Talk:Hylia

Left handed Hylia
[] at 19:34, you can clearly see that she is lefthanded. Can you change it back, please? --Link, the Hero of Light 13:06, 1 February 2012 (EST)
 * That would contradict the images we have in the article (such as the one shown in the introduction), so really, we can't tell for sure. She might have been ambidextrous or something. :P --Dany36 13:16, 1 February 2012 (EST)
 * Yes, your right, it might be xD. But maybe we should add it at Trivia, that the pictures of her shows her both right- and left hand? --Link, the Hero of Light 13:19, 1 February 2012 (EST)

Lorulean Counterpart?
There's obviously not a whole lot of outright information in support of this, but might it nonetheless be worth mentioning that Hylia may have had a Lorulean counterpart? In Hyrule, of course, the Royal Family was descended from Hylia, and given that Hilda shares so many characteristics with Zelda- including magical abilities- it would make sense that she too had a divine heritage. Setras (talk) 05:12, 6 December 2013 (UTC)
 * They also have a Triforce, and we've been told in the past that Termina was created by the Goddesses too (erg...), so it's more likely she's just in both universes.KrytenKoro (talk) 17:44, 7 December 2013 (UTC)
 * But Lorule, canonically speaking, isn't Termina (and I've never heard anything canon that says the goddesses made the latter anyway), and regardless, we don't know precisely how its creation occurred- hypothetically, the Golden Goddesses could have Lorulean equivalents, too. More to the point, Hylia can only exist in one universe- the one containing Hyrule- because the Zelda of SS is Hylia. So unless SS Zelda could move between the worlds at will, and had an affair in Lorule that eventually spawned the Lorulean Royal Family while simultaneously founding what would become the Hyrulean one- an unlikely sequence of events, to say the least- she can't be related to the former. Unless I misunderstood you and you meant that there was one Hylia in each universe... but wouldn't this ultimately come to the same thing as having a counterpart? Not to mention be kind of aesthetically unpleasing, given that the other Lorulean counterparts shown aren't exact replicas of the Hyruleans? Setras (talk) 18:41, 7 December 2013 (UTC)
 * Nope. She's a goddess, so there's (1) no reason to expect that she is limited to one dimension, especially given that her creation, the Master Sword, is able to see through and navigate time, and one of her descendants, OoT Zelda, is able to split the timeline; and (2) no reason to expect that Hilda is a descendant of Hylia or any hypothetical counterpart.
 * Basically, there is nothing in the game suggesting or requiring that Hylia has a counterpart, so any claim that one is implied would be equivalent to claiming that Termina or Lorule must have an equivalent of the Helmaroc or Midna.KrytenKoro (talk) 21:03, 9 December 2013 (UTC)