![]() It just takes too long to collect the Zora Eggs and collect what's needed for the Gibdo well. The guide is less helpful here because it doesn't really measure the time needed to get the last two temple songs, but my instinct is "no". Now the question is, can you open the path to both the last two temples in "cycle X"? If X is 3, you lose an hour or two to get Epona. ![]() It then takes basically no time at all to enter the Clock Tower and go to the final boss. Since you had two days to complete all of Woodfall and Snowhead in the previous cycle, we can cross those off, and say that "cycle X" will involve completing the entirety of both Great Bay and Stone Tower. Looking at the guide again, it takes an entire cycle to complete the second half of all the dungeons: day 1 for Woodfall and Snowhead, day 2 for Great Bay, and day 3 for Stone Tower. So basically, in the first cycle (not counting the first one when you're trapped as a Deku), you can't do any better than completing Woodfall and Snowhead. Without Epona, you can't get to Great Bay or Ikana. At this point, you can now go to Medigoron and unlock Power Kegs by doing the test (as it requires either Fire Arrows or beating Goht), but it's too late to get Epona, which has to be done before 6:00pm D1. ![]() Get Bomb Bag, go to Goron Village: 2.0h.Go through the swamp and enter Woodfall Temple: 4.0h.Note that this is all with time slowed by the Song of Inverted Time. What we can do is synthesize the old in order to make progress and to break out of the loop.Using the guide you linked to, it looks like the amount of time you need to the mandatory parts of the game is as follows. The truth though is that before things began to spiral out of control, people all around the world had their ways of living sustainably with their environment. For a young person like myself, I’ve spent a big chunk of my life hearing the same reports on how bad things have gotten the same promises from politicians and the same obstacles rear the head again and again. Rather, what we can keep in mind is that climate change, no matter how big and nebulous, is ultimately a historically situated event. When analyzing Majora’s Mask through an ecological lens, however, this isn’t necessarily what we must take away for own climate situation. As a fantasy story, The Legend of Zelda series often venerate tradition’s role in preserving harmony. Of all the intelligence he gathers, some of the most useful is knowledge rooted in culture and tradition. By remembering each previous loop, only Link is able to slowly bring everything he needs together to confront the Skull Kid and stop the moon. With all of this in mind, one question arises what is Link’s greatest tool? The answer is memory. It turns out the elder has been frozen solid outside so the village, so Link unthaws the him and is taught the first part of the lullaby the elder usually sings to his son. On Snowpeak Mountain, all of the Gorons are unsettled because the young child of the village elder misses his pops and won’t stop crying. To this end, songs are of central importance to Link’s efforts. He acts as an agent of continuity for the community he’s helping, rather than being a purely foreign agent coming in to save the day. By healing their souls and using their masks to solve the crisis, Link steps into their social role and bridges the gap left by their absence. Both Snowpeak and The Great Bay feature a heroic figure, Darmani and Mikau respectively, who tries to help their people but die with their will tragically unfulfilled. In all corners of the land, one of the most damaging things about disaster is the way it disrupt the transmission of knowledge necessary to keep a culture thriving. Ikana valley on the other hand, with its ruins of a once proud civilization, feels like a reflection of our future.īy observing Termina as a whole, however, one starts to see a certain pattern emerge. The Zora’s becoming incapable of reproducing themselves in their natural environment is chilling in the context of current global marine extinction. Moving through these environments in 2021 is eerie, perhaps more so that what was intended by the developers. The river that was once the lifeblood of the valley is now but a scar of cracked mud. Finally, to the east is Ikana valley, the desert graveyard of an old kingdom. To the west is the Great Bay, where the aquatic Zora people can no longer hatch their eggs in the ocean because of rising water temperatures. To the north, a terrible cold snap has hit Snowpeak Mountain, home of the Gorons, freezing many where they stand. To the south of Clock Town is the swamp, where the waters have become toxic and invasive species have proliferated. It is during Link’s quest to find the four giants that the extent of Termina’s environmental collapse becomes apparent.
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