![]() ![]() ![]() It takes someone who can empathize with the burden of being a hero to restore Link’s confidence. He spends nearly the first half of the book bedridden on a pile of straw in the back of a dilapidated barn, cared for by a young woman named Anika, who has survived similar horrors.īut while Anika can treat Link’s physical wounds, she can’t do much for those that lie deeper. It’s perhaps the most vulnerable that we’ve ever seen Link in any The Legend of Zelda production. As Volume Seven begins, Link is a broken soul who continues to be devoured by his tragic past. This is not the fearless, unflappable warrior that we controlled in the game. ![]() Read our review of Volumes One, Two, Three, Four, Five, and Six of the Twilight Princess manga. ![]() The memory of that calamity has haunted him since the earliest pages of the Twilight Princess manga, and his lingering trauma swells to new heights in Volume Seven. The opening volume in the series wasted no time in revealing significant changes to the character, most notably that Link’s birthplace was destroyed by a mysterious catastrophe before he came to consider Ordon his home. We’ve known for a long time that the Twilight Princess manga would feature an interpretation of Link that is different from the one The Legend of Zelda fans remember from playing the video game. ![]()
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