Majora's Mask (Object)



Majora's Mask is the final enemy Link must defeat before saving the land of Termina.

The Mask itself manifests in three forms: a hovering mask (Majora's Mask), a pedantic legged-being (Majora's Incarnation), and a vicious humanoid monster with whips as arms (Majora's Wrath).

Majora's Mask
Majora's Mask comes to life and grows "hair like tenticals." To defeat the Mask, Link must stun it with some projectile weapon to make it collapse to the ground, allowing him to strike it with his sword. However, it must be a strike to the back to stun it (it IS a mask). An easy way to do this is to transform into Zora Link. When Z-targeting the Mask the Boomerang fins will fly around behind it and strike it in the back, stunning it. After the Mask has taken enough damage, it will shoot beam fire at Link and the four boss masks will attack you as well, but little effort is taken to kill them. The beam can be deflected with his Mirror Shield to reflect it back at the mask. Majora's Mask has tentacles in this form and can use a whirling attack.

Majora's Incarnation
After the Mask is defeated, it grows a set of arms and legs along with a single eyeball; it also loves dancing. To defeat the Incarnation, Link must shoot it with a Light Arrow or other weapon to stun it, and then strike it with his sword. Majora's Incarnation is very fast and unpredictable but takes very few hits to defeat. While it's various dances are funny, and it's child-like antics entertaining, they can be a bit grating on the nerves. It can moonwalk, can-can, Russian dance, ballerina twirl, and fire energy bolts at you (its only attack). Since the moves are unpredictable, it's wise to keep distance. It has a shrill scream when it's damaged.

Majora's Wrath
After the final scream from the Incarnation is heard, it becomes enraged and its limbs throb and pulse to become... Majora's Wrath, also known as Majora's Mage, is a humanoid version of Majora's Mask with a horned head with 3 eyes, whips for arms, and a flaming mouth. To defeat Majora's Wrath, Link must use a projectile weapon to stun it while its paused, then strike it with a Light Arrow or his sword. This process must repeated until it is defeated. Majora's Wrath can inflict very heavy damage and jump from one side of the arena to the other. Because it is slow to attack (by that, it means in-between attacks, not when it's attacking...especially when it does its whiplash attack), it can however, be easily defeated. Majora's Wrath attacks by whipping 3 times, leaping across the room, throwing eyeball-shaped tops, grabbing you and tossing you clear across the room, and using a furious whipping attack that it announces only a brief milisecond before it uses the attack with a horrifying shriek. Killing the Wrath results in it turning into ashes, eliminating the threat to Termina.

Fierce Deity and the Moon Dungeons
Majora's Mask is encountered when Link talks to the lonely child under the tree inside the Moon. Using the Fierce Deity Mask, Majora's Mask can easily be defeated, however, some fans think this takes some of the fun out of the battle.

To obtain the Fierce Deity Mask, however, you need to obtain all 23 (including the 3 transformation masks) and use them to enter the 4 moon dungeons. While on the moon, you will notice 5 children, 4 of which are running around wearing the masks of the 4 bosses you defeated. Each will allow you entrance to their dungeon, for a fee of masks. If you give all 23 masks to the four children at the entrance and exit of each dungeon, the child wearing Majora's Mask will grant you the Fierce Deity's Mask.

Theories on Origins of Majora's Mask
Though the game doesn't give much specific history on the origins of Majora's Mask, it does state that the mask was used by an ancient and evil tribe in their hexing rituals. When the mask's evil and corrupted power was revealed it was sealed away, until hundreds of years later is was sought out and found by the Happy Mask Salesman. Soon afterwards, the Skull Kid stole the mask from the salesman and began to access its power, awakening the consciousness of the mask.

Some believe Majora's Mask to be the incarnation of a powerful entity by the name of Majora who fought in a great war against five other tribes who had a respective leader; the tribe of Odolwa (the monster of Woodfall Temple), the tribe of Goht (the boss of Snowhead Temple), the tribe of Gyorg (the giant fish of Great Bay Temple), the tribe of the Twinmold (the sand-worm duo of Stone Tower Temple), and the tribe of the Fierce Deity.

How Majora's Mask was created
Majora's creation is explained in one of the Zelda comics that were released at the same time as the game. The story goes that 10 million years ago (before the time setting of Majora's Mask) there lived an evil creature which fed on the desires of the countless numbers of humans who had come before it to try and claim its armor and be granted one wish. Anyway a traveler (who looks similar to Link) came forward to the place where the moster lived. The hero brought a bongo and went to it's lare. He came up to the man-eater and started talking with it. He found out that the moster itself wanted to die, being so misreble. So then the hero the hero pulled out his bongo and started playing. The moster then in a trace started dancing! The hero played for three days strait (probably why majora whants to finish off the world in three days) and then the beast dropped dead from dancing his heart out. The hero took his magical armor but instead of wishing apon it, he carved it into a mask attemting to seal the beast's power inside the mask forever, it was named after the beast, Majora. But to why the mask had a mind. It was because Majora's evil power lingered on inside the mask seaking a hoste, not resting intill It's wish was granted. On the mask there appears to be four spikes, each with it's own color. Three of these colors have been used to represent the Goddesses in previous games, red for Din, green for Farore, and blue for Nayru. The fourth one is yellow and doesn't represent anything, but it could support the Tetraforce theory.