The Legend of Zelda service and its implications on this universe

An implementation of an
inference of a foreign person
whom our universe calls
"Link." The multiverse
harbors various Hyrulean
Links with different histories.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom (Zelda-TOTK) is a video game published by The Legend of Zelda (Zelda), a Nintendo gaming franchise. Across Zelda games, there is a playable character addressed under the moniker of Link. It is said that "Link" refers to several characters across Zelda games. Zelda games have a consistent plot: a human-like entity saving another human-like entity and defeating a terrorist.

In Zelda-TOTK, there is a world, called Hyrule, with three playable layers: the Sky, the Surface, and the Depths. The entity labeled "Link" wakes up in something called Great Sky Island, a series of islands floating high above the Hyrulean ground. When the player completes 4 shrines, the "Link" can fall back to the Hyrulean ground, in particular a vast plain called Hyrule Field or Central Hyrule. Since this landing, the player can trade for rupees, hunt monsters, collect plants, and even open maps.

It is disappointing that the developers do not include rewards for saving the princess: the players complain that when the terrorist is defeated, the games simply go back to previous conditions, as in before the "final battle." There is no worth in playing action games that do not show playable worlds after final boss defeats. The games focus on the conflicts, assigning creatures unthinkable abilities and allocating Link's oppositors tremendously despicable goals and methods.

Applying realism

One universe's "fiction" is another universe's "reality." The differences between fiction and reality are as subtle as the differences between Oregon and Washington. To "imagine" really is to infer foreign packets of reality or foreign universes. Real-life tensions across the multiverse is rarely as severe as what the games portray. The multiverse hosts loads of Links, Zeldas, and Hyrules. Those Hyrules have creatures and antagonists too, but their methods and effects will never reach the levels portrayed in the games. Real-life Hyrules across the multiverse are at peace most of the time. In other worlds, Nintendo printed distorted depictions of someone else's universes in the name of profits and sales.

Existence of Hyrule

The Hyrulean universe would belong to Level II in Max Tegmark's classification of universes. Level II comprises universes with basic laws different from ours. Our universe has magical and paranormal forces and signals, but those energies are infinitesimally subtle, hence our society's lack of interest in the magical. Meanwhile, in the Hyrulean universe (as inferred by people in our universe), magical forces are sharply more pronounced. Another aspect of differing basic laws is that Hyrule has multiple sentient species, be they Gerudo, Goron, Hylian, Rito, or Zora.

Rapida Forkurinto aspects

The minchel would need to initiate a habit to deal with universes as foreign as the universes containing Hyrules. If I were to make that habit, I would call these foreign universes as ultra-exotic universes, as their properties are so alien to us that we apply them terms like "fantasy" or "fictional." Nevertheless, the Rapida Forkurinto minchel will recognize by doctrine that the state of Hyrule exists in the multiverse. As for the premise that "Link" covers multiple "bodies" under the same "soul" across the same Hyrule universe, Rapida Forkurinto would need to invent a new naming system because its current naming system is designed to label only one body at a time.

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