argue.garcian67 said:I wouldn't go that far. What Zelda has shown, through gameplay with the certain boss fights, and in OoT with sheikh, is that when she must act, she will, and she will take a wise action.OlasDAlmighty said:Zelda has proven in many instances that she can be a bold, daring character
I said "REDEAD" not "REDHEAD", as in these things:garcian67 said:Link does not appear cowardly in any sequence involving enemies, to my knowledge. Your comment about redheads I assume is directed towards to light flirting that occurs in the series? in which case bashful might be a better word? I am not sure of your meaning here.OlasDAlmighty said:Vice versa there are certainly instances where Link appears cowardly. (see anytime he encounters a redead)
Not even close. You must not have been here when Mass Effect 3 came out.garcian67 said:Record for Longest post?
It goes both ways. The wiggle room can also be exactly why Link can be a women if Nintendo so chooses to.Savagezion said:That wiggle room is exactly why Link doesn't need to be a girl.
Nobody claimed that making Link a women for a game was going to add depth. At most people suggested that it might add interesting gameplay changes such as if said female Link was a Gerudo.I don't see a reason why you must change Link's gender to add depth here. The story isn't deep, pretty much anything'll do.
And nobody claimed that Link not being a woman was sexist either.The game isn't being sexist if it doesn't change Link and to do so would be pointless.
Who is claiming that a female Link will add more depth into the games?Gender bending Link by itself isn't some genious or in depth writing tool and it brings nothing to the table.
There is nothing really supporting a male Link either aside from being the default gender for 20 years simply due to fan familiarity.It is shallow with nothing supporting it.
Genderbending is only shallow to you. However for other people it can be a pretty fun and creative outlet. Look how popular the genderbent Adventure Time characters are. They got so popular that they were even thinking about doing an offshoot series. Nobody got their panties in a twist about that.Gender bending is every bit as shallow as those saying the writing in the game already is.
Excellent.OlasDAlmighty said:Okay, just to start off I think we've reached an agreement on a lot of things, so I'm only replying to the few points you made that I still take issue with.
All of this is true, unequivocally.OlasDAlmighty said:No it hasn't. Yes, the CYCLE will repeat. The cycle of Ganon rising and Link defeating him with the power of Zelda and the triforce. This doesn't mean that Zelda will be always be a reincarnation of Hylia each time.garcian67 said:In skyward sword, it is stated explicitly that this cycle, the goddess, the hero, and the evil, will continue ad infinitum. Unlike many of my points, this has been directly told to us by Nintendo.OlasDAlmighty said:According to who? You? That sounds like an assumption you've made?garcian67 said:This point is where our disagreement is, apparently. Zelda, in any game (except maybe spirit tracks, never played that one so no clue) is always Hylia.OlasDAlmighty said:Only the Zelda in Skyward Sword is specifically stated to be the reincarnation of Hylia, the rest are just descendants who inherent some power through the royal bloodline. I don't think it says anywhere that EVERY Zelda is a reincarnation of the goddess. Not that it even matters since there's no rule saying you can't reincarnate as someone of a differnet gender anyway.garcian67 said:Zelda is a the reincarnation of the goddess Hylia. This is the first reason "Zelda can't be a guy".
I followed your suggestion and actually did some research to confirm this. Here's the wiki page for [a href="http://zeldawiki.org/Hylia"]Hylia[/a]. Notice the part where it says:
"Beginning as a divine entity, she was later, by her own choice, reborn into a mortal form as the first incarnation of Zelda, making her the true ancestor to the Royal Family of Hyrule and explaining the magical powers passed down within their bloodline."
Keywords: first incarnation
It isn't a matter of simple inheritance, however. Every member of the royal family possesses some measure of Hylia's power due to blood relation with her first mortal form. This much is known and agreed upon.OlasDAlmighty said:If you read the page for [a href="http://zeldawiki.org/Princess_Zelda"]Zelda[/a] it basically says the same thing from Zelda's perspective. The first Zelda in Skyward Sword was the reincarnation of Hylia, every following Zelda was simply inheriting the power through the Hyrulian bloodline.
No, we aren't lucky enough to have such a thing stated explicitly. Whether each Zelda is Hylia herself or merely possesses a measure of Hylia's power, the argument at large is not greatly weakened.OlasDAlmighty said:Never, anywhere, is it stated that each Zelda is herself a reincarnation of Hylia, and it's strongly implied that that isn't the case. If each Zelda is actually Hylia herself, Nintendo hasn't said so to my knowledge.
The power is passed to every member of the family, but we have only ever seen young princess zeldas use it. There was a time when a king of hyrule used the triforce and (likely) the power granted to him by hylia to keep hyrule at peace for a long time, but this is never the setting for a game, only told in the lore.OlasDAlmighty said:Then why is Zelda's power passed down through her bloodline as stated in the games and every wiki page about her or the royal family?garcian67 said:No. Hylia only takes on mortal form when she is needed to combat the evil. This is her role in destiny. This, again, is explained, directly in skyward sword. It is told to the audience by Hylia herself.OlasDAlmighty said:That assumption also brings up the problem of what happens when Zelda births a daughter, because both mother and daughter should inherit the Hylian power, yet they're alive at the same time. Are they somehow both Hylia?
If it's simply Hylia taking human form why would she always have to be a direct descendent of the first Zelda? Couldn't she just be any random chick, or guy for that matter?
Evidence of which assertion?OlasDAlmighty said:Please provide evidence of this assertion. I've already provided my counter evidence above.garcian67 said:There is a difference. Link, for example, in most adventures does not appear to possess the spirit of the hero for much of his life. He is a simple boy/man until something spurs him to heroism, and he then becomes the hero. In the case of Zelda things operate differently. The hylian royal family has an intimate connection with the goddess, being that the progenitor of the line was the first reincarnation. Hylia does not use every family member as a vessel, though it is likely she acts as a kind of conscience or advisor as hinted at in A Link to the Past. When she takes direct physical form, it is as princess Zelda. It is always as princess Zelda, but that does not make every Zelda hylia, merely all of the Zeldas we have seen.OlasDAlmighty said:It seems like there's a difference between being possessed by a spirit, and actually being the literal reincarnation of a goddess, which is what you are claiming every Zelda is.garcian67 said:Just as Link always possesses the spirit of the hero, and Ganon/Gannon is Demise's malice given form. This is nigh on indisputable, as laid down, explicitly, in skyward sword.
But why? you ask, are all of the zeldas Hylia?
In three sentences: Hylia is necessary to defeat the evil which threatens the land. Were she to not appear, the hero would fail and the world would be conquered/destroyed/enslaved and so on. This hasn't happened (with the exception of one branch of OoT) and thus every Zelda we have seen is Hylia.
I will address this later on in the statements about blind courage and character flaws, as I believe it will fit best there.OlasDAlmighty said:You're still missing the point. I'm not talking about her possessing the courage to stop Ganondorf. I'm just talking about courage in general. You were basically describing her as a big pussy who couldn't do anything physical or dangerous on her own. And I think that's untrue in at least several of the games.garcian67 said:That's just the thing though, Zelda did stop ganon by herself. In OoT, after link returns to the past. He warns Zelda about what will happen if ganon is left unchecked. She uses this knowledge to prevent his rise to power and ganon is executed. She didn't do this on her own, without the hero, because she lacked the courage to take such a brash action (ganon was already influential and well-liked at the court).OlasDAlmighty said:I don't think stopping the (arguably) most powerful being in Hyrule is a fair requirement for proving that one has courage. Ganon can only be stopped by the power of the triforce, but he's special.
I am not treating his blind courage as a positive trait, as I mentioned before, without being tempered by Zelda at several points throughout the series, Link would have been killed before he was able to amass enough power to actually defeat ganon.OlasDAlmighty said:You can call it "wise action" if you want. It doesn't change the fact that she often puts herself in dangerous situations that a more fearful person would shrink away from. She may be doing it for a logical reason, but it still requires courage I'd argue.garcian67 said:I wouldn't go that far. What Zelda has shown, through gameplay with the certain boss fights, and in OoT with sheikh, is that when she must act, she will, and she will take a wise action.OlasDAlmighty said:Zelda has proven in many instances that she can be a bold, daring character
I also find it weird that you treat "blind courage" like a positive trait over rational courage. The times in Windwaker when Link tries to charge blindly at Ganondorf he nearly dies and only survived by other people coming to his rescue.
It is most certainly a flaw. It is Link's biggest flaw, and one reason both the hero and the goddess (or Zelda, since we still have disagreement here) are needed to stop Ganon. We have seen what happens to Zelda when link is not there, She disguises her identity and attempts to avoid Ganon altogether (OoT, while link is maturing). We can assume what would happen to Link should he attack ganon well before he is ready (basically any game in which link confronts ganon before the very end). It is this dependency I am referring to when I call Zelda timid. She has the power (at least in OoT) to defeat ganon on her own, but she doesn't act because it is risky. Link, on the other hand, almost actively tries to get himself killed due to rage. Zelda is incredibly wise, but almost too cerebral, she seems to believe that observation will make the right path clear to take, whereas link just wants to break some bones, no matter where that would leave him.OlasDAlmighty said:His disregarding logic seems like a flaw to me. I'd argue that it's his amount of courage, not his lack of reason, that makes him special. Of course this is all very speculative and a bit off topic.
I honestly forgot those things existed and always just called them zombies. This can be viewed as his courage having limits, which it realistically must (just as ganon's power and Zelda's wisdom have limits). Or it could be argued that the scream they use to paralyze Link bypasses courage and is a more magical/biological effect, but this is conjecture and not very supportable.OlasDAlmighty said:I said "REDEAD" not "REDHEAD", as in these things:garcian67 said:Link does not appear cowardly in any sequence involving enemies, to my knowledge. Your comment about redheads I assume is directed towards to light flirting that occurs in the series? in which case bashful might be a better word? I am not sure of your meaning here.OlasDAlmighty said:Vice versa there are certainly instances where Link appears cowardly. (see anytime he encounters a redead)
Which literally paralyze Link with fear long enough to begin humping him like a catholic priest. I'm not trying to call Link a coward, I just want to point out that his courage has limits as well.
I can imagine.OlasDAlmighty said:Not even close. You must not have been here when Mass Effect 3 came out.garcian67 said:Record for Longest post?
garcian67 said:My reasons for believing a strong connection between femininity and divinity in the LoZ universe in order of decreasing strength are as follows:
4)In OoT 5 of the 7 sages, or 4 of 6 not counting Zelda, are female.
5)In Wind Waker 2 out of 3 sages are female (neglecting Makar because makar is a plant without a gender
6)The Gerudo in OoT are lead in Ganon's absence by two witches who act as soothsayers. They were also Ganon's surrogate mothers and helped him hone his sorcery
There are some counter arguments to this, you can point out the several prominent male spirits in twilight princess, or the minor deities of certain tribes in wind waker and OoT being male, but I believe the feminine argument is stronger.
Even in your example, it was making him a Gerudo that added anything. Which it added in the way of the story and him being Gerudo adds more than him swapping genitals. Hell, it's the only thing that adds anything and what it is trying to add is depth (through shifted perspectives) to the world and/or lore. Which can be done without a sex change.Dragonbums said:It goes both ways. The wiggle room can also be exactly why Link can be a women if Nintendo so chooses to.Savagezion said:That wiggle room is exactly why Link doesn't need to be a girl.
Nobody claimed that making Link a women for a game was going to add depth. At most people suggested that it might add interesting gameplay changes such as if said female Link was a Gerudo.I don't see a reason why you must change Link's gender to add depth here. The story isn't deep, pretty much anything'll do.
Who is claiming that a female Link will add more depth into the games?Gender bending Link by itself isn't some genious or in depth writing tool and it brings nothing to the table.
Ah, so it has at least 1 thing supporting it then, doesn't it? Don't act like 27 years of being a iconic character in the gaming industry is not such a big deal either. I would say it is due to Miyamoto's vision, not fan familiarity. We are only familiar with it because that's how he made Link.There is nothing really supporting a male Link either aside from being the default gender for 20 years simply due to fan familiarity.It is shallow with nothing supporting it.
A fun and creative outlet? Because your avatar is a girl in green instead of a guy in green? You must have been overjoyed when Link got a red tunic and a blue tunic. Think of the possibilities...Genderbending is only shallow to you. However for other people it can be a pretty fun and creative outlet. Look how popular the genderbent Adventure Time characters are. They got so popular that they were even thinking about doing an offshoot series. Nobody got their panties in a twist about that.Gender bending is every bit as shallow as those saying the writing in the game already is.
Not claimed, but passive aggressively implied.And nobody claimed that Link not being a woman was sexist either.The game isn't being sexist if it doesn't change Link and to do so would be pointless.
The bolded part shows you are impying that not being cool with letting people gender bend Link is due to some sort of fear of female characters. (Which usually translates to sexism) It implies that this really isn't about Link, its about having a woman be the main character. More specifically, a male one no longer get to be the main character. If someone isn't OK with that (even though everyone I have seen in the thread is against change for the sake of change, not against female protagonists) they are on a sexist crusade to defend their boys club mentality. This goes back to a thread I made LONG ago about how this whole thing in gaming is no longer about solving the problem of females being underrepresented and misrepresented in the industry - its a witch hunt aimed to call out the community as sexist even if it means making shit up to do it....
This is also ignoring the fact that people in other fandoms have no issues with genderbending canon characters themselves. Games however seems to always make a big damn fuss about things like this like a single game featuring a female character as main as opposed to a male one will end the whole damn franchise in ashes.