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Old 03-23-2008, 08:37 PM
MajorasWrath1 MajorasWrath1 is offline
Royal Hylian
Join Date: Mar 2008
Location: Ancient Castle of Ikana
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Re: Mind Travel Theory: ending of OoT fully explained

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sparkly Faerie View Post
You're also forgetting that Zelda has fled the Castle before the Door of Time was opened, so she wouldn't be there when Link returned to the past. I suppose that could be after the execution scene we see in TP, though, when she'd returned to the Castle...
Yes, that's true that at that point she had already fled, but we see him with her in her garden after he's already seen Navi leave. And it's obvious that she hasn't seen him before, or in a long while, from her expression. But it's not possible for this to be, you see, because he would have had to visit her just before the Temple of Time scene to get the ocarina. Remember, he left it behind in the future when he handed it to adult Zelda.

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sparkly Faerie View Post
Anyway, I really, really, really like this theory. I believe I've thought of something very similar somewhere along the way, but not nearly as well thought out as this.

So, what I can gather from this is that you are saying;

1) The events that Link had performed as a child when he had 'replaced' the Master Sword had already happened by the time that he had woken from the Sacred Realm;
2) Link's body did not travel time, merely his mind, and;
3) Everything that Link did in his time travels follows the Adult Timeline.

Correct?
Pretty much. But all of Child Link's exploits, such as saving Princess Ruto, are in both timelines, because the split happens at the end of Child Link's story (I'm claiming she placing him back at his natural time, his LAST child link save point).

Quote:
Originally Posted by Sparkly Faerie View Post
My thoughts on the subject:
I believe the timeline actually splits at the point where he 'returns' the Master Sword in the past, and not when Zelda 'sends him back'. I had a thought, once, that the point were we see Link walking away from the Master Sword is alternate from when Link grasps the sword for the first time. As his 'future' consciousness came back to him, he decided not to take the Sword, and instead took an alternate course of action.

It would have been logical for the 'old future' to be erased, though. Perhaps the fact that Link had not grapsed the Master Sword simply erased his presence from the future, but not everyone else's.

This, in turn, creates a paradoxial situation. If he does not pull the sword, then what will tell him not to do it? The split timeline is most probably the outcome of this; the first time, he did not know better; the second, he knew what was to come, and therefore avoided it.

I can't help but feel I got off-topic somewhere along the way...
You can't erase your presence from the future but no-one else's because the actions you take affect everyone else, and a timeline can't change or disappear once it's already been written.

I'm not sure what you mean about the paradoxial situation, but if nothing is telling him not to pull the sword, then he's going to pull it. There's not going to be a split there.
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