The Legend of Zelda has always possessed a long muddled
timeline. Like the chicken or the egg
argument, no one knew exactly which game came first when trying to form a
chronological order. This argument
created much strife amongst fans, but all of this has now been resolved. With the release of The Legend of Zelda:
Hyrule Historia, fans finally have an official timeline to quell their
arguments. Hit the jump to see why!
THE LEGEND OF ZELDA: HYRULE HISTORIA
PUBLISHED BY DARK HORSE COMICS
ENGLISH EDITOR - PATRICK THORPE
JAPANESE SUPERVISING EDITOR - EIJI AONUMA
The book is broken up into four main parts. After an introduction by creator Shigeru Miyamoto, the first section is called “The Legend
Begins” and tells the story of Skyward Sword with great detail and tons of
concept art. The second, “The History of
Hyrule” is the main attraction of the book.
In this section, the official chronology is laid for every game. The third is the “Creative Footprints,” where
artwork from past games is introduced and some sketches from the deep, dark
depths of Nintendo’s dungeons are brought to the light for the first time. The final segment is a special comic from
artist pair Akira Himekawa which tells the story of a time even before Skyward
Sword.
|
Link concept art featuring the many faces of Link! |
CONCEPT ART
All of the concept art included in this book is a little
staggering. Out of the 274 pages, easily
two-thirds of it is concept art. The sketches
range from the final build of characters to their first humble conception. Some sketches even include interesting facts
about the characters. For instance, the
most attractive feature of the character Fledge is supposed to be the nape of
his neck, or the Ocarina of Time is the same color as the Time Shift Stones so
its ability to alter time could mean it was created from the same material. Little gems like these are all over the
design sketches and it adds a special layer to the universe that devout fans
will enjoy learning.
HYRULE HISTORY
|
Twilight Princess features my favorite look for Ganondorf. |
My favorite part of the whole book is the chronology. The pages of “The History of Hyrule” give a
timeline that would have been impossible to guess without the official guidance
found in this book. A step-by-step
history of the land of Hyrule is weaved through each of the games and learning
how each of the games affects the others is fascinating. Even though I love the chronology, this is
where my biggest problem with the book arises.
After reading the timeline, it is obvious that the creators had to
stretch to tie it all together. Some of
the divisions in the history just seem too far-fetched. I am supposed to believe that one of the
timelines begins because Link, the Hero of Time, is killed by Ganondorf? That just seems a little ridiculous to
me. Like Eiiji Aonuma says in his letter
included in the book, the games were created specifically with gameplay in mind
and the chronology is just an afterthought.
THE COMIC
The special comic included in the back of the book by Akira
Himekawa (a pseudonym for the female manga artist pair A. Honda and S. Nagano) is
an interesting iteration of Link. The
art by Himekawa is wonderful and the story is a bit darker than any of the
games. It clearly depicts the very first
time Link is present in the history of Hyrule as we know it, even before Skyward
Sword. By going further back, the comic
fleshes out the one piece of history that the chronology was light on which is
The Ancient Battle.
|
Concept art for the Gorons shows many different sketches. |
Verdict - BUY IT
The Legend of Zelda: Hyrule Historia is a work of love for
all Zelda fans. The creative team really
wanted to give something back to the people on the 25th Anniversary
of the franchise and with this book they nailed it. With tons of concept art, an official
timeline, insight into the creative process, and a wonderful comic, this book
is one that any Zelda fan will find worthwhile. If you like Zelda, buy it. (Sidenote: I gave this a "Buy it" rating because I can only see this as something the most hardcore of Zelda fans will want. The book is definitely a collector's item. Hundreds of pages full of concept art is not something everybody will love, but if learning all of the ins-and-outs of The Legend of Zelda is what you desire then buy this.)
2 comments:
Τhe blackberry S2 cell phone may bе the voice ѕеrѵices.
Thanks to the plaѕtics useԁ, the bаttery will drain oνernіght while I am still a bit weary on the lіst prіce -- $399.
Despitе thiѕ drop in quаlity the Super AΜOLED scгeеn.
Ιt's the future of the market for budget tablets is booming and many companies have 7-inchAndroidtablets priced at under Rs 10, 000 XP. It should not give information about the device or the screen tech anymore -- we saw a book.
Look into my weblog ... Ipad
Post a Comment
Thanks for checking out the Weekly Crisis - Comic Book Review Blog. Comments are always appreciated. You can sign in and comment with any Google, Wordpress, Live Journal, AIM, OpenID or TypePad account.
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.