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The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

Sky Islands (by VERTIGRIS aka Fabian Rensch)

  • Not the OP, but I was looking for this exact question ;) thank you so much, it worked like a charm ♥

  • Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    mindblowing

  • If you haven't seen the show yet:

    • Witches in that world have staffs with a living wooden creature on top, called "Palisman". It's basically a mix of an familliar and a tool / staff decoration. Most Palismen are shaped like regular animals like cats and birds and spend most of their time as inanimate objects sitting atop their respective staff, but there's no actual restriction for how they have to look and whether or not they have to be attached to their staff all the time.
    • The "giant head" creature is called The Bat Queen, and in the show it is eventually revealed that she was once a Palisman herself, albeit on a giant staff, so her owner must have been a giant too. But that was thousands of years ago and she has forgotten whom she belonged to. The human sitting on top is the main protagonist of the show and offered the Bat Queen to help her search for the truth if she ever wanted to find out who her former owner was. (It never happened because the show was brutally axed before that subplot had a chance to develop)
    • Titans are... well... titanic in size once they're fully grown, but that's TOO big to wield something of the size of the Bat Queen as a staff topper.

    Conclusion: she was the Titan's toothpick, not a staff. And it's probably for the best that she forgot.

  • I've seen this comic a couple of times elsewhere already but this is the first time I noticed the corks in Flapjack's ears lol. Poor little guy XD

  • All Orange Cats Share One Brain Cell @lemmy.world

    Braincell Latency

    All Orange Cats Share One Brain Cell @lemmy.world

    Choo choo! Orange monorail express incoming!

  • "Word of God" says it's canon, but it can't be in the same timeline as BotW because the story of AoC actively prevents BotW from ever happening. Then again, TotK retcons a bunch of stuff from BotW as well (like pretending the Guardians and Divine Beasts never existed or somehow "just disappeared" which still cotradicts the after-credits end scene from BotW) so personally I think that's just an alternate timeline, too.

    Or maybe the devs just didn't put much thought into continuity.

  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

    Chasing Dragons (by @anx87400528)

    The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild @lemmy.world

    "Linktober #8 - Healing" by ÔRA @ tumblr

  • You must be referencing some stuff the developer added after release

    Likely, yes. I got that game relatively late on the Nintendo Switch, and IIRC by that time it it was first released for that console, it had been availiable for 5+ years on PC already. Lots of time to listen to feedback and implement QOL improvements ;)

  • There is only 1 kind of bait.

    There's regular bait, deluxe bait, targetd bait, wild bait, magic bait and challenge bait.

    Leveling up requires that you catch fish

    You also get fishing XP by taking stuff out of crab pots, completing "fish pond" quests, harvesting fish pond produce, fishing up garbage items, reading the books "Bait and Bobber" or "Book of Stars". Not a single one of these requires playing the minigame with the green bar, and only the "fish up garbage" thing requires owning a rod in the first place.

    Food bonuses are true but they all require ingredients caught by fishing.

    Gus can randomly sell dishes that boost your fishing skill, like Fish Taco or Trout Soup. The same goes for the travelling cart. You do not need to have any fishing experience to buy those. As for cooking those yourself, you can also buy fish from Krobus or the travelling cart, or find fish in garbage cans. And Linus can send you fish per mail (and sometimes maki rolls for whatever reason). You don't need to actually use the fishing minigame for any of those.

    because it requires you to still be checking the queen of sauce in mid-Summer of Year 2

    The Queen of Sauce Book teaches you literally all recipes in the game. If you rush the Ginger Island questline you can get that reatively early.

    Most people will have gotten too many reruns to keep checking at that stage of the game.

    If you check the weather forecast each day (which I always do) you can see whether or not it's a rerun before clicking on it. No idea why anyone would not check those then.

    It took me 3.5 years to catch everything even with a guide

    See other fish sources above. I regularily check all of these and usually manage to complete the community center in Winter Y1 or Spring Y2 unless I get the short end of the stick when using the remixed option and/or fail to get red cabbage seeds or enough Gold Star veggies in Spring Y1. Haven't touched any guides until my third playthrough.

  • Stardew Valley @lemmy.ml

    Shout-out to Stardew Valley for having the best fishing minigame

    The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild @lemmy.world

    I mean, technically they both ARE 100+ in Breath of the Wild ...

  • Ohhh dang, why didn't I see that?! Thanks for pointing that out :D

  • The Owl House @lemmy.world

    Easter Egg in the Episode Titles

  • UPDATE: You can opt out of the data collecting thing in the full game. It's just not possible in the demo, but the full game has this option, thankfully.

  • Monster Hunter @lemmy.ml

    Privacy Policy MonHun Rise (Switch)

    The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

    Attack 255 / Durability 28,957,535

    Dungeons and Dragons - Memes and Comics @lemmy.world

    Painfully Accurate

    Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    Highly educational

    The Legend of Zelda @lemmy.world

    Link's Final Form (by Light Roast Comics)

    The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

    Fashion of the Kingdom

  • also don’t forget that placebo work even when you know it’s placebo

    This right here. I've had problems with pain relief medicine simply not working since I was a child. A couple years back I started drinking caraway seed tea whenever a headache was JUST going away, and even tho I know dang well that caraway seeds do jack sh*t against pain, my body now somehow associates the taste with "ok, headache time is over" and I can drink that stuff to MAKE headaches go away.

    100% placebo, 100% aware about it - still works.

    PS: why caraway seeds? Because it is the least likely "tea" you can be offered in everyday context. If I had used something as common as charmomile or green tea, I think the effect wouldn't have had a lasting effect.

  • The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

    Rauru + Sonia concept art

    Dad Jokes @lemmy.world

    Must have happened while camping ... because it's past tents.

    Lemmy Shitpost @lemmy.world

    Nine out of ten dentists approve!

    All Orange Cats Share One Brain Cell @lemmy.world

    Braincell stuck in buttmunch-mode

    The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom @lemmy.world

    "TotK link brings wolf link on some adventures" (by stupjam @tumblr)

  • Ohhh nice! Thank you for the link ^^

  • That's been done by someone else already =P

  • Just to add another factor to the ongoing discussion: artistic talent isn't uniform and never was. Just because only/mostly "immature" art survived from a certain century of human history, doesn't mean that there literally was no realistic art present at the time. Since you mentioned the statues already...

    These are from the same era (around 200 BC), but as you may have guessed, made by different artists =P The statue is called The Dying Gaul by the way.

    As for painting examples, I guess the Rothschild Canticles^1 book illustrations represent best what most people nowadays would call medieval art. Not exactly realistic, a little goofy ... perspective? Never heard of it. Proportions? Who cares. And who needs shading anyway?! As long as you can still distinguish a human from a cupcake, it's "eh good enough".

    I guess that was also what you meant by "immature" art, because it is the same art style as those goofy weird pictures of knights fighting giant snails and rabbits riding cattle into battle and the like.[^2]

    That book is dated to be around 1500–1520 so it would be easy to assume that people at the start of the 15th century didn't have a realistic art style yet. But you know what else was made in that same era?

    The Mona Lisa (1503–1506).

    One dorky meme-esque style, and one realistic, modest and easy-on-the-eyes style in the same century, probably even the same decade. But they were used by different artists.

    Now you might be thinking that those art styles might have been intended for their respective purpose or something along the lines: that the goofy, simple art style was used for nothing but amusing little pictures, and the more realistic style was for "proper" art, because noone in their right mind would spend 100+ hours painting highly detailed nonsense just for sh*ts and giggles, right?

    May I introduce you to Joseph Ducreux?[^3]

    I guess most of you will have seen that meme by now, but this is a real painting made by a real artist - and it is far from the only one. Ducreux created an entire series of similar self-portraits in ... unusual poses and situations.

    ... so yes, at least that one guy DID indeed spend dozens if not hundreds of hours (plus material costs) painting amusing nonsense for his own entertainement. He was, in a way, the victorian era equivalent of a shitposter (and I mean that in a good sense!)

    Long story short: one can't just claim that "they didn't have X art style in Y century" because the truth is much more facetted than that. It is way more likely that each and every era of human history has had people with insane talent who were able to create art as realistic as possible with whatever tools their lifetime had to offer, and also a bunch of "eh good enough" art or stuff that was deliberately stylized for fun. How we percieve said art today depends mainly on what artworks have survived up until now, and/or how popular the surviving art is. (Everyone and their grandma knows about the Mona Lisa, but how many of y'all knew about the Rothschild Canticles?)

    If we don't know about any realistic art from a certain period of time, it doesn't automatically mean that there was no realistic art. It may have been lost, forgotten or it exists but it's just not popular enough to be well-known.

    [2]: https://imgur.com/gallery/medieval-marginalia-dump-bKY5h just some delightfully awkward examples [3]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Ducreux

  • Sorry for the late reply, I wasn't online for a few days ... but I see you figured it out ;) I can't speak for other instances, but at least on lemmy.world, the thumbnail is blurred and the post marked as NSFW.

  • whoever handed those out is probably a bigot

    That explains so much. Their usual mental gymnastics have a similar "order" to them ....

  • I have no idea, sorry. I just found that picture in an imgur dump.

  • Thanks! I was sure that I had added the NSFW tag initially and wasn't aware that it wasn't showing.

  • There is also at least one major translation error that's only present in the English version. In the final boss battle, Zelda says that Ganon has "given up on reincarnation and assumed his pure enraged form", implying that the reincarnation cycle has been broken and there will be no more Ganons after this fight.

    In all other languages including the original, it is some variation of "his obsessive refusal to give up on reincarnation turned him into this monstrosity", which implies the exact opposite. No matter how often you kill him, he just won't let go, ever - even if it means to turn into a mindless beast. He WILL try to survive and revive, no matter the cost.

    I guess the translator in question got a little confused with the double negative (Ganon fiercely does NOT want to NOT reincarnate = he fiercely wants to reincarnate).