
The character Hino, from Dueling Peaks Stable, keeps track of blood moons and can explain them to Link. The Shrine Quest Under a Red Moon also requires a blood moon to complete. What an awfully big adventure.The main useful effect from a Blood Moon is that cooking meals while malice specks are in the air, from 23:30 on, during a blood moon will result in an automatic critical, improving the results markedly. He must look after himself almost entirely. Here, more than ever, Link must be smart. How Link, taller though he may be now, is so small compared to it all. How vast the stretches between points of civilisation and safety are. When the wind whips up you can hear how empty it all is. If you listen hard enough you can hear secrets, and faires, and find your way through the lost woods. You can hear rivers before you see them, and enemies before you run into them. I’m thoroughly convinced, along with, I’m sure, anyone else who has played the game, that while yes, there is a whole thing with Princess Zelda and Ganon and what have you, Breath of the Wild is almost entirely about the world, and when you play you should be listening to it. But coming back from the dead isn’t allowed: only I, the hero, should be allowed to do that! These insolent lizards must be dealt with! Accompanied by the heartbreaking, slow-motion crystalline shattering noise that your sword makes when it finally breaks. This is especially galling when they come back whenever a blood moon rises, a method Nintendo have used here to not make the game lose its moments of peril but not use inexplicable respawning. They shouldn’t be here! They’re ruining it, the ruiners!

Their unnatural scrapings across your ears make it all the more imperative that you dispatch them, or get away from them yourself. They, particularly ancient mechanical ones like the cephalopodic, six-legged Guardians, have noises out of sorts with everything else. But the deeper into the wild you get, the more enemies you run into. The Koroks, little wood spirits with leaf mask faces, sound like hollow wood knocking together. The villages fit around existing hills, canyons, or rivers of lava, and mostly sound like wind chimes, flags, and cooking fires. You can startle birds and listen to them flap away you can cut into a tree with little thwacks of a blade and listen to it falling you can sit on a silent mountain and listen to wolves howling.Įven the other people and animals you meet fit nicely into the wild, which has made a space for them rather than them making a space for themselves. The crunch of walking over snow isn’t the same as the crunch of walking over sand, and all are entirely different again if you’re riding a horse, which is accompanied by jingles of tack and, sometimes, laboured horsey breathing if you’re pushing hard. When it’s raining softly you hear little patters, and when a storm rages you hear thunder and lightning, and see other people running for cover. When it’s sunny and quiet you can still hear Link’s feet, and the gear on his back, which knocks with a different noise if he’s using wooden weapons or metal ones. Calm rivers ripple and great waterfalls roar out mist. Sometimes the wind rushes strong and whispers in the grass, or sometimes it’s you cutting a swathe through a field making it rustle. Most of the time, though, you’re listening to the world itself. They’re slightly menacing, because the wild, the great-out-there, is dangerous. Sometimes, when you crest a hill or enter a wide prairie, a few piano notes sound to remind you that you’re in the wild now, but they’re not happy notes. The times it does have music are usually times you run into civilisation, like the stables dotted around - and sometimes at the stables there’s a Rito bard, playing Epona’s Theme on the accordion (against all physical probability that he is able to play an accordion). The Breath of the Wild is surprisingly musical, by which I mean it doesn’t have very much music but it has a lot of very specific, very well made sounds.

So Link (and us with him) hears the call of the wild now. This is good, because Breath of the Wild is a more grown up adventure - or at least, it’s the kind of adventure a child might imagine they’ll have when they’re grown up, the kind of adventure where you can tame wild horses, climb trees to eat apples, and fly from the tops of mountains, and sometimes it might be a bit scary but, if you need to, you can run away to somewhere you can eat a cake and feel better - and there’s a lot to be done. Now, after decades saving Hyrule and Princess Zelda from the evil pig-man-beast Ganon, many different times and many different ways, Link is the boy who never grew up. Shigeru Miyamoto has said that Link was inspired by Peter Pan, at least visually. Link, elfin hero of the Legend of Zelda series, is very much a Peter Pan figure.
