The Legend of Zelda is easily one of the most recognizable and beloved video game franchises in the history of the industry. Nearly every entry is synonymous with “masterpiece,” despite a few missteps along the way.

The series typically follows the exploits of a cute youth named Link, wearing a green tunic, as he sets out to adventure across an expansive world, conquering labyrinths and monsters, all the while hoping to rescue Princess Zelda, defeat the monstrous Ganon, and protect the sacred Triforce.

It may come as a shock, then, to know that despite the cutesy exteriors, aesthetics and often goofy characters (Tingle, we’re looking at you. Not directly though, because you make us uncomfortable.) that the games have their fair share of incredibly dark and disturbing content that’s very easy to overlook if you’re not paying specific attention.

In order to reveal the “bloody history” of Hyrule, we’ve compiled this list of 15 Secrets You Didn't Know About The Legend Of Zelda Franchise.

Keep in mind that aside from revealing the shocking terrors hiding in a myriad of games, we’ll also be discussing spoilers, so be sure to take the proper precautions before diving into the list that will change the way you look at the series.

Link's Awakening Illistration

Link’s Awakening is one of the finest entries in the Zelda franchise, despite being on Game Boy. With inspiration from Twin Peaks, Link finds himself on a strange little island called Koholint, with a memorably zany cast of townsfolk, even including a Chain Chomp.

Shortly after Link washes up on the island’s shores, an owl informs him that to leave, he’ll need to awaken the mythical “Wind Fish,” so Link sets out on his quest while flirting with local girl Marin and helping out the kooky cast.

At a certain point, an ancient mural reveals that all of Koholint is the dream of the Wind Fish, and waking the deity will wipe everything out of existence. So what does Link do? Does he contemplate the moral dilemma he is faced with? No, he chooses to continue, even after people, including the villains, beg him to stop. What a hero.

There's Nothing Worth Saving In Breath Of The Wild

Link standing face-to-face with Calamity Ganon at the end of Breath of the Wild.

Taking place in the far future at the tail-end of one of Zelda’s fractured timelines, the world of Breath of the Wild is a broken mess, with Ganon victorious, and much of civilization on the brink of extinction.

When Link finally awakens from a 100 year sleep, it’s his duty to defeat Ganon, rescue the embattled Zelda and save Hyrule-- except there’s nothing to save.

One of the main themes of BOTW is loss, and the hopeless world in which the story takes place exemplifies this perfectly.

With only a modicum of struggling towns, and a handful of lives left in the ruins of an old world, the defeat of Ganon is only the beginning of a long and excruciating reconstruction that will likely end in failure.

That said, the green pastures of the nearby northern continent look promising, so perhaps we’ll see a direct sequel take place there.

The First Zelda Is An Apocalyptic Final Battle

Link in the Legend of Zelda

While the original Legend of Zelda was the first in the franchise, it is essentially the last in the “Era of Decline” for the official timeline.

This branch was borne out of Link being defeated by Ganondorf during the events of Ocarina of Time, and this timeline features the Kingdom of Hyrule repeatedly thrust into chaos, shrinking year by year until it’s nothing but a shadow of its former self.

At its weakest state, Ganon and his armies lay siege to the kingdom, driving its miniscule population into caves and under ground.

In the barren wilderness of the once great Hyrule, Link wanders the realm, collects the hidden pieces of the Triforce of Wisdom, and defeats Ganon for what will be the final time in a desperate war for the post-apocalyptic wastes of the kingdom.

The True Nature Of Majora Is Never Revealed

Majora in The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask.

Majora’s Mask is a terrifying game, with its surreal atmosphere, emotionally-crushing side stories and Groundhog-Day-styled time travel in order to combat the ominous threat of the moon colliding with Termina, all at the behest of Majora’s Mask.

We know a lot about Ganondorf, as his motivations and personality have been fleshed out for multiple entries, but the same can’t be said about Majora.

Is Majora the mask? Or was it sealed in the mask using the Song of Healing? What are its goals?

Sure, it seems that destruction and mayhem are part of the plan, but is that Majora speaking, or just the Skull Kid that wears the mask?

The only two things we solidly know about Majora’s nature is that it claims it will “consume everything” and, most disturbingly, it refers to itself as “the good guy,” with Link being the villain, both of which are bone-chilling.

The Deku Mask Is The Deku Butler's Son

The Happy Mask Salesman Speaks To Link in Zelda

One of the coolest parts of Majora’s Mask is being able to transform into a Deku, Zora or Goron using masks. To obtain these masks, however, players need to soothe the pained souls of suffering characters, and transform that pain into the masks.

That pans out for the Goron and Zora mask, but what about the Deku mask?

At the start of the game, the Skull Kid (under Majora’s influence) turns Link into a Deku scrub, and you’re able to transform back by converting the curse into a mask. But what was the source of the curse in the first place?

Sadly, it appears that a withered tree resembling a Deku scrub, likely murdered by the Skull Kid, was the origin, which is later heavily implied to be the lost son of the Deku Butler, who is found weeping by the tree during the credits, breaking hearts everywhere.

The Poe Collector Is A Deformed Royal Soldier

The Spooky Poe Collector In The Legend Of Zelda: Ocarina Of Time

After getting out into Hyrule Field for the first time in Ocarina, players were overwhelmed by the scope of the world available to them. After goofing around and being terrified by Peahats and Stalchildren, a visit to the at-the-time glorious Castle Town was in order.

Upon going through the city’s drawbridge, there’s a little door that can be entered, where you talk to a disgruntled, yet seemingly harmless soldier who’s beyond bored at his post.

He non-chalantly reveals that things would be “more interesting” if there were “more troubles in the world.” Fast-forward seven years, and in that guard’s post a strange, cloaked figure, wearing the tatters of Hylian clothes, collects ghostly Poes.

Talk to him, and he’s ecstatic. He’ll praise Ganondorf, saying what a great time for business it is, and that he hopes the world gets even worse.

Well, it looks like this one-time guard got his wish.

The Zora Are Doomed To A Monstrous Future

Legend Of Zelda Zora Sidon

It’s not easy to create a fantasy race that can stand among the traditional faire, yet Nintendo was able to pull this off perfectly with the Zora and Goron tribes.

The Zora are essentially fish people, but with an excellent grasp of the ways of war and the arts. Alas, in nearly every timeline, they end up either as another species or as monstrous beasts.

In the first Zelda, which is in the far future, the Zora (also known as “Zola”) are hideous, violent mer-creatures that assault Link any chance they get.

In Breath of the Wild, which is another late-in-the-timline game, the Zora, despite maintaining their culture and mental acuity, are evolving beyond their sleek appearances from Ocarina, and slowly becoming far more monstrous and shark-like.

We’re not sure why the Zora have such a dark evolutionary fate, but it’s a sad fact of life in Hyrule.

Ganondorf Was Right

Link fighting Ganondorf Zelda

Wind Waker was divisive during its reveal, thanks to its stark change of the generally realistic aesthetic to one that was blatantly cartoony.

However, most could agree on one thing: Wind Waker’s Ganondorf was a three-dimensional character that blew all other interpretations out of the water.

Before the final showdown, Ganondorf reveals that the only reason he ignited the fateful wars of the past was because he envied Hyrule. His people suffered and died during harsh days and nights in the desert, while Hyrule thrived. He simply wanted help his people.

Worse yet, with the Triforce in hand, he was about to wish for the sunken kingdom of Hyrule to be restored, only for the King himself to wish against it.

In this brief moment, Ganondorf nearly saved a civilization, while its very king condemned it to eternal destruction.

They say this guy is the villain?

The Legend of Zelda Ocarina of Time Art

The consequences of messing with time and creating devastating paradoxes is a trope that Ocarina of Time seems to turn a blind eye towards, but the Hyrule Historia makes a case for just how devastating the adventure was.

Because of the time travel, Link shattered the timeline into three distinct branches, most of which have cataclysmic future repercussions.

Not only that, but there’s also the issue of the “causal loop.”

In Ocarina, Link must learn the Song of Storms from the guy in the windmill, who angrily claims that young Link is the one who taught to him in the first place.

Young Link never learns the song in game, so the question of where Link originally learned it burns brightly.

This is why you don’t mess with time.

Link facing an enemy in Death Mountain in Zelda II: The Adventure of Link

While the original Legend of Zelda features the final battle between Link and Ganon for that timeline, the adventure continued with Zelda II.

Although Link was victorious, Ganon’s followers, and the remnants of his army, launched a counter-attack against the slowly-rebuilding Hyrule, plunging the world into darkness once again.

Their main goal was not just conquest, however. No, their plan was to capture Link and literally use his blood on Ganon’s ashes to resurrect him.

That’s pretty graphic for an old NES game, especially a Nintendo game, but that was really the plan.

It’s terrifying to think that Link was intended to be captured alive and then brutally sacrificed in some occult ritual, with his painful death resulting in the resurrection of his greatest rival. Obviously it didn’t happen, but the concept remains incredibly eerie.