Talk:Guru-Guru

Guru-Guru Paradox
Interestingly enough, Guru-Guru is angered by the Song of Storms as an adult and teaches the song to Link, who goes back in time, plays it as a kid to enter the Well angering him. A paradox, therefore, Link teaches himself the Song of Storms. Accept the Song was apparently written by the Composer Bros. in Majora's Mask. So where did the song come from? We may never know... Plus if you never enter the Well at all, then you should not be able to learn the song in the first place.

Display Problem
The "References" section of this page does not display when I'm not logged in. I do not have this problem on other pages. If I'm logged in, the References display normally. When I'm logged out, I see the "References" header but no references are displayed below it. If I "view source" on the page the references are not there either so it seems that Zelda Wiki is simply not generating the content for non-logged in users. --Rootbeer277 00:29, 25 May 2009 (UTC)

Where Is the Source for His Name?
I don't recall him ever being referred to as Guru-Guru in the game itself, and in the Official Nintendo Guidebook from Japan, his entry in the character list just names him 風車小屋の男 (Fūshagoya no Otoko) meaning Windmill Man... Moritasan2040 23:23, 28 June 2010 (UTC)
 * Well, in MM, he is referred to as Guru-Guru several times:


 * It seems Guru-Guru, the traveling musician, had the Bremen Mask... --From a Gossip Stone


 * In OoT, he's just usually referred to as the Windmill Man. Dany36 23:38, 28 June 2010 (UTC)


 * So, it's just the MM character's name (which is a different character than the identical guy in OoT). The people in MM are supposed to resemble the people Link met in OoT, but they have different names. For example, "Ingo", "Malon", and "Talon" appear in MM, but they have different names. Moritasan2040 21:12, 29 June 2010 (UTC)