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Book of Magic

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Book of Magic
Book of Magic AnA art.jpg
First appearance The Legend of Zelda (1986)
Latest appearance Hyrule Warriors: Definitive Edition (2018)
Location(s) Lion (First Quest)
Level-4 (Second Quest)

The Book of Magic, also known as the Magic Book[1], is an item that first appears in The Legend of Zelda.

History[edit]

The Legend of Zelda[edit]

In The Legend of Zelda, Link can obtain the Book of Magic at the bottom-left room of the Lion labyrinth in the First Quest. In the Second Quest, the Book of Magic was relocated to the Level-4 labyrinth. The Book of Magic serves as an extension to the Magical Rod, causing the rod to emit fire after its beam hits an object or enemy. The fire can even light up dark rooms in a labyrinth and attack enemies.

The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures[edit]

In The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures, a magic book appears as an event item in the Village of the Blue Maiden. The player must give to it Iris in the Dark World, who left it behind with her teacher. It is said to be heavier than it looks and thus requires lifting with both hands. After obtaining the book, she will be able to use one of its spells to return to the normal world.

Hyrule Warriors[edit]

In Hyrule Warriors, the 8-Bit Book of Magic was added in the Master Quest Pack DLC. It is classified as a Book of Sorcery used by Lana, and is an equivalent to the Sorceress Tome. It does not reappear in Hyrule Warriors Legends, but returns in Hyrule Warriors: Definitive Edition, where it aesthetically replaces the Tome of the Night in the 8-Bit Weapons setting.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japanese バイブル
Baiburu
魔法の本
Mahō no Hon
マホウノホン
Mahō no Hon
Bible (Zelda no Densetsu)

Book of Magic (Four Swords+)

Book of Magic (Hyrule Warriors); written in katakana to mimic the typical usage in older Famicom games

Trivia[edit]

  • The Famicom cartridge version of The Legend of Zelda, despite retaining the name "Bible" in Japanese, has "Book of Magic" underneath in English during the "all of treasures" sequence. This is likely due to it being based on the NES release. Additionally, Four Swords Adventures and Hyrule Warriors no longer refer to it as a Bible in Japanese and instead have a name based on the English localization, modifying the symbol to look less like a Cross. In the latter, this also extends to the shield that comes with the 8-Bit Wooden Sword as well as the game's rendition of the Magical Shield.

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Legend of Zelda instruction booklet, page 26.