15 Apr

Including the Triforce in Your Game

The Triforce is the most powerful object in all the Zelda games. Carrying just a vestige of the power of Hyrule’s creator-goddesses, the Triforce is often sought by fated Heroes as a means to save Hyrule from the most dangerous foes and existential threats. Sometimes it is fragmented, its awesome power split into pieces to prevent its use by those with evil in their heart. Always coveted, rarely found – the Triforce is the ultimate magical item in any Zelda game.

Artwork by Nintendo

Naturally, that means that some players really, really want to get their hands on it. It also means that some GMs will want to use it as a MacGuffin in their campaign.

Below, we take a look at a few ways you can include the Triforce in your campaign – in whole, or in part – and let your players realize the wildest wishes of Zelda gamers for decades.

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01 Apr

Heroic Arms: Navigating the Darkness

Happy April, everyone! With the Northern Hemisphere firmly in Spring’s warm grasp, and the Southern feeling Autumn’s cool caress, we’re happy to bring you another new and fun way to handle your adventures in Hyrule (or maybe even beyond)!

This time, community member (and now two-time article contributor) Maddie has handed us a traditional Reclaim the Wild presentation of a beloved and classic element of the Zelda world. Check out her contribution below, and then pop into our Discord and give her a hand!

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01 Mar

New Item: Sheikah Slate

Art by Nintendo

The Sheikah Slate is a versatile tool in Breath of the Wild, providing all sorts of benefits: from taking photos to providing a map, casting spells to teleporting across Hyrule, it’s almost too good to be true! And in many ways, it was. But now, so long after the debut of Reclaim the Wild, we can provide a (somewhat) balanced way of having Sheikah Slates in tabletop!

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14 Feb

Heroes of Curious Parentage

A common trope in fantasy gaming is that of the “demi”. Be it a half-elf, a half-orc, a half-dragon, or even a half-god, there have been heroes of curious parentage since time immemorial. (In fact, the very first hero of a fantasy story, Gilgamesh, is one-third human, and two-thirds god!)

While this trope doesn’t seem to occur in Zelda games, that doesn’t prevent players from wanting their Heroes to hail from more than just one race. If anything, the franchise’s wide variety of strange and wondrous people encourages such thought.

But how do you square that with the total lack of examples from any of the games? In addition, how do you prevent a player from developing a knotted, convoluted family tree, just for the sake of min-maxing?

Below, we offer a ruleset for creating Heroes of Curious Parentage, and some advice on preventing those abuses of one’s ancestry.

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04 Feb

Wild Homebrew Jam Winner: New Race: Guardian Scout

Finally, we present the first-place winner of the Wild Homebrew Jam! This is Vader’s “New Race: Guardian Scout“!

With Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity fresh in everyone’s minds, Vader came out of nowhere with a write-up for a playable Guardian Scout race – and grabbed the hearts (and votes!) of the community, much as the adorable egg-shaped Guardian did in the game’s trailers.

More than ‘just a robot’, as one might be able to make with a suite of Talking Animal features, this Guardian Scout race allows a Hero to feel like they’re truly made from the same stuff as the Guardians that terrorized Link throughout the original Breath of the Wild – not only the Scouts and their anxiety-inducing lasers, but the Blights that infest the Divine Beasts, as well.

Speaking with Vader, he shared this about his thought process:

So I had a couple things I kept in mind when making my contest entry. One of them was having good presentation, which I won’t get into too much since that doesn’t have anything to do with the actual homebrew content itself, it just makes it more easily digestible and appealing to look at. This is mostly relevant when you’re giving it to other people to use, or when you’re trying to garner support in a contest setting.

Regarding the Guardian race itself, for me it was very important that I make something with a ‘mechanical draw’. That is, a mechanic that is unique to this race and makes you want to play it over other races. And this is easy enough to do if you’re just looking at the bestiary entry and translating that over to a player race (which I did with a couple of the Scout’s techs and spells), or you just think about it long enough for something not represented in the bestiary.

But just translating a bestiary entry is kind-of boring. I wanted to go above and beyond that to make something truly unique (and to serve as my ace-in-the-hole for the contest). So, I thought more deeply about what constitutes a Guardian and realized that the Scourges are basically Guardians themselves, and I could base a series of feats, techniques, and spells off of them. It was an inspired choice, and one that I feel adds a lot of flavor, mechanical depth, and even replayability to what would otherwise be a one-note race entry. I can imagine someone reading my homebrew and thinking “huh, I hadn’t thought about that before, but that makes sense,” and having their own imagination sparked, for both the character and mechanical possibilities.

If you’d like to see a Guardian Scout Hero in your next Reclaim the Wild game, be sure to check out the race here.