Wizzrobe

The Wizzrobe is one of the more commonly recurring Legend of Zelda enemies in the Zelda universe, appearing as early as The Legend of Zelda and as recently as Phantom Hourglass.

Characteristics
Wizzrobes, first seen in the original The Legend of Zelda, have been quite the staple of the Zelda franchise, as they've been garbed in colorful outfits, wide-brimmed hats, shooting energy beams and fireballs at Link even up to Spirit Tracks, spanning the entire series. As stated earlier, these foes are known for their ability to shoot magical, energetic projectiles at Link: the orange variety in The Legend of Zelda set such a trend to follow throughout the later incarnations. The physical aspects of the original The Legend of Zelda Wizzrobes find their way into the titles of Link's Awakening, A Link to the Past, and even into Four Swords Adventures and The Minish Cap; however, as later titles show, the diversity and appearance of the Wizzrobe change dramatically.

Disappearing and teleporting have been popular facets of the Wizzrobe since its introduction in Majora's Mask, as well, enabling the creature to engage Link through ambushes and surprise attacks, only adding more difficulty to a foe that fires accurate, wide-range projectiles. In many titles, but most distinguishably in The Wind Waker, Wizzrobes make alarm sounds when they teleport, and upon reappearing, there is sometimes a flurry of white sparkles or beads that quickly appears, surrounding their position.

Color Differences
Beginning with The Legend of Zelda, Wizzrobes always have been distinguished in strength and behavior by color, a scheme that changes a bit between subsequent titles. The Legend of Zelda incorporates Wizzrobes of two colors, the stronger of the two maintains the ability to charge and shoot a flurry of beam attacks at Link at once.

Seen most exclusively in Oracle of Ages and Oracle of Seasons, the green variety of Wizzrobe stay in one place, disappearing and reappearing to attack Link with their beam attack. The red variety has a little more health than the green variety, and instead of staying in one spot, teleports all around the room, attacking in the same way. The blue Wizzrobe is the only variety that moves like a normal enemy, but it has the advantage of being able to make itself invulnerable to attack when changing direction. While it does this it can move through objects, but cannot harm Link. When vulnerable, the blue Wizzrobe starts attacking in a similar way to its other forms. It is faster in its attacks than the other two, and it also has the advantage of being able to move while attacking. The same coloration is seen in Four Swords and The Minish Cap, however, the red version shoots fireballs, the blue version shoots ice blasts, and there is even a fourth version, unique to Four Swords Adventures that prides itself in its Force Gem-sucking powers. In the Japanese versions, the red Wizzrobes are called Firerobes, and the blue ones are called Icerobes.

The Adventure of Link
The  is an enemy in The Adventure of Link that is identical to Wizzrobes in all ways except one: they are impervious  to Link's sword, and can only be defeated by reflecting their magic back at them using the Reflect Spell. In the American manual, they are mistakenly called Wizzrobes.

Majora's Mask
Though a Wizzrobe also appears in Majora's Mask, misspelled Wizrobe, it is significantly different in appearance from previous Wizzrobes. It tends to transport itself to different pads across a room. Link has to attack it while it is dancing but before it attacks. After Link damages it enough it appears with illusionary copies and dances briefly before attacking with either fire or ice. To defeat it, Link has to guess which of the dancing spirits is the real Wizzrobe and attack before they teleported away (if standing in a good spot, Tatl proceeds to zoom over to the real one). Only the real one appears on the map.

The Wind Waker and Phantom Hourglass
In The Wind Waker, most Wizzrobes Link encounters wear a dark cloak with a red hood and masks shaped like toucan heads. There are also three groups of Wizzrobes that wear white cloaks and are found on top of the three triple-platforms in the Great Sea. There is also a more powerful version of the Wizzrobe, who wears a red cloak and an Inca crown. It is the the mini-boss in the Wind Temple. He has the sole power of summoning other Wizzrobes, as well as enemies such as Darknuts and Moblins. A one-hit kill, even for the Wizzrobe mini-boss, is to freeze it with an Ice Arrow, and toss it at a wall or crush it with the Skull Hammer. When Link defeats this mini-boss, he receives the Hookshot.

return in Phantom Hourglass after their drastic change in The Wind Waker. They retain the bird masks, but are slightly smaller and carry large scythes instead of wands. In spite of the aesthetic similarities, they take on a completely new role in this game. They appear only in the Temple of the Ocean King and do not use their traditional magic. Instead, they are invisible until right before they attack, and will sneak up to steal time away from the Phantom Hourglass with a swipe of their scythes. They appear as skulls on the map on the top screen, which is the only way to track them without coming in range of their attacks. They can be useful, though, because beating one earns Link 30 more seconds while they can only steal 15 at a time.

Weaknesses
For the most part, the most original Wizzrobe form is weak to conventional weaponry such as the sword, arrows, bombs, and the like, however, the more important aspect of battling these foes is catching them before they teleport and disappear. The incarnations seen in The Wind Waker are sometimes too far out of reach for the typical sword strike, appearing in the air, so use of the Fire Arrow or any other arrow proves successful in the long run over sword usage. Interestingly, the ice Wizzrobe seen in Four Swords and ALL types of Wizzrobe - not just Ice ones - in The Minish Cap are weak to the Lantern.

The Legend of Zelda comic
The Wizzrobes in the Legend of Zelda comic highly resemble their original artwork depiction from The Legend of Zelda. Although a Wizzrobe makes a brief appearance in He Also Serves,  these foes play a more important role in To the First Power and,  to an extent, in Queen of Hearts.

In To the First Power, a Wizzrobe commands several of Ganon's minions to tie Link up after Zelda heads inside the Eagle Labyrinth to train against Ganon's minions. However, the Wizzrobe reveals to Link that he filled the Eagle Labyrinth with the most dangerous of   enemies so that Zelda may not stand a chance up against them. Although Link confronts the Wizzrobe and tells him that capturing Zelda  will do no good since he is the one that Ganon wants, the  Wizzrobe  confesses that he is not interested in following Ganon's  orders anymore. He elaborates that he has gathered many other minions who feel the same  way, and as soon as he destroys Link and Zelda, all of Ganon's  minions  will join his renegade army, leaving Ganon to fail.

Eventually, Zelda makes her way to where the Wizzrobe and Link are, delighting the foe since he will now be able to defeat her himself. The Wizzrobe shoots a magic beam at her,  which Zelda dodges and quickly fires an arrow from her bow towards  the  foe, making it fall into a fire pit that sends the Wizzrobe back  to  Ganon. The story ends with the Wizzrobe kneeling in front of Ganon while the  Prince of Darkness praises him since he could make use of a "deceitful   and treacherous" man like him.

The Wizzrobe in Queen of Hearts is in charge of securing the magic container that holds all of Queen Seline's magical  powers. When Link and Seline make their way to where the magic container is, they are confronted by a Wizzrobe and a horde of Ganon's other minions. Link is then heavily injured and faints, and before the Wizzrobe can finish him off, Zelda appears and shoots an arrow at the magic  container, restoring Seline's powers and allowing her to easily defeat the Wizzrobe and the rest of the enemies.

The Crystal Trap
A Wizzrobe disguised as a Fortune Teller appears in The Crystal Trap. Known as Madame Grusha, she resides in the Town of Ruto. If Zelda visits Madame Grusha's hut, she will guess that Zelda has traveled far and that she is seeking three things. The fortune-teller goes on to explain that she knows how to help the princess, but she cannot speak of it in their current location and asks that Zelda follow her into her inner sanctum. Following Madame Grusha will lead to Zelda's death, while deciding to not follow her will result in a fight between Zelda and the Wizzrobe, along with some Moblins; however, the princess will manage to defeat both enemies and come out of the hut alive.

The Wand of Gamelon
In the non-canon CD-i game Zelda: The Wand of Gamelon, a single Wizzrobe appears as an individual character and "boss" who has kidnapped Lady Alma. He is fought in the Shutoy Lake Tower, and is killed by reflecting his "disintegration spell" at him. He is most likely the one who put Link in the mirror. In this game, he looks very different from the canonical version of the species, now resembling a green-skinned, humanoid wizard with a purple cloak.

Trivia

 * While Wizzrobes are not present in Twilight Princess, Zant's Masks use the same attack strategy as the Wizzrobes from The Wind Waker, teleporting back and forth and firing magic blasts at Link.
 * The Wizzrobe designs (except from Majora's Mask, The Wind Waker and Phantom Hourglass) are similar to the Simirror enemy from the Kirby series.
 * Blaaz, the boss of The Temple of Fire in Phantom Hourglass, appears to be slightly based off of the Wizzrobe. It shares a similar appearance and attack strategy to Wizzrobes of the past, especially Wizzrobes of The Wind Waker.