User:Christopher-gpuser/Sandbox

The Imprisoning War or Seal War was a great conflict spoken of in A Link to the Past that broke out across the land of Hyrule long ago when a thief named Ganondorf gained entry to the Golden Land and stole the Triforce from its resting place. Ganondorf's seizure of the Triforce tainted the Golden Land, transforming it into the Dark World and Ganondorf himself into a beast named Ganon. He launched an invasion against Hyrule with his new army of monsters, made up of people from Hyrule that came seeking the Golden Power for themselves. This invasion was repelled by the Knights of Hyrule, who gave their lives almost to the last to protect the Seven Sages as they cast a seal on the Dark World, trapping Ganon and his army inside and restoring peace to Hyrule.

An Accidental Discovery
Long ago, in the land of Hyrule, legends spoke of a great power left behind by the Golden Goddesses following Hyrule's creation. Stories telling of the so-called "Golden Land", or the Sacred Realm, and the omnipotent "Golden Power" known as the Triforce that resides within it eventually spread across Hyrule over the ages, causing a lust for the Triforce's wish-granting power to grow and fester in the hearts and minds of Hyrule's people until there was nothing left in many of them but pure greed. The Triforce could not judge between good and evil and thus would merely grant the wishes of its holder according to legend, and these tales eventually led to the spilling of blood out of lust for the Golden Power.

One day, a gateway to the Golden Land of the Triforce was accidentally discovered and opened by a band of thieves skilled in dark magic and their leader, a man named Ganondorf. They were the first to set foot in this magical place in ages. It was a place like no other, a realm of midday golden skies rather than blue. And there, shining down upon this world from above, was the Triforce in all its glory. A long running battle then ensued between Ganondorf and his followers to the heart of the Sacred Realm in a race to reach the Triforce first. Ganondorf fought his way past and killed all of his followers that had accompanied him into the realm along the way so that he could claim it uncontested.

The Great Cataclysm
After the murders of his followers, Ganondorf stood over the Triforce and grasped it with blood-stained hands. A voice whispered to him, stating that if he had a strong desire in his heart to wish for it. In response, Ganondorf's laughter echoed across time and space and reached even Hyrule itself as he made a wish that he become the ruler of the world. This event would came to be known as the Great Cataclysm, an event that came to symbolize the theft of the Triforce and would have vast implications for Hyrule and its people for ages to come.

It was also out of the Great Cataclysm that one of Hyrule's greatest threats was born as Ganondorf now had the strength of the Triforce at his command. An ancient prophecy concerning the Great Cataclysm also existed however, stating that if a person with an evil heart should ever gain possession of the Triforce that a Hero would be destined to one day appear, and that Hero would defeat the evil one that unleashed the Great Cataclysm.

The Spoiling of the Golden Land
As a result of Ganondorf's wish for the domination of the world, the Triforce interpreted that wish by causing the Sacred Realm to radically change. The Golden Land began to whither and die as it was transformed into a twisted copy of Hyrule that seemingly was meant to represent what Hyrule would look like if Ganondorf were to rule it. Dark clouds now permanently blackened the skies as light shined no more upon this sacred place. As a side-effect of this transformation, the Triforce's magic was used to cast a curse over the entire realm, one that would cause any without protection from it to transform into a shape that would reflect what is in his or her heart. The Golden Land was now the Dark World, a place of darkness and evil that was intended to satisfy Ganondorf's wish.

Ganondorf himself also changed: he transformed from his humanoid form and took on the form a demonic, boar-like creature bent upon conquest and destruction. It was then that he took on the name of Ganon, a name that came to symbolize his villainy and evil. Ganon was not satisfied merely with ruling the newly-transformed Dark World however, as he sought to return to Hyrule and conquer it as well. In time, evil power began to issue forth from the portal to the Golden Land, beckoning to men from the outside to seek out the Golden Power and have their wishes become reality through its magic.

The Invasion of Hyrule
As greedy men from Hyrule entered the Dark World hungry for the Golden Power, each of them was transformed into a monster reflecting the greed within them. As a result, Ganon's army of monsters grew to a large enough proportion that he was now capable of launching an invasion against Hyrule. Many plagues began to beset Hyrule as well, causing catastrophes for the people that would precede the coming storm.

Finally, with his army now ready, Ganon launched a massive invasion against the land of Hyrule, intending to make his wish come completely true to be the ruler of both the Dark World and the Light World. Ganon's army swarmed from the Dark World and flooded into Hyrule, causing mass chaos and attacking Hyrule Castle. Meanwhile, the Seven Sages, a group of powerful sorcerers skilled in magic, searched for a courageous individual that could take up a weapon that had been crafted to combat magic as powerful as that of the Triforce's, a sword that could banish evil itself. This blade came to be known as the "Blade of Evil's Bane", or the Master Sword.

The Seal of the Seven Sages
The King of Hyrule eventually convened the council of the Seven Sages as well as the Knights of Hyrule that served to protect the Hylian royalty and commanded them to seal the gateway to the Dark World shut in order to stem Ganon's invasion of the kingdom. Both groups would play pivotal roles in the hope of reaching this goal, with the Seven Sages bearing the responsibility of creating the seal itself while the Knights of Hyrule would protect them as they did their part to halt Ganon's massacre of the kingdom.

The Knights of Hyrule took the full brunt of the attack from Ganon's monsters, and while they fought courageously to the end, they were nearly wiped out entirely as they did their duty. Their lives were not lost in vain however, as they bought the necessary time for the Seven Sages to create their seal, trapping Ganon in the Dark World and halting the invasion. With this, the war was ended in a victory for the Light World, though it had come at a very high cost. The people of Hyrule rejoiced nonetheless at the restoration of order and peace to their kingdom, thanks to the efforts of the Seven Sages and the Knights of Hyrule.

Ganondorf/Ganon
The individual responsible for unleashing the Great Cataclysm and the primary instigator of the Imprisoning War, Ganondorf, known as Ganon after his hauling of the Triforce, was once the humanoid leader of a band of thieves that resided in Hyrule. He and his followers were skilled in the dark arts; One day, they discovered one of the gateways to the fabled Golden Land. After a deadly race to the heart of this Sacred Realm in which he slew all of his own followers, Ganondorf seized the Triforce as his own with the blood of his followers literally on his hands. His wish to become the ruler of the world caused the Golden Land's transformation into the Dark World as well as his own transformation into Ganon.

As Ganon, he took on the grotesque shape of a boar-like creature that thirsted only for conquest and destruction, hungering for power at any price. He also took to wielding a magical trident as his primary weapon of choice. Using the Triforce's magic, he cast a spell over the Dark World that would cause any venturing into it without protection to be transformed into a shape reflecting what lies in that person's heart, not too unlike himself. He also used the Triforce to lure greedy men from Hyrule into the Dark World in order to transform them into monsters for his army and create the foundation for a massive invasion of the Light World. Once he had built a large enough force, Ganon proceeded to launch his assault on Hyrule with the intention of ruling both worlds with the Triforce at his command. His schemes were put to a halt however through the sacrifice of the Knights of Hyrule and the magic of the Seven Sages when a seal was placed on the gateway to the Dark World, preventing him from being able to return to the Light World.

King of Hyrule
Not much is known about the sitting King of Hyrule at the time of the Imprisoning War, apart from certain details concerning his actions during the conflict. It is said that when Ganon's army invaded from the Dark World and began attacking Hyrule Castle that the king called the Seven Sages and the Knights of Hyrule together and ordered them to seal the gateway to the Golden Land as a means to stem the invasion. Beyond that, not much is known about his reign or what other actions he took during the war, but it appears he was the chief architect of the plan to seal Ganon within the confines of the Dark World in order to restore peace to the kingdom.

In the stories of the Imprisoning War, he is referred to as the "Lord of Hyrule". As is the case with the Royal Family at the time of A Link to the Past, it is implied that he too ruled from Hyrule Castle during his reign, as Ganon's beasts were said to have targeted it during their invasion of the kingdom. As there is still a sitting king at the time of A Link to the Past, which supposedly takes place centuries after the Imprisoning War, it is thought that both the King of Hyrule in the present as well as Princess Zelda are descendants of the unnamed king that led Hyrule through the Imprisoning War.

Knights of Hyrule
The protectors of the Hylian royalty renowned for their bravery, the Knights of Hyrule were the primary military force defending Hyrule during the era of the Imprisoning War and sacrificed a great deal to preserve its freedom. Not much is known about their order or how it was formed, but their primary purpose was to serve the Royal Family of Hyrule and to defend the country. When Ganon seized the Triforce and attacked Hyrule after forming a great army of monsters, the knights were the main source of resistance to the chaos he wrought upon the kingdom. When the King of Hyrule formed the plan to seal Ganon and his army within the Dark World, they were assigned the role of protecting the Seven Sages from harm as they cast the seal on the portal to the Dark World. As a result, they took the full brunt of the beasts' attacks and subsequently perished almost to the point of complete extermination. They had however succeeded in their ultimate goal of giving the Sages the time they needed to cast the seal, so their lives were not lost in vain.

Not all of their numbers were completely decimated though, for one of their few remaining descendants, Link, is featured in A Link to the Past and becomes the legendary Hero spoken of in the prophecy of the Great Cataclysm that would reverse the Cataclysm's effects by taking back the Golden Power and restoring both the Golden Land and Hyrule to their former beauty. This would seem to imply that not only is Link descended from the knights, but also his uncle, who taught him the basics of swordsmanship.

Seven Sages
The Seven Sages, also known as the Seven Wise Men, were a group of powerful sorcerers skilled in magic that served the Royal Family of Hyrule around the time the Imprisoning War broke out. Not much is known of their history, such as their group's formation or even what their names were, but what is certain is that they were primarily responsible for ending the Imprisoning War by placing a seal on the gateway to the Golden Land, therefore locking Ganon away within the Dark World and protecting Hyrule from further harm. Before the formation of the plan to seal Ganon away, they were said to have searched for a courageous individual that could take up the Master Sword and confront the evil that was threatening Hyrule. Despite this search, the beasts of Ganon's army were wreaking havoc, and the King of Hyrule acted by convening the Sages' council, where he ordered them to place their seal on the Dark World. They succeeded in this endeavor largely because the Knights of Hyrule sacrificed their numbers to defend them while they created the seal. In the end, it was the combined efforts of the Sages and the knights that saved Hyrule.

The descendants of the Seven Sages, the Seven Maidens, appear in A Link to the Past, and have inherited their status as Sages in their own right in the present day. The town elder of Kakariko Village at the time of A Link to the Past, Sahasrahla, also claims to be descended from the Sages as well as the lost old man that gives Link the Magic Mirror on Death Mountain. During the events of A Link the Past, the dark wizard Agahnim intends to send each of the Sages' successors, the Seven Maidens, across the barrier between the worlds and destroy the seal placed on the Dark World by their ancestors.

Theories
The Imprisoning War has been a source of much debate in the Legend of Zelda community since it was first introduced with the release of A Link to the Past, and there have been numerous attempts to decipher where exactly it fits in the timeline of the series or even whether or not it has already been depicted in the games in one form or another. To date, no single attempt to link the Imprisoning War to events already depicted in the games has been completely successful; However, Nintendo did issue the statement that Ocarina of Time depicts the war shortly after that game's release. Despite this seeming confirmation, there have been numerous problems that have made it difficult to fit not only Ocarina of Time but other existing possibilities as well into the aforementioned story of the Imprisoning War spoken of in A Link to the Past.

Ocarina of Time
Perhaps the one game possessing the most evidence to support its candidacy for the Imprisoning War, Ocarina of Time was released in 1998 and tells the story of the Hero of Time and his long journey not only across Hyrule but through time itself to save the land from Ganondorf, a thief from the desert intent upon harnessing the Triforce's power and ruling the kingdom. After acquiring a special stone from his father-figure, the Great Deku Tree, and meeting Hyrule's Princess Zelda, the young Hero, Link journeys to find the other two stones and open the gateway to the Sacred Realm where the Triforce is kept. Though he succeeds in this effort, Ganondorf attacks the kingdom, resulting in Link acquiring the Ocarina of Time as well, another of the keys to the Sacred Realm. Using these keys, the young Hero opens the Door of Time within the Temple of Time and claims the Blade of Evil's Bane, the Master Sword, from its holding place within the Pedestal of Time. This action fully opens the portal to the Sacred Realm, but also causes Link to be sealed away for seven years until he would be old enough to claim the mantle of the Hero of Time. Meanwhile, Ganondorf uses this opportunity to enter the Sacred Realm and haul the Triforce, resulting in the relic's split into its three component pieces and the Sacred Realm's transformation into a world of evil.

Ganondorf then returns to Hyrule and becomes its tyrannical ruler for seven dark years, until the Hero of Time returns to confront him. To defeat Ganondorf, the Hero of Time journeys around Hyrule rescuing the Seven Sages that have the power to seal Ganondorf away in the void of what was formerly the Sacred Realm. After rescuing all of the Sages, Link reunites with Princess Zelda, the seventh Sage, and learns that she and he both hold one of each of the two pieces of the Triforce Ganondorf had failed to acquire. This however results in Zelda's capture by Ganondorf, who uses her as bait to lure the Hero of Time to his castle. There, the Hero of Time battles the King of Evil for the fate of Hyrule and the balance of the Triforce, ultimately triumphing over the evil Gerudo. Ganondorf then uses his piece of the Triforce to transform into Ganon, a dark beast of terrible strength. The Hero of Time once again triumphs over him however, and the Seven Sages use their powers to seal Ganondorf away within the void of the Evil Realm, upon which he promises to return one day to exterminate the descendants of those who imprisoned him. As a reward for his efforts, Zelda sends the Hero of Time back to his own time to regain his lost seven years, resulting in a split universe of Hyrule's history.


 * Support
 * 1) The single strongest piece of evidence for this game's candidacy of being the Imprisoning War is the aforementioned statement released by Nintendo shortly after the game's release, stating that the game was made with the Imprisoning War in mind.
 * 2) The Sacred Realm seemingly has never been opened in the continuity of Ocarina of Time before Ganondorf's incursion into it, closely matching the description of this event detailed in the backstory of A Link to the Past.
 * 3) A group of Seven Sages do indeed make an appearance in this game, and they also seal Ganondorf away in what was formerly the Sacred Realm, virtually identical to how Ganondorf's imprisonment is described in A Link to the Past.
 * 4) The Triforce is indeed hauled by Ganondorf from its hiding place in the Sacred Realm, causing the Sacred Realm's transformation into a world of evil, once again virtually identical to the way this event is described in A Link to the Past.
 * 5) Ganondorf's origins are seemingly revealed in Ocarina of Time, where he is fittingly described as being the leader of a band of thieves, the Gerudo, that live in the desert of Hyrule, another match to what is said in A Link to the Past.
 * 6) A civil war is said to have taken place not long before the events of Ocarina of Time, closely mirroring the statement made in A Link to the Past that the people quarreled and fought over the Triforce shortly before Ganondorf discovered the gateway to the Golden Land.


 * Discrepancies
 * 1) It is said that the King of Hyrule commanded the Seven Sages to seal the Golden Land in the legends of the Imprisoning War. Even though it is never stated in the game, he is presumed dead, and the noncanonical manga states that the King indeed died in Ocarina of Time following Ganondorf’s assault on Hyrule Castle. He is however thought to have survived in the other timeline.
 * 2) The story of the Imprisoning War states that there was no Hero found who could wield the Master Sword, yet Link obviously did discover the sword and wielded it in Ocarina of Time.
 * 3) The Seven Sages are of all different races in Ocarina of Time despite that in A Link to the Past their descendants, the Seven Maidens all appear to be humanoid.
 * 4) Ganondorf is sealed in the Sacred Realm with only one piece of the Triforce in Ocarina of Time. In the backstory for A Link to the Past, he steals all three pieces together and makes his wish on the united Triforce.
 * 5) The Knights of Hyrule are not nearly as prominent in Ocarina of Time as they are in the original story. Only one knight is seen in a back alley, and though his dialogue indicates he was killed by Ganon, the battle waged by the Knights to protect the Sages does not appear in Ocarina of Time.
 * 6) Ganon could not figure out how to return to the Light World after the seal was cast. Two direct sequels to Ocarina of Time, The Wind Waker and Twilight Princess both feature Ganon's return.

Four Swords Adventures
Four Swords Adventures opens with a series of dark omens plaguing Hyrule, namely that the skies grow dark and foreboding as storms overtake them. Princess Zelda and the Shrine Maidens, worried about the seal on the Wind Sorcerer Vaati possibly weakening, call Link to Hyrule Castle to protect them while they check the status of Vaati's seal. However, upon opening the portal leading to the Four Sword's resting place, all seven of the maidens are captured by an evil shadow resembling Link as they are sealed within crystals and spirited away. Link chases his evil twin through the portal and into the Four Sword Sanctuary, where he is tricked into drawing the Four Sword from its resting place, splitting Link into four colorful versions of himself and releasing Vaati in the process as Shadow Link escapes and the now-four Links are swept away by Vaati's power. The four Links awaken to the voice of Kaepora Gaebora, a sagely owl that acts as a guardian over Hyrule. He informs the four Links of the current situation and instructs them to seek Vaati if they wish to find the Shrine Maidens and Princess Zelda. As they progress onward, the four Links become aware that evil magic has caused Hyrule's military to now serve the forces of evil. Still the four heroes forge ahead with their quest to free the maidens and Princess Zelda, journeying around each region of Hyrule to rescue them.

Along the way, they learn of the disappearance of the Knights of Hyrule, a special order of knights that serve the Royal Family of Hyrule by guarding the four Royal Jewels (the necessary keys to reach the Realm of the Heavens); Eventually they are discovered to have been killed by a foe with a mighty weapon and sent to the Dark World as the four Links free their souls and gather the Royal Jewels. They also learn of an evil relic known as the Dark Mirror, inside which a dark tribe is said to have been sealed and that has the power to create a dark manifestation of a person. It is later revealed to have been stolen by an evil entity known as Ganon, the so-called King of Darkness. Upon investigating the Desert of Doubt where Ganon, the former Ganondorf, once resided amongst the Gerudo tribe, the four Links discover that Ganondorf has stolen the Trident of Power , a powerful weapon housing an evil spirit, from its resting place deep inside the ancient Pyramid. With the Shrine Maidens rescued, the four Links make their way to the Palace of Winds to confront Vaati. There, they recover the Dark Mirror (the source of the Shadow Links plaguing Hyrule ) and defeat Vaati once and for all. They are then faced however with Ganon himself, but they are able to defeat him and buy the Shrine Maidens and Princess Zelda the time to seal Ganon away within the Four Sword.


 * Support
 * 1) As indicated by deleted text in Four Swords Adventures the original concept for that game would have included elements which might have made it the game in which the Imprisoning War occurred. Deleted text talks of Link not being able to wield the Master Sword, and more explicit references to the Hylians.
 * 2) Several elements of the backstory from A Link to the Past are present in Four Swords Adventures such as the Dark World, the Knights of Hyrule, and a new origin story for Ganon, who still lives amongst the Gerudo thieves of the desert, matching part of his description in the story of the Imprisoning War.
 * 3) Dark clouds do blacken the skies as a plague to Hyrule near the start of the game, mirroring the way similar happenings were described in the backstory of the Imprisoning War, where dark clouds and plagues were also noted to have beset the kingdom upon Ganondorf's gain of power.


 * Discrepancies
 * 1) The absence of such elements as the Master Sword and the Triforce in the final version of the game means that Four Swords Adventures is missing some important elements from the story of the Imprisoning War.
 * 2) The Knights of Hyrule are only four in number in the game as the guardians of the four Royal Jewels, whereas they are implied to have been large in number and to have been the primary source of resistance to Ganon's army during the Imprisoning War.
 * 3) Though some incarnation of the Dark World is present in Four Swords Adventures, it is not clear that this is the world of evil that was formerly the Sacred Realm; Rather it appears as a hazy, backward copy of Hyrule itself in which only shadows of it appear in the normal world, without any clear connection between it and the former Sacred Realm.

Twilight Princess
Twilight Princess opens with Link living in a distant annex of the kingdom of Hyrule, namely the small Ordon Village. He is tasked with delivering a gift to the Royal Family of Hyrule at Hyrule Castle, but on the day of his departure, his village is attacked by a gang of Bulblins. Pursuing the beasts, he is brought into the twilight-enshrouded Faron Woods and takes on the form of a divine wolf as the holder of the Triforce of Courage. After meeting a mysterious imp named Midna as well as Zelda (holder of the Triforce of Wisdom), Link learns that twilight has engulfed Hyrule as a result of an invasion orchestrated by the self-proclaimed King of Shadows, Zant. Link and Midna then escape the castle together and make preparations to search Hyrule for the fragments of a weapon to defeat Zant. The weapon they seek is the Fused Shadow, a powerful weapon once wielded by Midna's ancestors, the Dark Interlopers (a group of skilled sorcerers that sparked a war when they attempted to seize control of the Sacred Realm before being banished to the Twilight Realm by order of the Golden Goddesses). After lifting the twilight from each province protected by the Light Spirits of Hyrule, they succeed in finding the Fused Shadow fragments. They come face-to-face with Zant however, who steals the fragments and fatally wounds Midna when she refuses to join his cause. After taking the injured Midna to Princess Zelda, who sacrifices herself to save Midna, the pair seek out the Master Sword in the ruins of an ancient temple.

They search for the Mirror of Twilight that connects Hyrule and the Twilight Realm. At the Arbiter's Grounds, they discover Zant has broken it and sent three of its fragments away; Only the true ruler of the Twili could destroy it. The Ancient Sages appear and relate the story of Ganondorf, the leader of a band of thieves that invaded Hyrule to establish dominion over the Sacred Realm. The Sages tried to execute him, but his possession of the Triforce of Power made this ineffective. They used the mirror to send him away into the Twilight Realm. Suspecting that Ganondorf influenced Zant, they instruct the duo to find the mirror shards. After the mirror is restored, they reveal that Midna is the Twilight Princess, the rightful ruler of the Twilight Realm overthrown by Zant. Accepting their apologies concerning Ganondorf, Midna goes with Link to the Palace of Twilight. They discover the truth of Zant's relationship with Ganondorf and defeat him, obliterating him with the Fused Shadow. They return to Hyrule to face Ganondorf, who has taken over Hyrule Castle and holds Zelda hostage. They confront and defeat him after a battle in both the castle and Hyrule Field. As the Triforce of Power leaves him and Zant's spirit snaps its neck, Ganondorf dies. Midna is restored to her true form as the Twilight Princess. Though Zelda encourages the two worlds to continue relations, the Twilight Princess shatters the Mirror of Twilight. Zelda resumes her throne and Link returns the Master Sword to its resting place before riding away.


 * Support
 * 1) As in Ocarina of Time, Ganondorf is revealed to have been the leader of a band of thieves, matching the description of him in the manual for A Link to the Past.
 * 2) Hyrule is cast into darkness near the start of Twilight Princess as an army of dark creatures swarm from another world and attack Hyrule Castle, similar to the description of the invasion spoken of in the manual for A Link to the Past.
 * 3) A war fought over the Sacred Realm and the Triforce, the Interloper War, seems to match the description of the battles over the Triforce described in the manual for A Link to the Past before Ganondorf obtained the Triforce.
 * 4) Ganondorf is sent away into a world of shadows by a group of Sages, similar to the story of his banishment in the manual for A Link to the Past.


 * Discrepancies
 * 1) The Sages are only six in number, not seven, and Ganondorf murders one of them at his execution, where they send him away into the Twilight Realm; This conflicts with the story of his banishment due to the fact that there were seven Sages that sealed Ganondorf away in the Dark World, an entirely different place from the Twilight Realm, and none of the Sages were said to have died in the process.
 * 2) No battle between the Knights of Hyrule and Ganon's monsters is depicted in Twilight Princess, whereas it was a notable part of the Imprisoning War according to the story; Rather Zant's army is the one that invades Hyrule and does so at the command of Zant, not even knowing of Ganondorf's existence.
 * 3) Ganondorf does not steal the Triforce of Power from the Sacred Realm in Twilight Princess but rather it is mysteriously granted to him when he is injured to the point of death, starkly contrasting with the story of how he got his power in the story of the Imprisoning War.
 * 4) No Hero is said to have been found to take up the Master Sword against Ganon's forces in the story of the Imprisoning War, yet Link obviously wields it in Twilight Princess, even using it to deliver Ganondorf his deathblow.
 * 5) Ganondorf is seemingly killed in Twilight Princess, another stark difference from the story of the Imprisoning War, which states that he was sealed away in the Dark World and couldn't figure out how to return to the world of light.
 * 6) Ganondorf is said to have successfully infiltrated the Sacred Realm and killed his followers immediately afterward in the story of the Imprisoning War, yet though he and his band of thieves invaded Hyrule to find the Sacred Realm before the events of Twilight Princess, they are implied to have failed in their invasion of the kingdom, which resulted in his capture and incarceration by the Sages.

Trivia

 * The name of the Imprisoning War seems to be a play off of the end result of the conflict, which resulted in the "imprisoning" of Ganon inside of the Dark World; Meanwhile, the alternate name for the war in Japan, the "Seal War", seems to be a reference to the seal cast by the Seven Sages that trapped Ganon in the Dark World and ended the war.
 * In the American manual for A Link to the Past, Ganondorf is given the surname "Dragmire" as well as the alias of "Mandrag Ganon" meaning "Ganon of the Enchanted Thieves".
 * The American manual for A Link to the Past makes the claim that the Hylian people were responsible for the creation of the Master Sword, while its Japanese counterpart states that the sword was ancient and had been crafted at the direction of the goddesses ; It was later revealed by Princess Zelda in Twilight Princess that the sword was crafted by the wisdom of the Ancient Sages, falling more in line with the Japanese manual's version of the sword's origins.
 * The story was heavily truncated for the manual of the Game Boy Advance version of A Link to the Past and did not include such important details as Ganon seizing the Triforce or the search for the Master Sword. These details are still provided by in-game text, however.
 * The American version of the story has the sages forget where the Triforce is hidden.