Ganondorf

"Hero? ...I've outlived more "heroes" than you can possibly imagine."

- Ganondorf

Ganondorf is the main recurring antagonist of The Legend of Zelda series. He is the holder of the Triforce of Power and a reincarnation of the hatred of Demise. Oftentimes, he appears as a beastly boar known as Ganon, although "Ganon" has also been used to describe his humanoid form. Ganondorf was initially known as the "Gerudo King of Thieves" and like most other members of the tribe, he has dark skin and red hair, although after becoming the "King of Evil" his skin became closer to green.

Early life
Ganondorf was the first male born to the Gerudo tribe in a century, and, in accordance with their laws, he was made the king of the tribe, with Twinrova as his surrogate mother. While growing up, he resented the hostile conditions of Gerudo Desert, coveting the lush parts of Hyrule the other races lived, particularly the Hylians. It was with this desire that Ganondorf began to devise a plot to depose the King of Hyrule and seize these lands for himself.

The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past
In The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, Ganondorf is mentioned by the maiden of the Swamp Palace when she is rescued by Link. He is a thief also known as Ganon who rediscovered the Golden Land, but did not know how to return to the Light World. The manual for the Super NES version elaborates further. According to legend, Ganondorf was the leader of a gang of thieves that found an entrance to the Golden Land by chance, and fought his own followers over the Triforce. When he reached it with his blood-stained hands, he heard a voice tell him that his desires were to be granted, creating the threat to Hyrule known as Ganon, the evil King of Darkness. The English translation of the manual also gives him the surname "Dragmire" and claims that he was known by the alias "Mandrag Ganon," meaning "Ganon of the Enchanted Thieves," although this never recurs in any of the games. These details were removed in the manual for the Game Boy Advance version, possibly because it was altered in later games.

In the comic adaptation, a vision of Ganondorf is shown when a talking tree tells a sleepy Link about him in Chapter Six: A Fool in the Shape of a Tree. The appearance of Ganondorf greatly differs from later titles, with light tan skin and scruffy hair. Manga adaptations depict him as a silhouetted figure closer to the games. The sole exception to this idea were the adaptations by Junko Taguchi and Akira Himekawa. In the Taguchi manga as well as the novel Katsuyuki Ozaki, Ganondorf is shown with a design radically different than what he would later be seen, depicted as a Hylian with fair skin and blonde hair. In the novelization, he is shown as a redhead, making him resemble Groose. In the Himekawa manga, Ganondorf is shown with his design from Ocarina of Time, partially obscured by the shadows.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time
Ganondorf first appears in his Gerudo form in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, after brief mentions in A Link to the Past. He initially appears in a prophetic nightmare Link has in the opening, where Princess Zelda and Impa are fleeing him on horseback, followed by him attacking Link with magic. Acting on his plan to conquer Hyrule, Ganondorf, while evading suspicion from all of the royal family except for Zelda, attempts to gain access to the Sacred Realm, where the Triforce is kept. To do this, he attempt to attain the Ocarina of Time and the three Spiritual Stones from the Great Deku Tree, the Gorons, and the Zora, but each refuse. As such, he punishes each, by infecting the Deku Tree with a parasitic Gohma, re-filling Dodongo's Cavern with hostile Dodongos, and infecting Lord Jabu Jabu with a parasitic Barinade. Zelda comes up with a plan to deal with Ganondorf alongside Link, involving using the keys to the Sacred Realm themselves. After Link deals with the problems Ganondorf caused and attains the Stones, Ganondorf attacks the castle, leading to the events of Link's nightmare. During her escape, Zelda throws the Ocarina in the moat, and Link recovers it and opens the Sacred Realm. However, when he does so, he unwittingly allows Ganondorf access while he gets trapped for seven years, allowing him to gain the Triforce. However, due to his lust for power outweighing his courage or wisdom by a significant amount, the Triforce of Courage and the Triforce of Wisdom disappear, leaving him with solely the Triforce of Power. During the time Link is imprisoned, Ganondorf with the Triforce of Power becomes far more corrupt, leading him to become the demonic "King of Evil," and making Hyrule far worse for most of its inhabitants. Hyrule Castle and the area around it is destroyed and replaced with the foreboding Ganon's Castle, and Hyrule Castle Town is left in ReDead-infested ruins. In one display of force, he attempts to feed the Goron tribe to a Goron-eating dragon he resurrected, Volvagia. Additionally, he seemingly freezes Zora's Domain and drains Lake Hylia. Another high authority in the Gerudo tribe, Nabooru, is brainwashed by Twinrova due to attempting to stop him. Link encounters Phantom Ganon, a demonic puppet of Ganondorf, in the Forest Temple. After Link defeats it, Ganondorf congratulates Link for his skill, but warns him that his further challenges will be much harder, before sending the phantom to "the gap between dimensions." Ganondorf is not heard from directly again until Sheik reveals herself as a Triforce of Wisdom-bearing Zelda in disguise, at which point he traps her in a crystal and tells Link to come battle at his castle, thus bringing him the Triforce of Courage he holds.

Ganondorf is found in the highest room of his castle, playing his theme music on a large pipe organ. Once Link arrives, he turns around, shows the Triforce mark on the back of his hand (with the proximity causing Link and Zelda's to glow as well), and turns the room into an arena to battle, and begins to float over the center of the room, with the dark energy not allowing Navi to target him. During this fight, Ganondorf can punch the floor, causing certain tiles to give way, leading to the room below (which is full of item-replenishing pots). He can also throw balls of energy, which can be bounced back with the sword or, as part of a series running gag, an empty bottle. However, he is also cabable of knocking them back at Link. Once Ganondorf fails to knock one back, he will be temporarily stunned, allowing Link to hit him with the evil-piercing Light Arrows, which hurts him, brings him to the floor, and temporarily gets rid of the evil aura, allowing Navi to target him and Link to damage him directly. He can also throw a much larger ball of energy, but this takes longer to prepare, giving Link another opportunity to hit him with the Light Arrow. After he takes enough damage, Ganondorf will be defeated, after which he throws up and falls to the floor.

The room and crystal holding Zelda are then destroyed. Zelda expresses some sympathy for Ganondorf due to the power of the Triforce corrupting him, but with his last breaths, he attempts to magically destroy the castle, thus killing Link and Zelda as well. However, they escape, and Ganondorf is seemingly crushed by the rubble. However, he emerges, his eyes fully yellow and demonic, and uses the Triforce of Power to become the beastly Ganon, knocking the Master Sword away. After Ganon is defeated, Ganondorf is sealed in the Sacred Realm himself, and promises to kill Link and Zelda's descendants when he escapes. After this, Zelda uses the Ocarina of Time to send Link back to before Ganondorf's takeover, allowing him to be stopped beforehand.

The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker
Ganondorf appears again as the main antagonist of The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker. In the future of the time where Ganondorf's takeover still happened and he was defeated, Ganondorf eventually breaks free and terrorizes Hyrule once again. This time, no hero emerged, and the three Golden Goddesses flooded Hyrule to seal him away. Eventually, Ganondorf makes his way to the surface, and sets up his base in the Forsaken Fortress, having the Helmaroc King kidnap girls to try and find Zelda's descendant. He additionally has Laruto and Fado, the sages of the Earth Temple and Wind Temple killed. However, the current Link's sister Aryll is kidnapped while he attempts to grab Tetra (the real Zelda), leading Link to begin his quest. Once Link initially finds Aryll, the Helmaroc King grabs him and takes him to Ganondorf, who wordlessly orders him to throw him across the ocean. After this, he attempts to attain the Goddess Pearls from the three holders of them. He sends a Gohma to injure Valoo, infests the Forbidden Woods with various evil creatures, and destroys Greatfish Isle. After Link finds the Master Sword in Hyrule's remains, Ganondorf's minions under the surface become active again, having been immobilized. Ganondorf is not seen again until Link frees the girls from Forsaken Fortress and destroys the Helmaroc King, at which point Link attempts to confront him with the Master Sword. However, due to the deaths of Laruto and Fado, the sword is powerless. Link gets rescued by Valoo and several Rito, and goes off to find the successors to the sages, and later, the Triforce Shards. Once Link has these, Zelda is kidnapped and taken to Ganondorf's castle. With the sword re-powered and the Triforce of Courage restored, Link is able to get to Ganondorf's castle. Initially, Ganondorf appears watching Zelda sleep, then seemingly turns into Puppet Ganon. After Puppet Ganon is defeated, Ganondorf reveals he is perfectly fine, telling Link to confront him on the roof. Once he does so, the Triforce is restored, and Ganondorf wistfully regales the story of how he resented his home growing up, leading him to conquer Hyrule for himself. Before he can make his wish on the Triforce, King Daphnes appears and wishes on the Triforce himself to give Link and Zelda a better future, causing the still-intact areas beneath the Great Sea to start flooding fully. At this, Ganondorf goes insane and starts laughing maniacally, and engages Link in a swordfight, with Zelda using the Light Arrows. After he is hit enough times, Link plunges the Master Sword through his forehead gem, causing him to be turned to stone. He is them buried under the Great Sea's water along with the King, ensuring neither will ever return, while Link and Zelda are returned to the surface.

The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures
In the backstory of The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures, Ganondorf is reborn in the Gerudo tribe, and begins his aspirations for conquest anew. However, he never appears in this form, instead only being shown as Ganon, like in A Link to the Past. This reincarnation of Ganondorf is depicted in Akira Himekawa's manga adaptation of the game, showing him in a design similar to the original Ganondorf as he appeared in Wind Waker.

The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess
Ganondorf is the true main antagonist of The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess. In the future of the time where Ganondorf was not allowed to take over in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time's epilogue, Ganondorf was to be executed by the seven sages for his crimes. However, when Link was sent back in time, the Triforce pieces went to their owners' past counterparts, leading Ganondorf to have the Triforce of Power, which the sages considered darkly to be some manner of "divine prank." He survives getting impaled by them, and uses the sword to kill the Sage of Water, leading them to activate the long-dormant Mirror of Twilight to seal him away. However, this leads to him discovering the resentful Twili Zant, whom he manipulates into helping him take over Hyrule. Ganondorf is absent for the first half of the game, initially only appearing in the sages' recounting of his failed execution midway through. He finally appears in person in the conquered Hyrule Castle, where he initially possesses Zelda's lifeless body. After he is defeated, Midna uses the Fused Shadows to extract Ganondorf's soul, after which he becomes a giant, fiery version of his head to speak briefly, and then becomes Ganon. After he is defeated again, Zelda's life is restored, and she uses the power of the four Spirits of Light to create the Light Arrows, which she shoots at him in a horseback battle in Hyrule Field. Once he is defeated here, he conjures up a force field and fights Link directly in sword combat, able to use many techniques. As part of the same running gag as in Ocarina of Time, Ganondorf will be distracted by Link's Fishing Line if he withdraws it. Once Ganondorf is defeated for the fourth and final time, Link impales him with the Master Sword. After this happens, a brief cinematic of Zant cracking his neck occurs, signifying Ganondorf's death.

The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass
A representation of Ganondorf makes a brief appearance at the beginning of The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass in Niko's presentation, where he recaps the events of The Wind Waker.

The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds
In The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds, Ganondorf is alluded to in the gallery of Hyrule Castle, where the story and backstory of A Link to the Past are told through five pictures. He is referred to as "a simple thief" who became Ganon after he attained the Triforce. Yuga is indicated to be his Lorulean counterpart, and resembles a much more effeminate version of him.

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
Ganondorf is briefly alluded to in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, when Urbosa mentions to Vah Naboris that legend states that Calamity Ganon once took the form of a Gerudo, and muses that that will make its defeat all the more satisfying due to being more personal to her.

The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild sequel
In the sequel to Breath of the Wild, Ganondorf is shown as a mummified undead corpse leaking malice, with a glowing blue hand emerging from a cyclone of Gerudo script reaching into his chest. A painting of him appears on the walls, riding his horse and wielding a trident.

Super Smash Bros. series
Ganondorf appears in every Super Smash Bros. installment starting with the second game, Super Smash Bros. Melee. In Melee, he uses his SpaceWorld 2000 design, being based off his "past" Ocarina of Time appearance. In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, he uses his Twilight Princess design, and in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, he uses his "future" Ocarina of Time design. Initially, he was a slower but more powerful moveset copy of F-Zero character Captain Falcon. In Brawl, one of his moves was altered and he was made much slower to differentiate them, though he was given more speed again in later installments.

In Brawl's "The Subspace Emissary" mode, he appears as working for Master Hand alongside Bowser. He initially is shown surveying Bowser's advancement on King Dedede's fortress, and then appears to take control of the R.O.B. army after the Ancient Minister decides to stop working with the Subspace Army. Once the Subspace Gunship is destroyed by Kirby in the Dragoon, he and Bowser retreat into Subspace. Ganondorf turns on Bowser, turning him into a trophy, before going to bow before Master Hand. However, when he sees that Master Hand is being controlled via marionette strings by another villain, Tabuu, Ganondorf attempts to stop Tabuu, only to be turned into a trophy himself. Later, after Bowser is restored, he takes out his anger by attacking Ganondorf's trophy. Link and Zelda then restore him, and he enters an uneasy alliance with them to defeat Tabuu, something that has notably never happened in their home franchise.

Hyrule Warriors
Ganondorf is once again the true main antagonist of Hyrule Warriors. Before this game, his soul was split into four pieces, each hidden in a different time period. One fragment was kept with the time keeper Cia, another during Skyward Swords events in the Sealed Grounds, another during Ocarina of Times events in the Water Temple of Lake Hylia, and the last during Twilight Princess's events in the Palace of Twilight. The shard with Cia notices her nonreciprocable romantic interest in Link, and begins to manipulate and corrupt her, causing her to expel all goodness from her soul (this becoming Lana) and open up portals to each of these time periods to gain the power of the other shards. However, the shards come together, causing Ganondorf to be whole again. Realizing what she has done, Cia attempts to stop him, but is swiftly defeated, leading her to make one last attempt to force Link to be with her, which itself fails. During this confrontation, Ganondorf appears in the battle and paralyzes Zelda, causing Link to have to go defeat him. He retreats, and waits for Cia to be defeated, as she goes completely insane and attempts to destroy time itself. Once she is defeated, he begins his plan, summoning Zant and Ghirahim to Gerudo Desert to recruit some of the monsters there, after which he attacks Hyrule Castle. He successfully takes it over, and Lana re-summons Link's allies from the other time periods for a final battle. During the final battle, Ganondorf becomes Ganon, here clearly retaining his intelligence and sense of self, but is eventually defeated and re-sealed.

Cadence of Hyrule: Crypt of the NecroDancer featuring The Legend of Zelda
In Cadence of Hyrule: Crypt of the NecroDancer featuring The Legend of Zelda, the Gerudo prince is strongly implied to be a young incarnation of Ganondorf. If the player enters the Gerudo Village home guarded by Barriara, the Gerudo prince can be found practicing the organ with his back facing the player, though he still bears a striking resemblance to Ganondorf in other games. If spoken to, he will rudely chastise Barriara behind her back, obsess over the power of music, and crypically remark that he will meet the hero again. During the final boss battle, Ganon has a similar hairstyle and is shown playing a similar organ. Ganondorf is also mentioned by name and is said to have found the broken Golden Lute, repaired it, and become corrupted by it to transform into Ganon.

Trivia

 * Ganondorf has concept artwork drawn for the Oracle games, depicting him in an angular robe and lacking the prominent forehead gem (instead having a large widow's peak), but this design was not implemented into the games, only ever appearing as a seemingly mindless version of Ganon.