Don't like the ads? Then create an account! Users with accounts have more options than anonymous users.

Hyrule Castle

From Triforce Wiki, a The Legend of Zelda wiki
(Redirected from Hyrule castle)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Hyrule Castle
Hyrule Castle BotW screenshot.jpg
Hyrule Castle as seen in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild
First appearance The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (1991)
Latest appearance Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity (2020)
Greater location Hyrule
Inhabitant(s) Princess Zelda
Royal Family of Hyrule

It has been requested that this article be rewritten and expanded to add missing sections for recent games.

Hyrule Castle is a castle and the home of the Royal Family of Hyrule in several The Legend of Zelda games. Hyrule Castle is a landmark area of Hyrule, and it first appears in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past. In several of its appearances, Hyrule Castle is taken over by an enemy force, especially Ganondorf.

Hyrule Castle's architecture and overall design vary throughout the games, although several aspects remain consistent throughout its appearances. Hyrule Castle consistently sported the appearance of a generic European castle. In the three-dimensional games, Hyrule Castle is white or gray with tall, angular spires and green or purple rooftops.

The North Castle is a predecessor to Hyrule Castle, especially in The Legend of Zelda television show, where it is home to Zelda and her father, King Harkinian.

History[edit]

The Legend of Zelda series[edit]

The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past[edit]

Link standing in front of Hyrule Castle in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past

Hyrule Castle first appears in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past, and is located in the center of Hyrule. The location has six floors and features a courtyard and moat.

At the start of his adventure, Link goes to Hyrule Castle at the request of a telepathic voice, who directs him to a hidden entrance east of the castle. The hidden entrance takes Link to the basement floor of the castle, where he finds his uncle, who was mortally wounded from battle. After receiving a sword and shield from his uncle, Link continues exploring Hyrule Castle. Upon reaching the third basement floor, Link encounters and battles a Ball and Chain Trooper, who is guarding a cell that Zelda is imprisoned in. After it is defeated, Link and Zelda escape to the Sanctuary by taking the Sewer Passage north.

Later in his adventure, after Link obtains the Master Sword, he must go back to Hyrule Castle and rescue Zelda again. With the Master Sword, Link breaks the seal on Hyrule Castle Tower and continues to the top where he encounters Agahnim. After the battle, Link is sent to the Dark World where he continues his journey. The pyramid is the Dark World's equivalent of Hyrule Castle, and it is where the final battle against Ganon takes place.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time[edit]

A side view of Hyrule Castle in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

In The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, Hyrule Castle is first seen during the opening credits. The castle is situated west of Death Mountain and just directly north of Hyrule Castle Town. The entrance to Hyrule Castle Town alone is protected by a moat and a drawbridge which lowers only during the day. Beyond Hyrule Castle Town is a path which leads eventually to Hyrule Castle, but features a gate and several guards along the way. In order to infiltrate the castle, Link must sneak past each guard until he gets to the castle itself, surrounded by a moat. Link never directly enters any "important" parts of the castle, but he does manage to enter the courtyard (where he meets Zelda) using a secret entrance on the east side (similar to his infiltration in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past). Hyrule Castle is later destroyed and replaced by Ganon's Castle.

The castle and its surrounding area is the arguably most prominent and important place in the game, housing the Temple of Time, a town, many of the game's plot twists, and the game's final bosses, Ganon and Ganondorf. Surrounded by a small village, drawbridge, and moat, it models the stereotypical monarchial or feudalist castle. The king of Hyrule is never shown, although Ganondorf is shown falsely pledging allegiance to the King during the scene where Link meets Zelda.

Most of the castle is never seen or explored. The extensive castle gardens and the castle courtyard are the only areas available to explore. The castle courtyard serves several purposes, both as introducing the characters of Princess Zelda and Impa, and as a staging point for embarking on the next series of quests. Paintings of some Mario franchise characters can be seen from the Castle Courtyard.

The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker[edit]

Hyrule Castle's appearance in The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker

Hyrule Castle, at first frozen in time, is situated under the Great Sea and accessible at the site of the Tower of the Gods. Only the main hall, which contains a secret passage to a room where the Master Sword is found, and a small courtyard may be visited. When Link takes the Master Sword, the castle and the land around it unfreezes. Enemies who were assaulting the castle at the time it was frozen reawaken and must be defeated. As time continues in the game, an area outside the castle is made accessible for Link to explore. In the basement room housing the Master Sword, 9 stained glass windows depict the Triforce, Ganondorf, and the six sages from Ocarina of Time.

The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures[edit]

In The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures, Hyrule Castle lies just south of Death Mountain, somewhat near the center of Hyrule (seemingly a combination of its locations in A Link to the Past and Ocarina of Time). It first appears as the final level of the first chapter, Whereabouts of the Wind. Later, it appears again in Infiltration of Hyrule Castle. The design in the stages is very similar to its A Link to the Past incarnation, while the appearance on the world map is based on that in The Wind Waker. The interior also features many large suits of armor acting as decorations.

Link first goes to the castle in the prologue, having been summoned by Zelda to help check on the seal the Four Sword has over Vaati. However, when the six Shrine Maidens open the gate to the Four Sword's resting place, a shadowy facsimile of Link appears and traps all seven girls in crystals before traveling back through the warp. Link follows, pulls the Four Sword to stop him despite knowing the ramifications will be freeing Vaati, and is then swept away by a cyclone. Later, the now-split Links wake up at Lake Hylia and are told by Kaepora Gaebora they need to quickly make their way back to the castle due to sinister happenings.

For the initial stage, Kaepora appears and warns the Links of an evil presence within. The first volume of the Tingle Times can be found nearby, in which Tingle describes how an improbably beautiful girl (actually the Great Fairy) went into the castle and never returned. soldiers of various types appear throughout, including Bomb Soldiers and Sword Soldiers. A Chief Soldier and a Ball and Chain Trooper separately act as minibosses. Shadow Link is encountered twice, and wields the Magic Hammer at one point. A pair of Traps also debut. Two friendly Zoras can be found; they are actually the Great Fairy in question, who had gone into the castle to investigate the strange happenings but was overcome by the dark powers. She then uses her power to obliterate a platoon of soldiers and dispel the Lightning Lock. At the top of the castle, Phantom Ganon is fought, likely as a callback to the similar Agahnim. Once he is defeated, the darkness covering the castle disappears and the Blue Maiden is rescued.

The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap[edit]

In The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap, Link first travels to Hyrule Castle to deliver Smith's Sword. In his adventure to restore the broken Picori Blade, Link must find the Four Elements, and each time when he finds one, he must return to Hyrule Castle's Elemental Sanctuary and imbue that element with his sword. As the story progresses, Vaati disguises himself as King Daltus and goes into Hyrule Castle, hoping to trick the soldiers into finding the element. Near the end of Link's adventure, Vaati transforms the entire castle into Dark Hyrule Castle, which serves as the game's final dungeon. At the end, Link must confront Vaati on the roof of Hyrule Castle, and battle him within the castle.

The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess[edit]

It has been requested that this section be rewritten. Reason: copied from Wikipedia

Link standing in front of Hyrule Castle in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess

Hyrule Castle plays a central role in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, both geographically and plot-wise. Located in the center of Lanayru Province, many of the game's more dramatic moments and plot twists take place within its walls. The structure itself is visible from almost any point in Hyrule, and its grounds and interior are far larger than in any previous Zelda game. The castle also serves as the game's final dungeon, and is possibly the largest dungeon of the game in terms of sheer floor space, although it is a relatively short dungeon compared to the rest. It features an outdoor portion, a ground-floor indoor portion, and a tower portion; the former two sections each have their own miniboss, being King Bulblin and a green Darknut, respectively. In this dungeon, a small contingent of ghosts appear when Link's heightened wolf senses are used to help Link on certain puzzles-in one room, they point to a painting that must be shot with a bomb arrow; in another, Link must follow the pointing fingers of Hyrule's undead elite, as deviating from the path they indicate places link on floors that will drop out from under him.

After transforming into a wolf, Link is thrown into the castle dungeon, but escapes with Midna to Princess Zelda's chamber, where Zelda explains the castle was overrun by twilight creatures led by Zant. Later in the game, a force field surrounds the castle. At the end of the game, the true nature of the force field is explained. Ganondorf has returned to Hyrule and captured the castle. The final fight with Ganondorf partly takes place in the throne room of the castle, where the first two phases of the battle are fought--Ganondorf first possesses Zelda, but Link is able to defeat him without harming her. Ganondorf then takes the form of a raging boar. After Ganon's exterior form is destroyed, his "spirit" battles Midna, and as a result, the castle seemingly explodes. Ganondorf survives, reforms himself into his true Gerudo form, and the rest of the battle takes place in Hyrule Field. After the battle, the Hyrule Castle throne room is seen in pristine condition, but it is unclear whether it was simply rebuilt, or if the explosion did not directly take place at the castle at all, or even if the view is from before the explosion itself.

The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Anniversary Edition[edit]

Hyrule Castle appears in The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Anniversary Edition during the re-release-exclusive stage, Realm of Memories. Both the exterior and interior can be explored, in the form of the first and second stages of the Silver Door respectively.

Super Smash Bros. series[edit]

Hyrule Castle's appearance in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

In Super Smash Bros., Hyrule Castle appears as a lengthy stage based off of its appearance in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. In single-player mode, Hyrule Castle is the first stage the player battles on. During gameplay, a whirlwind appears about every 30 seconds; any character caught in it is blown upwards, and sometimes out of the stage if sufficiently damaged. The castle also has a little shack at the far right end of the stage, which may act as an additional platform. This stage serves as Link's home stage in the game.

In Super Smash Bros. Melee, a similar but much larger stage called Temple takes its place. Hyrule Castle, in its The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess incarnation, also appears in the background of the Bridge of Eldin stage in Super Smash Bros. Brawl and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.

Hyrule Castle returns as a stage in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U. The stage was first announced at a Nintendo Direct that premiered on June 14, 2015, in which Masahiro Sakurai revealed that developers have been working on porting Hyrule Castle (along with Peach's Castle) into the two games as a downloadable stage. Hyrule Castle was later released on July 31, 2015, under the name Hyrule Castle (64). Hyrule Castle has also appeared in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.

Mario Kart 8[edit]

Hyrule Castle in the background of Hyrule Circuit in Mario Kart 8.

In the DLC of Mario Kart 8 and the base game of Mario Kart 8 Deluxe, Hyrule Castle is part of Hyrule Circuit course. As the castle is surrounded by a river, racers access it by gliding from Hyrule Field to the castle's roof. When racers enter the castle, they drive down a curved staircase into a large chamber that houses several Rupees and the Master Sword resting on the Pedestal of Time, surrounded by several stained glass windows. If racers are able to hit all three Spin Boost bumpers on the way down the staircase, a small Dash Panel ramp appears in front of the Pedestal of Time; if this ramp is used, racers can get an additional speed boost by touching the Master Sword. When exiting the castle, racers drive over a bridge and onto a path leading into Hyrule Castle Town.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japanese ハイラル城
Hairaru-jō
Hyrule Castle
Spanish Castillo de Hyrule
French Château d'Hyrule Castle of Hyrule
German Schloss Hyrule
Italian Castello di Hyrule
Portuguese Castelo de Hyrule
Russian Замок Хайрул
Zamok Khayrul
Korean 하이랄 성
Hairal Seong
Chinese 海拉鲁城堡 (Traditional)
海拉魯城堡 (Simplified)
Hǎilālǔ Chéngbǎo