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1Take ''Franchise/TheLegendOfZelda'', turn it into a graphic novel, and you get this. Beautiful combinations of plot and humor (usually), the manga follow the adventures of Link and what he does in that game to save the day and rescue Zelda (usually).
2
3So far, the official manga are:
4* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI The Hyrule Fantasy'' by Kobayashi Susumu.
5* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI'' and ''[[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink The Adventure of Link]]'' by Ran Maru.
6* ''[[VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink The Adventure of Link]]'' by Daisuke Shigoto.
7* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaI'' and ''VideoGame/ZeldaIITheAdventureOfLink'' by Yuu Mishouzaki.
8* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'' by Creator/ShotaroIshinomori. Run in ''Magazine/NintendoPower''.
9* ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast A Link to the Past]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaLinksAwakening Link's Awakening]]'' (2 volumes) by Ataru Cagiva.
10* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast'' by Junko Taguchi.
11* ''Oath of Lilto'', an [[ElsewhereFic elsewhere spin-off]] centered around original characters.
12* [[Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaAkiraHimekawa Multiple adaptations by Akira Himekawa]]. Other than Ishinomori's ''Link to the Past'', this is the only series of manga to get a wide English release:
13** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast''
14** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime'' (2 volumes)
15** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaMajorasMask''
16** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOracleGames'' (2 volumes, one for ''Ages'' and one for ''Seasons'')
17** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaFourSwordsAdventures'' (2 volumes)
18** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheMinishCap''
19** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaPhantomHourglass''
20** A prequel short story based on ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaSkywardSword'', which is included in the ''Literature/HyruleHistoria'' art book.
21** ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess'' (11 volumes)
22* ''VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTheWindWaker: Link's Logbook'', a collection of humorous {{Yonkoma}} (4-panel strips) rather than an adaptation.
23
24[[AC:Manga With Their Own Pages]]
25[[index]]
26* ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaI (Yuu Mishouzaki)''
27* ''ComicBook/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast1992 (Shotaro Ishinomori)''
28* ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaAkiraHimekawa''
29** ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime1999''
30** ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaFourSwords2004''
31** ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast2005''
32** ''Manga/TheLegendOfZeldaTwilightPrincess2016''
33[[/index]]
34
35Most of the manga are written in Japanese and have been fan-translated on the internet for people to read, like at [[http://www.zeldalegends.net/index.php?n=manga Zelda Legends]]. Official English translations of all of Himekawa's adaptations have been released, while the Ishinomori version of ''Link to the Past'' was written for the English audience in the first place.
36
37Not to be confused with the [[ComicBook/TheLegendOfZelda Zelda comics]], produced in 1990 and 1991 and based on the two NES games in the franchise.
38
39----
40!!This manga series provides examples of the following:
41
42[[foldercontrol]]
43
44[[folder:General]]
45* AdaptationalBadass: Sometimes, the bosses put up an even greater fight than in the games. This is prevalent in ''Four Swords Adventures'' with Vaati, ''Ocarina of Time'' with Dark Link, and Ran Maru's ''Adventure of Link'' with Bolba.
46* AdaptationalWimp: The bosses from the games are often less powerful in manga adaptations, and rarely need more than a single blow to be killed.
47* BigBad: Usually Ganon(dorf). Sometimes turns out to be Vaati/Gufuu, and was once the Skull Kid. Twinrova is TheManBehindTheMan (er, women behind the man) in the ''Oracle'' stories.
48%%* ComicBookAdaptation
49* CourtlyLove: Some of the stories, ''Ocarina of Time'' and the Himekawa ''Link to the Past'' in particular, depict varying shades of this between Link and Zelda. ''Four Swords Plus'' presents them with gifts of flowers and holding hands.
50* FairyCompanion: Navi in ''Ocarina of Time'' (as in the game), Tatl and Tael in ''Majora's Mask'' and Ciela in ''Phantom Hourglass'' (ditto), the nameless fairy in ''Four Swords'', Ephermelda in Ishinomori's ''A Link to the Past'', and Felicia in ''Link's Awakening''.
51* HeroicMime: Averted in the ''Twilight Princess'' manga and ''Oath of Lilto''. Used frequently in the ''Wind Waker'' 4-koma.
52* KidHero: Link in almost every adaptation aside from Twilight Princess.
53* LuminescentBlush: Multiple examples:
54** Link has this (complete with hearts in his eyes) when Zelda kisses his cheek in the first half of ''Ocarina of Time''.
55** He also does it repeatedly during the course of the Himekawa ''Link to the Past.''
56* ParentalAbandonment: Typical of the ''Zelda'' franchise, although the background of ''Oracle of Seasons'' does show the death of Link's mother. There's no indication of his father's identity, however. Conversely, ''Four Swords Plus'' gives him a father, but no mother. ''Link to the Past'' (Himekawa version) explains the absence of both, as it's plot-relevant.
57* RaisedByGrandparents: Link, in a few of the stories.
58* RequisiteRoyalRegalia: Zelda is almost never seen without it (except, of course, when she's Sheik or Tetra).
59* RetCanon: All three of Shigoto's manga have Link with inaccurate hair colors. First he's a redhead, then a blond, and next he has pink hair; [[YouDontLookLikeYou these are all the same Link by the way]]. Link was made into a blond for ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaALinkToThePast A Link to the Past]]'' and has been so since, and the in-game sprites show Link with pink hair due to graphical troubles.
60* SuddenlySpeaking:
61** Link is seen speaking in the pre-[=OoT=] comics and in the Twilight Princess manga.
62** A lot of unintelligent monster and animal type enemies can now talk.
63* ThisCannotBe: Some villains when they're defeated in the adaptions made by Akira Himekawa.
64* ThisIsUnforgivable: The adaptations made by Akira Himekawa seem to admire this trope. Link calmly declares this to Ganondorf in ''Ocarina of Time'' after being forced to kill his old friend Volvagia in order to free him from Ganon's curse and awaken Darunia as the Sage of Fire. He also shouts this at Agahnim in ''A Link to the Past'' as he absorbs his magic with the Master Sword and sends it right back at him after Agahnim sends Zelda to the Dark World encased in a crystal as part of a sacrifice ritual to open a portal to said realm itself.
65* TheWisePrince: Gender inversion. Zelda, whose wisdom is even sought and deferred to by adults when she's a child, such as Link's father in ''Four Swords Plus''.
66[[/folder]]
67
68[[folder:''The Legend of Zelda'' -- Ran Maru]]
69* CameBackWrong: [[spoiler:Ganon's revival is incomplete, as Zelda's blood was spilt onto his ashes, leaving him looking almost like a corpse, and needing to cover his eyes when attempting to attack Link, due to Zelda having placed two pieces of the Triforces of Power and Wisdom into Link's Magic Shield.]]
70* CompressedAdaptation: The first game is covered in only a few chapters, with only two of them having Link explore dungeons, particularly the Eagle Dungeon and Death Mountain. The rest of the dungeons are covered in a single chapter showing Link's adventure and his obtaining the many items and upgrades he needs to defeat Ganon with. [[AdaptationExpansion On the flipside]], Zelda 2 takes three volumes to cover, with interesting story progression between the Temples, including what happens after Link awakens Zelda I.
71* {{Cult}}: [[spoiler: The Cult of Ganon are the main antagonists of the Adventure of Link, led by the Prince's aid, Ganon's alter ego. They are successful in reviving their master in Vol. 2]]
72* DissonantSerenity: Don't let the Osamu Tezuka-style art fool you. [[BloodierAndGorier These four volumes are quite bloody]]. The most violent they get is in the final volume of the Adventure of Link. [[spoiler: Link defeats his Shadow by bisecting him down the middle, with a visible blood splatter. [[OneSteveLimit The Zelda from the first game]] is dropped into a pool of lava, before Link is able to save her. The kicker is when the Prince's aid rapidly decays before a skeletal Ganon runs him through.]]
73* RetCanon: [[spoiler:Of all things that were in the manga, including Link's pink hair on the covers, the one thing that made it into the games and was later deemed canon was the identity of the Magician: he's Ganon as a human. His overambitiousness towards attaining the Triforce led to him becoming Ganon's alter-ego, eventually realizing that this led to his own death in Vol. 3. Such an idea of a lamenting Ganon would appear in the Wind Waker's depiction of Ganondorf (already Ganon's human form as early as ''A Link to the Past'', and Hyrule Historia would confirm the Magician to be one of Ganon's alter-egos, similar to Agahnim.]]
74** Ganon being revived incorrectly would later make its way into the game via the ''Oracle'' games in which Twinrova/Koume and Kotake have to sacrifice themselves to light the Flame of Despair instead of Zelda after they lose to Link, while in ''Breath of the Wild'', Zelda sabotages Ganon's Calamity form's revival long enough for Link to defeat him.
75** A cult worshipping Ganon would be present in ''[[VideoGame/HyruleWarriorsAgeOfCalamity Hyrule Warriors Age of Calamity]]''. [[note]] Given the game's LooseCanon status, though, it should be taken lightly with a grain of salt. [[/note]]
76* TrueFinalBoss: [[spoiler:Ganon becomes one at the end of Zelda 2 Vol. 3. After he obtains power from the Triforce of Power and takes to the skies, Link obtains an InfinityPlusOneSword by combining all three pieces with the Magic Sword, making it into a proto-Master Sword. Link then cuts off Ganon's wings and buries him under a boulder with the Power Glove, then stabs through the boulder with the sword, making sure that Ganon will never return. After he leaves Ganon's tomb, the now purified River Devil (a giant salamander in this adaptation) finds Link's discarded flute and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L2g83Z_XSrk plays a bit of music]].]]
77[[/folder]]
78
79[[folder:''A Link to the Past'' -- Multiple Versions]]
80* CursedWithAwesome:
81** In the Ishinomori version, Roam has come to accept and even depend on his beast form (a hawkman) to aid him in battle. Ghanti in the Himekawa version doesn't mind her beast form (a wolf or fox, it's hard to tell), either. Link himself has a noticeably better form in both compared to the game's rabbit -- he's a wolf. But he doesn't let himself fall victim to it.
82** Link's werewolf form was originally a choice made by Ishinomori to reflect the darkness within Link; Himekawa's take on it, based on his hate towards Agahnim, was due to how Twilight Princess was still in development at the time of publication. In both Cagiva and Taguchi's versions, Link never changes his form.
83* DarkWorld: The {{Trope Namer|s}} world of ''A Link to the Past'', of course.
84* DeathByAdaptation: [[spoiler: In three of the manga adaptations, Link's uncle remains dead at the end of the story and is not revived.]]
85* DecompositeCharacter: [[spoiler: In the games, Agahnim is Ganon's avatar in the Light World. All manga adaptations depict them as separate villains.]]
86* TheDragon: Agahnim. (The game, in contrast, depicts him as [[spoiler:Ganon's alter-ego.]])
87* GhostReunionEnding: Link's Uncle and parents are seen together at the end of the Shotaro Ishinomori and Akira Himekawa versions of the story.
88* PlayingTennisWithTheBoss: How Link fights Agahnim in all four manga.
89* PsychicLink: Link and Zelda are brought together by her telepathic distress call, as in the game. In at least Himekawa's version, they then continue to maintain their psychic bond throughout much of the story. Averted in the Cagiva version where Link is never contacted by Zelda, but instead, is given a mission to save Zelda by the leader of the knights.
90* RetCanon: All four manga manage to show something that would later appear in the games.
91[[/folder]]
92
93[[folder:''A Link to the Past'' -- Junko Taguchi]]
94A second adaptation of of ''A Link to the Past''. This manga was written and illustrated by Junko Taguchi and published by ''Hippon Super!'' in 1993.
95----
96* AdaptationalAttractiveness: Oddly enough, Agahnim in this version. He appears as a dark-skinned man with a well-built physique.
97* CompressedAdaptation: Most of Link's journey in the Dark World is cut down, showing him arriving in the land, fighting a Lynel, meeting the transformed inhabitants, and finally fighting against Ganon.
98* RetCanon: Ganondorf's appearance in the manga differs greatly than how Ishinomori depicted him. Here he is shown as a muscular man in black armor and skilled with a sword, very much like how Ganondorf would be presented in all games following ''Ocarina of Time'', though him fighting with swords would not be ready until ''The Wind Waker'' onwards.
99[[/folder]]
100
101[[folder:''A Link to the Past'' -- Ataru Cagiva]]
102An adaptation of ''A Link to the Past''. This manga is set in the same continuity and has the same Link as the ''Link's Awakening'' manga. It was actually created and released after the ''Link's Awakening'' manga, making it a {{Prequel}}, despite the original ''Link to the Past'' game being released before the ''Link's Awakening'' game.
103----
104* AdaptationalAttractiveness: The King of Hyrule is much younger and thinner in this manga than he was in the game.
105* AnnoyingArrows: At one point, Link's arm is pierced by an arrow all the way through, but this only leaves a minor wound that quickly heals.
106* BareFistedMonk: Rasuka fights entirely bare handed in a setting where everyone else uses swords.
107* CanonImmigrant: [[spoiler: The Master Sword's guardian is revealed to be a {{Precursor Hero|es}} and the previous wielder of the Master Sword who fought against Ganon 600 years ago during the Imprisoning War. This manga came out in 1995, three years before ''Ocarina of Time'' which makes the Hero of Time a CanonImmigrant from this manga. This comes across more as Nintendo and Ataru Cagiva having the same idea of a previous hero wielding the Master Sword during the Imprisoning War rather than a deliberate attempt at a Canon Immigrant. This would also make his unnamed FairyCompanion a rough counterpart to Navi as well.]]
108* CanonForeigner: Link and his uncle's friends Tou and Rasuka. Rasuka accompanies Link on his quest. There is also the leader of the Hyrulean Knights who serves as a mentor to Link and also accompanies him. When Link tries to pull the Master Sword out of its pedestal, a guardian spirit appears to test if Link is worthy to wield it. In the Dark World, Link meets Kanika, a scholar who is knowledgeable about the Dark World.
109* CryIntoChest: Leader comforts Link after Link's uncle dies by having Link cry into his chest while shirtless.
110* {{Expy}}: The Master Sword's guardian's fairy companion has an identical character design and personality to Felicia from the ''Link's Awakening'' manga.
111* FacelessGoons: Averted, the Hylian guards have visible faces.
112* FakeDefector: [[spoiler: Kanika openly admits to previously working for Ganon but has had a change of heart and joins Link. It turns out he was TheMole all along]].
113* FairyCompanion: Link's spirit advisor, the Master Sword's guardian, has a fairy companion who also turns out to be a spirit as well.
114* HeroWithBadPublicity: Not only is Link wanted for kidnapping Zelda like he does in the game, in the manga, he is also framed for the murder of his uncle.
115* HeroicLineage: [[spoiler: The Master Sword's guardian who is revealed to be a past hero and the previous wielder of the Master Sword who fought Ganon during the Imprisoning War is also revealed to be Link's ancestor]].
116* ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice: In their final fight, Link kills Agahnim by running him through with the Master Sword.
117* InTheEndYouAreOnYourOwn: Rasuka and Leader accompany Link on his entire quest, but in the final fight against Ganon, Link goes in alone.
118* KatanasAreJustBetter: Under the impression that Link is a servant of Agahnim, Zelda picks up a katana and actually manages to catch the hero off guard. Link is unable to defeat her directly, and takes advantage of Agahnim's sudden appearance [[TheKindnapper to bring her to safety]].
119* LegacyCharacter: The Master Sword's guardian is revealed to be a hero from centuries in the past who had previously wielded the Master Sword.
120* AMatchMadeInStockholm: Link and Zelda meet when Link kidnaps Zelda to get her away from Agahnim.
121%%* TheMole: [[spoiler: Kanika]].
122* NamedByTheAdaptation: Link's uncle is given the name Zanji in the manga.
123* NoNameGiven: The Master Sword's guardian and his FairyCompanion are unnamed in the manga.
124* PetTheDog: Agahnim revives a puppy that was run over by a coach with his power. This is a {{subversion}} as he only did this act of kindness to gain the people's trust.
125* PietaPlagiarism: Part of Link's uncle's death scene.
126* PrecursorHeroes: The Seven Sages seal away Ganon during the Imprisoning War in the backstory. [[spoiler: A CanonForeigner, the Master Sword's guardian, is revealed to be the previous wielder of the Master Sword who fought against Ganon during the Imprisoning War.]]
127* Really700YearsOld: Kanika and everyone else in the Dark World. After Ganon created the Dark World 600 years ago, time stands still for people inside of it and they no longer age.
128* RedemptionEqualsDeath: [[spoiler: Kanika dies from injuries he sustains returning the Master Sword to Link.]]
129* RetCanon:
130** [[spoiler: The concept Link being mentored by a SpiritAdvisor of a previous hero who wielded the Master Sword would appear in a canon game in ''Twilight Princess''. Going by Nintendo's official timeline, both spirit advisors would be the same person on different timelines.]] In addition, the previous Hero who wielded the Master Sword in a battle against Ganon, only to lose to the Great King of Evil, would later become canon via the Downfall Timeline, in which the Hero of Time lost against Ganon despite fighting him to the bitter end.
131** Likewise, the Master Sword acting as a seal to Ganon and/or his powers, would appear in ''Skyward Sword'' where his ancestor, [[spoiler: Demise would be imprisoned following his defeat, after cursing Link and Zelda, as well as thier descendants]], as well as ''The Wind Waker''. [[note]] [[DubInducedPlotHole It should be noted however, that only Ganon's minions, not his magic, were sealed]]. [[/note]] A decoy of Ganon would also be canon in the form of Phantom Ganon, who appears in ''Ocarina of Time'', ''The Wind Waker'', ''Four Swords Adventures'', and ''Tears of the Kingdom''.
132** Agahnim appearing in person at the Sanctuary to capture Zelda would also be used by Yuga in ''A Link Between Worlds'' when he turns Seres into a painting.
133** The Seven Sages fighting Ganon in the Imprisoning War would finally be seen ingame in ''[[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaTearsOfTheKingdom Tears of the Kingdom]]'', where they, Rauru, his older sister Mineru, and a time-displaced Zelda would fight Ganondorf to the bitter end, until Raura scarifies himself to seal Ganondorf away.
134* TheRival: Rasuka was always fighting duels with Link since they were children and even when they go on a quest to save Hyrule together, they still end up competing against each other.
135* SpiritAdvisor: Link is mentored by the guardian of the Master Sword. [[spoiler: The guardian is later revealed to be the spirit of the previous hero who wielded the Master Sword.]]
136* ThisIsSomethingHesGotToDoHimself: Rasuka and Leader walk in on Link's fight against Agahnim, but stand aside to let Link fight Agahnim himself.
137* SecretTestOfCharacter: The Master Sword's guardian fights Link to see if he is worthy of wielding the blade. Link ends up being no match against the guardian, but the challenge was to test Link's resolve and not his fighting ability.
138* SparedByTheAdaptation: [[spoiler: The King of Hyrule is never killed in the manga like he was in the game.]]
139* TenderTears: Link cries after his uncle is murdered. Zelda thinks Link's tears are a sign of weakness, but the leader of the knights tells her that Link cries because he loved his uncle and that Link's love is a sign of strength.
140* ThrowingYourSwordAlwaysWorks: [[spoiler: Subverted. Link throws the Master Sword at Agahnim, but it turns out to be a trap with Agahnim being an illusion. The trap results in Link losing the Master Sword, the only weapon that could harm Agahnim]].
141* TheWallsAreClosingIn: Rasuka and Leader get trapped in one of these rooms and Link has to use the Master Sword's SwordBeam to break them out.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:''Link's Awakening'' -- Ataru Cagiva]]
145* ApocalypseAnarchy: [[spoiler: Reasoning that Link will likely wake the WindFish, the monsters go on a hedonistic rampage, and destroy animal village.]]
146* ApocalypseMaiden: [[spoiler:Link. Link is told that he is the "Messenger of Awakening", a [[TheChosenOne chosen one]] who will awaken the Wind Fish. He later finds out that the true role of the "Messenger of Awakening" is to cause a DreamApocalypse and destroy the island]].
147* BagOfHolding: Felicia holds the Instruments of the Sirens for Link. She dematerializes the instruments for storage and rematerializes them when Link needs them.
148* BloodKnight: Master Drona, the Hinox warrior, fights Link for the enjoyment of fighting. This also applies to the other monsters to a lesser extent who make it clear they enjoy fighting.
149* CanonForeigner: Felicia, the {{Tsundere}} FairyCompanion. She's another Canon Foreigner fairy companion that predates Navi. There are also several original villains like Karuna, the Moblin swordsman, and Master Drona, the Hinox warrior.
150* DamselInDistress: [[spoiler: Surprisingly enough, not love interest Marin, but the fairy companion Felicia who is kidnapped by Moblins.]]
151* DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything: There seems to be a G-rated equivalent of DidYouJustHaveSex during a dialog exchange between Link and Felicia. Of course, that isn't what actually happened, this is a Nintendo game after all.
152* GirlNextDoor: Interpretations of Marin in the game range from exotic islander to girl next door, the manga goes heavily into a girl next door interpretation.
153* HeroicBSOD: Link gets one after [[spoiler:learning the truth about the island]].
154* InvincibleHero: Link in this depiction, the only time the possibility of him losing is when his sword breaks and when he fights Dethl, apart of that he's presented as being pretty much unbeatable. The other time he's in danger is when his sword breaks and he has to fight a monster with bare hands. This ends up working out since the focus of the story is less about the tension of him succeeding in his quest, he, in fact, clears dungeons off-panel, and more about coming to grips with the reality of it.
155* ItMayHelpYouOnYourQuest: Link is given the ocarina from Madam [=MeowMeow=] as a reward for rescuing Bow-Wow instead of finding it in the Dream Shrine like in the game.
156* JumpIllCatchYou: Played straight between Link and Marin when they are attacked by monsters while traveling to the Animal Village.
157* LotusEaterMachine: [[spoiler: Since Link can actually talk in the manga, a good portion of the manga deals with Link's emotions as he eventually accepts that he must wake the Windfish and bring about the end of Koholint Island.]]
158* MasterSwordsman: One of Link's fights is with Karuna, a Moblin master swordsman.
159* NamedByTheAdaptation: The unnamed ghost in the original game is given the name "Nakura" in the manga.
160* NoHuggingNoKissing: One of the rare aversions for this franchise. While there still isn't any actual hugging or kissing, the manga does play up the romance over what was present in the game if only because Link can talk.
161* SmoochOfVictory: Madam [=MeowMeow=] tries to give Link one for rescuing Bow-Wow, but Link runs away in terror.
162* TakeUpMySword: Literal example. Nakura the ghost in the manga is a soldier who defended the island when he was alive. After Link takes him back to his house, he gives Link his sword which finishes his UnfinishedBusiness.
163* TenMinuteRetirement: [[spoiler:Thinking that waking the Wind Fish will result in a DreamApocalypse (which it does), Link abandons his quest and tries to leave the island his own way.]]
164* {{Tsundere}}: Felicia.
165* WrongGenreSavvy: Link assumes he's on a run of the mill save the world quest. [[spoiler: He finds out he's dead wrong and his actions will actually destroy the island, which prompts him to try and run away from it, not aware that of the YouCantFightFate present.]] On a lighter note, when he gets his hands a new sword, he initially assumes that it's just an ordinary sword like what he was using before. He finds it's a lot more than that.
166[[/folder]]
167
168[[folder:''Oath of Lilto'' -- Junya Furusawa]]
169''The Legend of Zelda: Oath of Lilto'' is a spin-off set in the ''Zelda'' universe around the time of ''A Link to the Past'' but staring the original character Lilto and his friends, with Link and Princess Zelda only having a small role in the story.
170----
171* CanonForeigner: All of the main characters are invented for the story and do not appear in any other ''Zelda'' work.
172%%* DemotedToExtra: Link and Zelda.
173* DolledUpInstallment: Although it's a ''Zelda'' manga, the art style is blatantly that of ''VideoGame/DragonQuest''.
174%%* ElsewhereFic: Elsewhere Spin-off.
175* ExpandedUniverse: This is the only official ''Zelda'' manga that isn't a direct adaptation of a game and tries to expand on the ''Zelda'' universe. The main characters are {{Canon Foreigner}}s but the story takes place in the same setting as the ''Zelda'' games.
176* {{Expy}}: Lilto's character design is almost identical to Bianca's son from ''VideoGame/DragonQuestV''.
177[[/folder]]
178
179[[folder:''The Wind Waker 4koma'']]
180%%* AffectionateParody: It's {{Fourkoma}} for crying out loud.%%And?
181* ContainerCling: In ''Monsters Are Not Good With Tricks'', Link sneaks up behind a Moblin in a barrel only for the Moblin to suddenly turn around and snatch up the barrel. Link manages to hold on inside in the barrel and the Moblin wanders off confused.
182* TheDitz: Link. However, it's frequently subverted in that he's either a GeniusDitz or a {{Cloudcuckoolander}}. {{Lampshaded}} by a certain talking boat:
183-->'''King of Red Lions''': "Is he smart or stupid? I don't know."
184* HeroicMime: Used frequently.
185* LighterAndSofter: By virtue of being a cute and humorous 4-koma instead of a serious adaptation.
186* RunningGag: A surprising number of people think that "[Link's] clothes look uncomfortably warm ..." [[spoiler: Including Ganondorf.]]
187* SneezeCut: As Link is sneaking inside the Forsaken Fortress, Aryll reassures Mila and Maggie that her big brother is definitely going to come to rescue them. Cut to Link sneezing, almost giving his location away to a nearby Moblin.
188* StrangeMindsThinkAlike: Both Gonzo and Nudge both try to disguise their ship in That's A Smart Way with signs saying [[SuspiciouslySpecificDenial This Ain't A Pirate Ship]].
189[[/folder]]

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