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Majora's Mask may be the most ripe for fan theories and what-not than any of the other games in the series. Here is a list of such theories.
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Concerning Majora or Skull Kid Majora's Mask is a nightmare
Think about it. The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening provides precedent for a Zelda game being All Just a Dream. Why not MM as well? Termina is similar to Hyrule in many ways and filled with expies of people Link got to know well in Ocarina of Time, usually with horrible things happening to them. (And ever wonder why there's no expy of Link in Termina?) It's just familiar enough to be a product of his own psyche. Creepy things happen in MM, repeatedly, especially given the day cycle, which smacks of someone reliving all the fears he encountered during his earlier quest. OoT contained a decent amount of horror as well, did it not? Now, what the Song of Time actually does, instead of actually changing time, is wake Link up. The next night, he has the nightmare again, until he can finally overcome and banish his fears by defeating the Mask.
Majora was of the Lost Tribe.
It's Majora's Mask, so if it represents the Lost Tribe, then Majora was the creator of the Mask.
Expanding on the above, Majora was a child of the lost tribe.
All of the transformation masks have the soul of a person in them, so why not Majora? And this game does seem to carry a theme of creepy children. Anyway, my guess is the ancient tribe needed a sacrifice for the mask. They chose Majora. However, considering the masks use, Majora was subjected to things NO mortal was meant to see, much less a child. The trauma this caused turned Majora into what we saw it as. A pure heart is not nessecarily good after all.
Related WMG: Majora's Mask's power is to create and control horrible nightmares.
Link has to defeat its dreamworld avatar (its weak point) to to destroy its illusion and be released. That's why time travel doesn't work, and why the Plot Coupons don't disappear- he's too emotionally invested in getting the items, and creating them himself instead of simply carrying around fragments of the world like rupees and trade items. The four giants and the moon children are beings that police the dream world that Majora corrupted or enslaved (or in the case of the moon children, may not have been so Lawful in the first place). The Great Fairie and other helpful aspects were just bits of his memories (as in the above guess) that Majora or its mask couldn't yet corrupt completely. The Colony Drop is when Majora finally kills, breaks, or otherwise makes it impossible for Link to recover, and the Song of time disrupts the spell.
Majora's Mask is a dream caused by the Temple of Time to get Link ready for his Post-Time-Skip adventures.
What else was Link doing in the seven years he was sleeping there? And because time is so flexible in the Temple, he meets people he will be running into as an adult. You can also get a Hook Shot in Majora's Mask—something that only Adult Link can use in Ocarina of Time.
Thus the Majora's Mask version of Link, or at least a representation of his inner child, is the Skull Kid, who represents Link's fears of growing up. But upon realizing that 1) growing up means he gets to take a level in badass (the Fierce Deity Mask), and 2) he'll still remain who he is on the inside (the Skull Kid sniffs him and is happy to find that Link is the kid who befriended him in the Lost Woods), Link is finally ready to wake up and take the mantle of responsibility.
Majora's Mask is a hallucination caused by Ganondorf in order to gain revenge on Link
After Ganon is defeated and banished at the end of Ocarina of Time, he uses his last powers to take control of Phantom Ganon's spirit, trapped in the "void between dimensions", to which there is a portal in Kokiri Forest. He then uses the influence of the void to take control of a Skull Kid, and eventually, both Link and the Skull Kid (and Epona) end up in the void, which is really nothing more than a void. It is now that Ganondorf induces a grand hallucination into the minds of his captives, hoping to break Link's mind. However, the Happy Mask Salesman, a mysterious entity, appears into the void to help Link escape the hallucination before it's too late. Eventually, Link succeeds, but both he and the Skull Kid (and possibly Epona) have no idea that it was a hallucination, and spent the rest of their lives thinking it was all real. Oh, and the fairies weren't actually real, just aspects of Ganon's will. If you choose to believe the "Link commits suicide" theory, then Ganondorf actually did succeed in breaking Link.
Majora was a Woman.
Majora's Incarnation and Majora's Wrath have awfully womanly figures about them, and if you listen to it/her when hit, there is a shrill scream.
Majora is the evil side of Kamaro, the spirit dancer.
First off, Kamaro's dance music
Kamaro created Majora's Mask.
Related to the above, Kamaro is a member of the lost tribe that created Majora's Mask, and his dance is the "anti-Song of Healing" ritual that transforms the id of a person into a mask. Why does he want to spread his dance to the world? Why does he say that he wanted to "stir the world into a giant melting pot" with his dance? Why is he expressing his regret toward the moon? Because he died after creating only one mask, which only had the power to bring down the moon slowly. Since then, he's been perfecting a "long-incubation" version of his dance, which would have a chance to spread across the world before transforming everyone who witnessed it into evil world-destroying masks. And you just taught it to a pair of dancers. Nice Job Breaking It, Hero.
Majora is Satan
It had to be said. There are three Goddesses, with the Triforce that represents them (perhaps unintentionally) evoking the Christian Holy Trinity. Obviously, they're God. Ganondorf is "only" a human, albeit one who somehow gained a piece of God's power. Not quite Devil material. Then who would be the Zelda Satan? Well, certainly none of the villains who ended up Hijacked by Ganon. But of those who weren't, Majora has the whole bit of "mocking" God. Three forms: the "Mask", the "Incarnation", and the "Wrath", as a parody of the Holy Trinity. Remember that in The Divine Comedy, Satan himself had three faces in a similar mocking. The Number of the Beast is also a "trinity" (of sixes, in this case) in an attempt to mock God.
These tendrils
The tendrils wormed their way through his body and manipulated it like People Puppets.
Majora's Mask actually limited the Skull Kid's power.
The reason he was more destructive was because it was goading him on, not because he had any greater abilities.
Majora's worshipers were an alternate universe counterpart to Dark Link's race
If you've played TP, chances are you remember that creepy cutscene where Lanayru described the history of the Fused Shadows. Now, as everyone and their mother has pointed our on the WMG page for that game, Majora's Mask bears an uncanny resemblance to the Fused Shadows. Thus we can assume that the tribe that worshiped Majora's Mask and used it in dark rituals was the counterpart to the Twili's ancestors, and that the sealing of the proto-Twili in the Twilight Realm happened at the same time as the disappearance of the ancient tribe. But check the cutscene again. Who stands in for the Dark Interlopers? It's Dark Link. This at least implies that Dark Link's race was the proto-Twili, and thus the Majora worshipers.
Skull Kid is Link's Terminian counterpart.
Before he became a Skull Kid, he probably had a backstory similar to Link's, i.e. his parents fled some disaster and wound up in Kokiri woods. He was raised by the Deku Tree as well, but got lost in the Lost Woods before getting his fairy, which is why he became the Skull Kid. this would also explain how he wound up in Termina, since his counterpart was able to cross the dimensional boundaries (when he was a baby, but still) then the law of equivalent exchange would grant him the same ability/luck/power/whathaveyou. this seems to be supported by a few key singularities the two share, like affinity for playing musical instruments, becoming friends with Saria, and being way to curious (as all players are when they first play a Zelda game and don't really know what to do)
The Skull Kid from Twilight Princess is the same one from Ocarina of Time/Majora's Mask
That he knows how to play Saria's Song, which Link taught to the Skull Kid in OoT, seems to be proof enough. This is made even more plausible by the fact that TP apparently takes place in the same "Hyrule survives" timeline created by MM. Also, he appears in the Sacred Grove, an area that bears a conspicuous resemblance to the Lost Woods (in both background music and terrain), where the original Skull Kid lived. It's even possible that he was drawn to TP's Link because he reminded him of the old Link.
Majora's Mask was made by the Twili
A tribe using black magic made it, eh? And it's behaving a LOT like Zant. Oh, and don't forget that OTHER artifact of doom, which Link and Midna had to reassemble, which was said to be just as dangerous and had pretty simmilar markings to the Majora's Mask on it.
Majora is another product of Demise's curse.
It's established in Skyward Sword that Demise is the Ultimate Evil, and the curse he places on Link and Zelda at the end of the game states that their descendants/future incarnations will be forever plagued by a manifestation of his hatred. Link of OoT and MM is clearly one of those, and it's never clearly stated that Ganon is the only result of Demise's hatred. Since Termina was also created by the goddesses, it seems possible that some bit of his evil managed to seep its way inside and eventually take the form of Majora's Mask.
Majora's Mask's spirit isn't Majora, it is Uka Uka
Probably Uka Uka was transferred to alternate dimension when he was locked to his underground prison?
Majora is on of the gods worshiped by The Order
It's a Cosmic Horror that tries to destroy the world, and it's later forms certainly look like something out of Silent Hill.
Majora is Demise's God Behind The Demon King
Majora's main stick in the story is its being a master in manipulating every single event so to spread chaos and destruction. As Majora's main nature is unknown, it might also be that what we saw, being just a mask, is only a fragment of its very power and that could do much, much worse. As the Moon crashing Termina is among the most striking moments in the whole story and that Kaepora Gaepora defines Majora's as 'the most powerful threat [Link] has ever faced', and the dozen of blasphemous signals in the Stone Tower alongisde its obvious relationship with Majora's Mask, makes Majora a way worse and superior dark equivalent to Demise, as while he is an Evil Counterpart to Hylia, Majora seems almost as if being the dark opposite to the Golden Goddesses themselves. What is to say it wasn't Majora to create Demise? As to why Majora never came up, it's because he is both sealed inside an Alternate Universe (which he was about to destroy, and that he would have survived to, as the cutscene of Termina destroyed suggested) and because, as a good old textbook Lovecraftian Eldritch Abomination, Majora is not going to intervene directly, because Hyrule is that meaningless
Concerning the Happy Mask Salesman The Happy Mask Salesman is a living shell
Take a look at the shell of Link next time you do the Elegy of Emptiness in human form. Creepy, huh? Especially with that freaky grin, what's up with that? Now imagine it given life. Know anyone else in the Uncanny Valley with a creepy-ass grin? That's right, the Happy Mask Salesman! Somehow, the empty unmoving shell of a human left behind after the Elegy of Emptyness was given life, perhaps through a mask that didn't fit right. He became obsessed with the masks, fitting for one whose life began with a mask, and went to strange new lands while seeking them, eventually opening a shop in Hyrule Castle Town. But Hyrule had so few masks, as they hadn't become a part of everyday life like they did in Termina, so he returned home on his way somewhere else when he was pranked by the Skull Kid.
The Happy Mask Salesman is a native of Termina and travels to Hyrule
Notice that there is no Happy Mask shop in Termina. Why? Because the demand is low with everyone having their own masks, and magical masks are presumably expensive. But by traveling to Hyrule, he can sell cheap non-magical knockoffs of his home dimension's masks for a wildly inflated price. Notice how the Truth Mask, considered a powerful artifact in Hyrule, is just a curiosity in Termina when compared to some of the more potent masks.
The Happy Mask Salesman is/was Majora
Since the game came out, people have wondered who Majora is, as we only see the titular mask. The happy Mask Salesman was hysterical about getting his mask back - perhaps when he says that it's "MY" mask, he actually means it in more ways than one?
Suppose that Majora was a powerful being long ago, known for causing mass havoc such as was demonstrated in the game. There would, of course, be those who would challenge him, such as the being whose face the Fierce Deity mask is modeled after. Majora beats the Fierce Deity and turns him into a mask, but something he says makes him see the chaos he has caused (Perhaps calling him childish). Majora packs all of his evil and insanity into the mask, as well as the mask he made of the Fierce Deity, to keep it in balance, and just in case somebody finds the mask again. That being done, he becomes the Happy Mask salesman and sets out to spread happiness, to make up for what he had caused.
Eventually, though, the mask was found by a tribe that used it in its hexing rituals, disrupting the balance between Majora's and the Fierce Deity's powers. He sets out to retrieve it, does, but then has it stolen by the Skull Kid...
This theory would explain several things: Why the HMS is seemingly omniscient, why the kids in the Moon looked like him, why the kid wearing Majora's mask would give Link the Fierce Deity mask, with which Link can easily defeat Majora's Mask, and why the HMS is so desperate to get it back - because he knows exactly what it does.
The entire world was set up by the Happy Mask Salesman
Think about it. Everyone in this world instantly accepts the powers of masks; some of them react favorably even to insanely creepy masks, and no-one questions why a kid in green clothes runs around with the face of a Molblin. Most of the people look a lot like the inhabitants of the Happy Mask Salesman's previous home, Hyrule. After you chase the Skull Kid down the tree stump, you end up in an arboreal world of hollow tree trunks and giant empty spaces, and then you hit a corridor that sends you to the base of the Clock Tower in Clock Town. You can't get back to that corridor under any circumstances. That tree-trunk world was still Hyrule. Then the Happy Mask Salesman accosts you and informs you that you've suffered a hideous fate and that he can help you.
HE WAS RIGHT THERE. THE SKULL KID FLOATED STRAIGHT PAST HIM. THE GUY THAT STOLE "HIS" MASK FLOATED STRAIGHT PAST HIM AND HE DID NOTHING TO STOP IT.
After that, he teaches you how to take the dying and turn them into faces that you can wear to change shape. Hyrule's magic didn't work that way- it was handed to people by the Goddesses themselves, through the Fairies. But in his little mask world of insanity and torment, it does. All of a sudden Link can heal people's wounded souls through magic.
Who gives you the main quest? He does.
Who knows ahead of time that you'll be able to take on the Skull Kid and his God Mode Sue mask on your own within the three day time limit? He does.
Whose evil, conniving, petulant laugh do you hear should time run out and the world end? Not the Skull Kid's. His.
The Happy Mask Salesman is the human incarnation of the moon.
Every person from Hyrule has a "clone" of themselves in Termia, right? Well, the Happy Mask Salesman's "clone" is actually a being created by the moon to retrieve Majora's Mask before the Skull Kid could use it to crash the moon, thus destroying it. This would also explain why the kids on the moon look so much like the HMS; they're of a similar nature.
The Happy Mask Salesman is Nyarlathotep.
To wit, HMS "teleports" from position to position and facial expression to facial expression in a manner natural only to those who live outside of conventional geometry. Of course, the big clue is the thousand masks, natch...
The Happy Mask Salesman is Mario.
He happens to have a Mario mask, which most probably means that Mario is dead. The Happy Mask Salesman probably found his grave/body (like how Link found Darmani and Mikau) and he turned into a mask, so that the Happy Mask Salesman could continue his legacy.
The Happy Mask Salesman is Link's Termina Counterpart
Link and the Happy Mask Salesman were actually born around the same time, but Link stopped aging due to living in the Kokiri Forest, while HMS grew up into a not-quite-young man. The HMS did his part of Heroism by wandering across the lands - including Hyrule - to spread happiness with his wares. He took it upon himself to rid the world of the evil that is Majora's Mask. When Link left the forest and took up his mantle as the Hero of Time, the HMS went back to Termina because his power was nullified - if two counterparts exist in the same world, one will sap the power of the other. So when Link arrived in Termina, the HMS could only stay beneath the Tower and watch as his world die - and assist his Hylian counterpart any way he could.
Something else to consider: the HMS has a Hammerspace organ that has similar properties to the Ocarina of Time. It helped to heal Deku Link of his curse. If you don't play the Song of Time before the Moon falls, never fear; the HMS plays it and reverses time for you.
The HMS is an alien.
Specifically, from the moon. You know when you get on the moon? The moon children look like him and have an affinity for masks! Methinks the reason he would leave when the Earth crashes on Termina is so that he can get back home.
The HMS is the Spirit of Masks.
Hyrule and its associated alternate realms have spirits for everything else. The shop is his way of spreading his 'element' - like the Light Spirits spread light where they make their homes, the Happy Mask Salesman seeks to spread masks. He's not a particularly benevolent nor evil spirit, more Chaotic Neutral than anything: masks hide who you are, but it's still your choice whether to use that for good or for evil.
The Happy Mask Salesman has no face.
Look at the way he speaks. His face snaps back from happy to sad to pissed off almost unnaturally. He's also very prone to Mood Dissonance, given the way he smiles as he informs you of things that are horrible. He's wearing a mask to give the appearance of a face, either because he wants to protect his identity, or he has no face of his own.
Ganondorf's Termina parallel is the Happy Mask Salesman
Snap back to Ocarina of Time for a moment, back to the Forest Temple. After you defeat Phantom Ganon, Ganondorf apparently sends the thing into a void between dimensions. This would imply that he both has knowledge of alternate dimensions, with or without the Triforce; and the ability to open gates through them, probably with the Triforce. That in mind, look at the Happy Mask Salesman. He himself resides in a world in between dimensions, and probably has knowledge of both Hyrule and Termina; this fact is intensified if you believe that the Happy Mask Salesman from OoT is the same as from MM. Their MOs are also quite similar: they desire a relic of incredible power, and they're willing to manipulate Link in order to do so. Finally... Both of them are quite obviously evil in some way.
The Salesman is a Time Traveler
Building on the above idea that the salesman is from Termina, traveling to Hyrule, he mentions that he has to leave in three days at the start of the game. He is traveling to Hyrule, most likely, as the place where you first meet him is the connection between Hyrule and Termina. He probably moved back in time while he was traveling to Hyrule, thus being able to meet Link there. In addition, he has a Mario mask. He probably traveled forward in time to the point at which Mario dies to play the Song of Happiness for him.
Alternately, the cave is a time-bridge between Hyrule and Termina, and you go forward in time going from Hyrule to Termina, and backward in time going from Termina to Hyrule. This would explain that, and the fact that Termina is considerably more technologically advanced than Hyrule.
The Happy Mask Salesman is Vaati.
They both have the same laugh sound effect.
The Happy Mask Salesman is one of the Moon Children.
Specifically, the one wearing Majora's Mask. He calls it "his mask" because it is his mask. Naturally, this means that he's Majora, and by giving him back his mask you've doomed the world.
The Happy Mask Salesman isn't evil.
I know, it's the most wild of the wild mass guesses on this site, but think about it. There's nothing in any of the games that he's appeared in that suggests that he is evil. (Granted, I've only played Majora's Mask and Ocarina of Time, if there's a game he appeared in that did have him as evil, feel free to correct me.) People always assume that he'd evil due to his creepy nature, but not all creepy people are evil. Heck, The Doctor has a folder to himself on that series's [[Nightmare Fuel/Doctor Who Nightmare Fuel page]], but no one's going to say he's evil. The only thing that he does that even comes close to evil is when he shakes Link around like a rag doll, but a) he was in the middle of a monumental freakout due to the idea that Termina's ultimate evil might return, I think we can forgive him for a brief moment of losing control, and b) Link getting shaken like that is nothing new. Aside from that, yeah, he gets that creepy face, but both times it appears, it's justified. In Ocarina of Time, Link has taken his products without giving him his money back. What kind of business would it be if he just let that slide? Compared to what others might do, a little nightmare face seems benign. The second time, in Majora's Mask, is during the aforementioned monumental freakout, when he was afraid that Termina's ultimate evil would bring about the apocalypse, and learned that Link hadn't followed through on his promise to get the mask back. A little anger there wouldn't be out of the realm of possibility, and he cools down as soon as Link swears to get the mask back at all costs. And finally, when he says that Link's met with a terrible fate, the first time is when Link's been robbed completely, transformed into a Deku Scrub, and trapped in another dimention due for apocolypse in 3 days, and the only other time is when the moon crashes down, in which case Link is experiencing the apocolypse. That's not evil, that's stating the obvious. If anything, he seems relatively benign from some of his lines at the ending. No real proof of evil.
The Happy Mask Salesman doesn't exist.
Well, not technically. He is only an illusion or deity sent to the world by the goddesses to protect Majora's Mask. He only shows up to those who have important destinies with the masks he guards. In Oo T, no one but Link ever enters the Happy Mask Shop. In MM, no one but Link ever enters the Clock Tower. Skull Kid floated RIGHT PAST where HMS was, and he showed no intent of stopping the imp. So, why would HMS be seen by Skull Kid when he stole the mask and at the very end? The beginning, perhaps HMS was not finished... processing (or whatever you want to call it) into the world. The end, the goddesses could have allowed Skull Kid to see him so that he would learn his lesson. This would also explain how he appears in later games hundreds of years later. This raises one more question - what about the children of the moon, who look so much like him? Well, when Link went inside the moon, he landed in a large, open area. OPEN area. Even with magic, there would still be some way in and out of there. The reason for this? That was the goddesses realm. Majora took over it during MM. The children of the moon are these HMS deities in the making.
Concerning the Moon The Moon ALWAYS had a face.
Practically nobody aside from the juggler twins in Clock Town mentions the fact that the moon has a now hideous face, whereas realistically it'd be one hell of a talking point along with the "its falling" problem. Perhaps Termina's moon always had a frightful face, to warn off anybody that would try to bring evil to Termina. Perfect fodder for Majora to give the land an ironic death: Its scariest guardian becomes its armageddon.
The Moon isn't the moon at all.
Darth Vader was just trying out some new designs.
The Moon isn't the moon at all. It was something Majora created.
The inside of the Moon is actually representative of Link's psyche, not Majora's.
After the events of Ocarina of Time, Link is unable to claim the childhood that he lost. Tormented with the memories of the future he averted, he leaves Hyrule in order to search for Navi, one remnant of the past, a solid tie to the Kokiri Forest where he lived as a child. However, as he progresses through Termina, he is forced to act as his adult self to stop the moon falling (for example, using weapons such as the bow that he could not wield previously as a child) and must ignore his personal goal of finding Navi in order to help many other people. The interior of the Moon is a clear representation of Link's childhood in the Kokiri Forest, with the children under the lone tree symbolising the Kokiri protected by the Great Deku Tree. By going through each of the other children's 'games' he comes to term with his past, until only the Majora child remains. The final child, outcast by his friends, is representative of Link himself. The child sees the Fierce Deity mask as that of a 'bad guy' because he hates how his childhood was stolen from him as he was forced to become the Hero of Time, going through nearly insurmountable trials and hardships, as well as what he became, having the role of an unstoppable adult warrior thrust upon him after going all his life up to that point believing that he would live eternally as a peaceful Kokiri child. Link must accept his actions in Hyrule, and the impossibility of ever returning to a normal childhood, and in doing so becomes the Fierce Deity and defeats Majora.
Ganondorf's Termina parallel is the Moon
Its face very closely resembles Ganondorf's, especially his expression during the last we see of him in Ocarina of Time as he's being banished. Like Ganondorf (arguably, it is corrupted by a powerful outside force/artifact (Majora's Mask/Triforce of Power/Anything else that may have influenced Ganondorf in other games). It also seeks to destroy a land, and the 3rd day clock town's ominous, underlying music sounds like Ganondorf's theme (at least in the ZREO version).
The Moon is the parallel of Demise
The Moon is the Sacred Realm, or it's parallel.
Compare the inside of the moon Concerning Termina Termina is not an alternate universe
It's just another county/country from Hyrule, nowhere in game is it suggested it's another universe (apart from Link's falling in the opening). The fact that many people look the same as people in Hyrule is because they ARE the same as the people from Hyrule. Think about it- Few of the characters had reasons to stay in Hyrule: The carpenters travel around Hyrule in OoT and could easily travel to Termina, Tingle is just there for the money and for ingredients as he is still roaming as he was in Freshly Picked Tingle's Rosey Rupee Land after being cursed with immortality as long as he has rupees, Sakon (The thief) is just a thief and can go anywhere to rob whatever, The Gorman Brothers are related to the people at Lon Lon Ranch (perhaps cousins), Dampe has moved after having learned about Hyrule's future (possibly from Link) and his eventual death and fled to Termina to escape Ganondorf's uprising. The only people who are not the same are Anju and her Grandmother who are just lookalikes of people in Hyrule- same goes for the shop keepers. Plus this also means that more than just an alternate universe is at stake if the moon falls and actually the entire real world is!
Majora's Mask was Termina's Fused Shadows.
An object of great power, created by a dark clan of magic users centuries ago, that was sealed away for its corrupting influence. Familiar, no? Then there's how the eye on the Fused Shadows is identical to the eyes on Majora's Mask, as well as how both are capable of sprouting limbs when unleashing their full power.
Not actually my theory, but I've seen it elsewhere
The tribe that got banished to the Twilight Realm was from Termina, and spawned the HMS' ancestor beforehand.
In Majora's Mask, Link stays in Termina of his own free will.
He continues assisting with the Goron and Zora while wearing the masks with the Zoras' and Gorons' blessing, letting them know that Darmani and Mikau had died, but peacefully. When he is not workign with the Goron and Zora, he is teaching the Skull Kid how to function in polite society (shown when the Skull Kid's lessons are complete and he goes back to Hyrule to carve his image thing) and help Romani get over what happened, if he wasn't able to save her in the last playthrough (which for the sake of the happy ending, I assume he did). He eventually got all of the quests finished that wouldn't be time-sensitive once Link could escape the three days, stole the package back from Sakon, Anju and Kafei were perfectly happy if not in fact the correct ages... Everyone is happy, except Majora and possibly the Mask Salesman, though he may have eventually gotten the Fierce Diety's mask in exchange for not stealing the others? Eh, he doesn't count anyway. Jerk. And the Skull Kid finds Navi for Link when he returns to Hyrule. Or maybe she was Tatl and Tael the whole time, thanks to Majora, and is both happy and less annoying that way. Anyway, good endings all around. Not * a Downer Ending.
Termina is the good afterlife and Link got "lost" looking for Navi
It's stated that people become Stalfos when they get lost in the Lost Woods. Whether he got lost while chasing the Stalkid (and the Stalkid can jump worlds at will being already a lost child himself) or he was already gone by that point is up for debate. Perhaps that long fall is just what dying feels like. Why is Termina the good afterlife? Think about it, Link is a hero at heart, more or less the avatar of courage, he's plopped straight into a groundhog-day world where people have so many problems he can reset time over and over ad infinitum in order to play hero until his heart's content. He's basically in the premium-member's club of Valhalla. If you want to stretch it you could also wager that all the games that don't have a definite place in the timeline are simply Link getting bored with the old adventure and Ganon being "sealed" effectively amounts to being forced to be Link's bouncy-ball in the afterlife. It also explains why Termina has so many familiar faces, his first afterlife scenario involved people he knew to ease him into it until he grew less dependent on his old life.
Link is from Termina
When we first find out Link isn't a Kokiri, we are told his mother fled to the forest, and Link was taken and raised along with the other forest inhabitants. The Deku Tree just assumed Link was Hylian, since he had no knowledge of Termina. In actuality, Link's mother fled from Termina for some reason (probably to escape the Lost Tribe, or because Skull Kid was annoying everyone by bitching about the giant leaving him, or whatever) and thought the safest place for her and her baby would be a different world entirely, which she assumes would be safe. Unfortunately, Hyrule is anything but safe, as we know from OoT. This would mainly explain why Link has no Termina counterpart, since he's originally from there. On top of that...
Termina, the world of the Ocean King and Koholinth Island are one and the same
The Windfish is the united form of the four Giants from Majora's Mask. Also, the Wind Fish and the Ocean King are one and the same (which is supported by the fact that they are both whale-like gods).
Originally, the Wind Fish / Giants / Ocean King was/were supposed to stay asleep to keep the dream world of Termina existing, but after the Majora incident, this dream world was, after all, infested by Majora's Mask's evil and it would latter manifest as Bellum from Phantom Hourglass, AKA The Nightmare from Link's Awakening. Note how Bellum's full title in Japanese is "Dream Demon Bellum". Also: Bellum's eyes look a lot like Majora's Mask's eyes. So—> Majora's Mask—> destroyed—> essence becomes Bellum: Dream Demon = Nightmare.
First, the Ocean King / Wind Fish was able to hold everything pretty well together, so the evil power was "only" resulting in the flooding of Termina (similar to the flooding of Hyrule, only that it happened in both timelines here) but as time passed, the evil grew stronger and stronger and (in Timeline Number 1) consumed most of the dream world, until only Koholinth Island was left and it wasn't possible to stop the evil anymore without giving up on what was left of that world. Because of the split-timeline, however, a sooner Link (aka Wind Waker Link) arrived in the dream world in Phantom Hourglass (Timeline Number 2) and could stop the process, before it was as advanced as in the other timeline in ''Link's Awakening".
So, to sum it all up: The giants are becoming the Ocean King, who is later known as the Wind Fish, and Phantom Hourglass is basically Link stopping the Ocean King's dream world from becoming Koholinth Island in the second timeline as well.
Supporting this theory: All three of this world have many characters who are considered Expies of characters from the corresponding preceding game even in-game. It is common for dream dimensions in fiction to have their population based upon people from "the real world". Then, there's the way Link is entering those worlds in all of the three games: In Majora's Mask, he gets a short sequence that looks like childish doodles on speed, and in Link's Awakening, he, well, awakens on the shore of Koholinth Island. Phantom Hourglass unites aspects of both of this instances, by having Link wake up on a shore after having a pretty acid-like vision of Tetra's light being swallowed by darkness. Another thing that is supporting this theory: the way the Wind Fish and the Ocean King tend to reward Link's helpers. Marin was wishing for wings, Linebeck was wishing for being able to travel the seas in his S.S. Linebeck. Neither of them was wishing to see the "Real World". Yet, both of them suddenly turn up and get their wishes granted in Link's world, after the quest is completed: Marin flies away as an angel/seagull and Linebeck's ship is spoted on the horizon by Link after he and Tetra return. The Wind Fish/Ocean King probably intentionally rewarded them both with "freedom from the boundaries of the dream world", additionally granting their wishes.
Hyrule and Termina are the flip sides of a disc world.
Link falls for what is implied to be a really long time but isn't hurt, and ends up under Clock Town, which could be explained by him falling through the disc's center of gravity and landed over a ledge before his momentum ran out. There's a completely different moon, and as we know, the Earth's moon orbits it at a rate of one revolution per rotation. The moon around Hyrule/Termina could orbit it so that the side with the face is only ever clearly visible from the Termina side, and only the edge of the blank side can be seen from Termina (at least until it starts falling).
Each of the masks represents the races of Termina.
You get a mask for an important person from each race. The Deku mask is the Butler's son and therefore would have ties to the Deku Royal Family. The Goron mask is Darunia, a hero of the Gorons, and the Zora mask is Mikau, the guitarist for the Indigo-gos, the popular Zora band. Fierce Deity has incredible power, enough to combat Majora easily. Now, where did the Fierce Deity come from? He represents the humans, perhaps a sort of god they worshipped. Finally, Majora's Mask represents the Skull person tribe, or lost tribe. I can't remember where, but I do believe you get a glimpse of the lost tribe somewhere, and they look very much like Skull Kid.
Then, on a related note,
Termina is outside of the time flow of Hyrule, so that while there are two Hyrule timelines there is only one Majora's Mask timeline.
Link isn't flung back in time, everything but certain extremely powerful beings and magicked (ensouled?) items get reset to how they were three days ago. this is possible because Termina is a completely separate time-universe from Hyrule. However, the main reason I want to believe this is that the Wind Waker (Link sleeps for seven years) version of Termina would suck.
Every time link travels back in time he creates a different Termina timeline
In Oo T when Link is sent back to the past it creates two timelines, so each time Link Travels back in time in MM he creates an alternate Termina, meaning there are several Termina's where everyone died horribly regardless of whether or not Termina exists outside of Hyrules flow of time.
Similarly, masks in Termia are inherantly powerful and magical. They gain their power upon creation.
Would explain why every mask in the game does at least some supernatural thing.
Sometime in the past, Termina experienced a bout of revolutions
Instead of Hyrule, overlooked by the Royal Castle, there is only Clock Town, governed by a mayor. The Gorons have a chief rather than a king, and there seems to be at least some democracy involved in his selection. The Zora seem to lack a king as well, their society being either a democracy or an oligarchy. The only race retaining royalty are the Deku, who are sort of isolationist anyway.
Ikana is Hyrule.
Expanding on the Termina as more advanced Hyrule theory, the kingdom of Ikana is Termina's version of Hyrule, with Ikana Castle as Hyrule Castle. There are major differences, with Ikana favoring a more Egyptian look as compared with Hyrule's medieval castle feel. It collapsed in Termina's version of the Great War, meaning it's king is the counterpart to Hyrule's king, and the Redeads are the Market Town's populace.
Termina is outside of the time flow of Hyrule, so that while there are two Hyrule timelines there is only one Majora's Mask timeline.
Link isn't flung back in time, everything but certain extremely powerful beings and magicked (ensouled?) items get reset to how they were three days ago. this is possible because Termina is a completely separate time-universe from Hyrule. However, the main reason I want to believe this is that the Wind Waker (Link sleeps for seven years) version of Termina would suck.
Everytime Link travels to the past he creates a different Termina timeline
When Link was sent to the past to relive his child years in Oo T it created two split timelines so we can assume each time link sends himself back three days in MM he creates a new timeline, leaving AT LEAST four Terminas where everyone died horribly, regardless of whether or not Termina's universe exists independently of Hyrule.
Sometime in the past, Termina experienced a bout of revolutions
Instead of Hyrule, overlooked by the Royal Castle, there is only Clock Town, governed by a mayor. The Gorons have a chief rather than a king, and there seems to be at least some democracy involved in his selection. The Zora seem to lack a king as well, their society being either a democracy or an oligarchy. The only race retaining royalty are the Deku, who are sort of isolationist anyway.
At the end, Link chooses to keep traveling between Termina and Hyrule, becoming the Hero of Two Worlds
He's had one hell of a bonding session with Termina, so it's unlikely he'd just stay out of there forever. If nothing else, he'll have to keep sneaking back for more Chateu Romani. But the people of Hyrule are equally precious to him. Well, with the biggest threats to both worlds eliminated and only some odds and ends to take care of in each world, surely Link has enough time for both.
Termina is a metaphor for the five stages of grief.
This troper didn't come up with the idea, but it's interesting. At worst, good for maybe a quick chuckle.
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Termina is more than just an a parallel universe, it also stands out of time from the normal universe.
Unlike the various dark and twilight realms, which are perfectly parallel, time works differently. You can access any point in history to and from Termina.. We already know Termina is not a perfect mimicry of Hyrule, but has extra elements and is missing many elements. This could be explained by it being connected to many times, rather than just the one. This would explain how Skull Kid knew the giants and Link without him being hundreds of years old, the technological level being beyond that of Ocarina of Time, how Majora was able to cause so much damage in so short a time, and possibly how the HMS was able to get Majora's Mask in the first place, as we see plenty of evidence the mask was from Termina.
Termina is the first universe created in the Zelda multi-verse.
The three goddesses (Din, Nayru, and Farore) are daughters/creations of the four Giants, who were sent out to create their own worlds. Many of the new worlds contain similar elements to the first one, which explains the similarities that Termina and Hyrule share. This also explains why the giants are present in their world but the goddesses are not, since the goddesses are continuing to seed and create new worlds while the giants remain in the first one. The giants are also portrayed as being somewhat abstract elderly beings, while the goddesses are young women- they are both younger and closer in form to the various human-esque people of the worlds.
Termina Counterparts
Contains related entries from other folders.
Majora's Mask is a nightmare
Think about it. Link's Awakening provides precedent for a Zelda game being All Just a Dream. Why not MM as well? Termina is similar to Hyrule in many ways and filled with expies of people Link got to know well in Ocarina of Time, usually with horrible things happening to them. (And ever wonder why there's no expy of Link in Termina?) It's just familiar enough to be a product of his own psyche. Creepy things happen in MM, repeatedly, especially given the day cycle, which smacks of someone reliving all the fears he encountered during his earlier quest. OoT contained a decent amount of horror as well, did it not? Now, what the Song of Time actually does, instead of actually by defeating the Mask.
Skull Kid is Link's Terminian counterpart.
Before he became a Skull Kid, he probably had a backstory similar to Link's, i.e. his parents fled some disaster and wound up in Kokiri woods. He was raised by the Deku Tree as well, but got lost in the Lost Woods before getting his fairy, which is why he became the Skull Kid. this would also explain how he wound up in Termina, since his counterpart was able to cross the dimensional boundaries (when he was a baby, but still) then the law of equivalent exchange would grant him the same ability/luck/power/whathaveyou. this seems to be supported by a few key singularities the two share, like affinity for playing musical instruments, becoming friends with Saria, and being way to curious (as all players are when they first play a Zelda game and don't really know what to do)
The Happy Mask Salesman is Link's Termina Counterpart
Link and the Happy Mask Salesman were actually born around the same time, but Link stopped aging due to living in the Kokiri Forest, while HMS grew up into a not-quite-young man. The HMS did his part of Heroism by wandering across the lands - including Hyrule - to spread happiness with his wares. He took it upon himself to rid the world of the evil that is Majora's Mask. When Link left the forest and took up his mantle as the Hero of Time, the HMS went back to Termina because his power was nullified - if two counterparts exist in the same world, one will sap the power of the other. So when Link arrived in Termina, the HMS could only stay beneath the Tower and watch as his world die - and assist his Hylian counterpart any way he could.
Something else to consider: the HMS has a Hammerspace organ that has similar properties to the Ocarina of Time. It helped to heal Deku Link of his curse. If you don't play the Song of Time before the Moon falls, never fear; the HMS plays it and reverses time for you.
Ganondorf's Termina parallel is the Happy Mask Salesman
Snap back to Ocarina of Time for a moment, back to the Forest Temple. After you defeat Phantom Ganon, Ganondorf apparently sends the thing into a void between dimensions. This would imply that he both has knowledge of alternate dimensions, with or without the Triforce; and the ability to open gates through them, probably with the Triforce. That in mind, look at the Happy Mask Salesman. He himself resides in a world in between dimensions, and probably has knowledge of both Hyrule and Termina; this fact is intensified if you believe that the Happy Mask Salesman from OoT is the same as from MM. Their MOs are also quite similar: they desire a relic of incredible power, and they're willing to manipulate Link in order to do so. Finally... Both of them are quite obviously evil in some way.
Ganondorf's Termina parallel is the Moon
Its face very closely resembles Ganondorf's, especially his expression during the last we see of him in Ocarina of Time as he's being banished. Like Ganondorf (arguably, it is corrupted by a powerful outside force/artifact (Majora's Mask/Triforce of Power/Anything else that may have influenced Ganondorf in other games). It also seeks to destroy a land, and the 3rd day clock town's ominous, underlying music sounds like Ganondorf's theme (at least in the ZREO version).
Koume and Kotake are more than just potions-and-parlor-tricks witches.
They are the parallels to Twinrova, who were one of the major bosses of Ocarina of Time and attempted to screw with the deities' will. One of the Termina witches refers to the Skull Kid as a harmless little punk, despite his abilities to warp space, travel between dimensions, and potential immortality (or even having conquered death, which is admittably not that big a deal in MM and other 3D Zelda games). The only things they do in the game are make potions, remotely pilot a boat, and fly on a broomstick, but their comparison to Twinrova should be enough to suggest they can do more, let alone their mostly-dismissal of the Skull Kid even with Majora's Mask.
Kafei is Link's Termina counterpart
Besides Link, Kafei is the only character you can control. He also seems to have remarkable courage, the way he was going to go get his mask back all by himself despite being in a child's body.
The Butler's Son is Link's Termina counterpart
Think about it; If Termina is supposed to be a parallel universe to Hyrule, where are all the Kokiri? We never see a single one. In this universe, the Deku take their place as the "forest" race, so if Link WERE to have an expy, it would have to be a Deku too. In fact, the Deku that was Link left the Deku society in order to go on a quest to defeat Skull Kid, because he knew before anyone else that he would try to destroy the world. During an encounter inside the clock tower, Skull Kid lured the original "Deku Link" into an alternate dimension, tore his face off, found the nearest kid he could tease and trick into wearing the mask, then ran back to Termia, leaving the original "Deku Link" in the alternate reality, sealed behind a stone door that can never be opened.
The Fierce Deity is Link's Termina counterpart.
With no Hyrule War, there was no reason for Link to spend time hidden and unaging/slow-aging in the Kokiri forest. He grows up, becomes a skilled warrior and champion of justice, working from the shadows if this was recently... Then he gets his soul sucked out trying to destroy Majora's Mask where it was sealed in the Stone Tower Temple (and accidentally breaking the seal without killing it) and everything goes to pot. The timeline could vary, depending on how long the Happy Mask Salesman had the mask, but it's most likely either just before the Skull Kid got the mask (and the Happy Mask Salesman was returning from retrieving it), or some time ago.
The Fierce Deity is the Termina counterpart of both Link and Ganondorf.
Going on what has been said about the mask, even though it looks like Link it has been described as being evil or at the least malevolent. My theory is that when this mask was created it used to souls instead of one for more power and since we see no counterpart for Ganondorf I believe his counterparts soul along with Links was used in it's creation.
The Fierce Deity is the counterpart of Ganondorf.
If it is actually evil. Also could be used to show that Link and Ganondorf are Not so Different or something.
Sometime in Termina's past, a previous incarnation of Kafei (see above) defeated the Fierce Deity and the Happy Mask Salesman came along and sealed him away in a mask. The Fierce Deity lends Link his power because he doesn't want the land destroyed before he can take it over, or maybe he had a change of heart.
The goron named "Link-goro" is the Termia counterpart of the Link-goron from OoT.
Fairly straightforward, except one is young, and the other is grown.
The Deku Princess and the monkey scapegoated for her disappearance are the counterparts of Zelda and Link
Because who else could be Zelda's counterpart? And monkey-Link just because.
Unsorted
Guesses that either have yet to be sorted or don't quite fit into the above folders.
The "sad tree" in Majora's Mask is the butler's son.
As Link is navigating the strange cave that leads to Termina, he comes upon a knobby little tree with a sad face. During the end credits, the butler is seen apparently mourning over it. Since all of Link's other transformative masks are made of the earthly regrets of the dead and magical curses of the living extracted and sealed into a mask by the Song of Healing, it stands to reason that Skull Kid's curse may have involved the sad tree in some way.
The Elegy of Emptiness could restore people encased in masks to their original body.
My group has been discussing it... the Elegy of Emptiness creates another, hollow body that takes the instrument player's appearance. If Link plays it while wearing masks, the bodies resemble the people trapped in them, not (Goron/Zora/Deku) Link's. If you tried to put the mask onto the hollow body, you could potentially unite their 'bodies' and 'souls' and revive them! Well, Link can keep the Zora Band's guitarist away from them forever, f.e.
Link I (The Hero of Time) commits suicide after Majora's Mask
We know that he doesn't show up in later continuities. We know that he is mortal and will one day die. We know that he's a tough bastard and probably won't get killed any time soon. I don't think he survives to be adult Link, but I can't where I read remember that bit of continuity at the moment.
Add to this all the horror that he lives through. This includes, but is not limited to: being forced to tread through dangerous and painful looking dungeons (including two intestinal tracts in O.o.T. alone), being raped by zombies, losing everyone near him (especially with the above), painful-looking mask transformations, and everything else that happens in the game.
One can reasonably conclude that, after giving up the chance that he will find that annoying butterfly, Link wedges his sword between some rocks and hops on. Thank God he never complains.
In a similar vein, Majora's Mask is a Joker-esque test to prove that anyone can be driven to madness and suicide.
Link is a Stalfos and he's really in Hyrule with everything switched around
Same as the above, but in addition to being an undead corpse, instead of being controlled by an outside force while his spirit lives in the afterlife he's just "brainwashed" by necromancy into thinking normal villagers are monsters and sealed-evil-in-a-cans are benevolent giants. When the hero didn't show (or Ganon got out and was subsequently Twilight-banished, whichever timeline the child ending falls under, this troper can never remember) it was just because Link's spirit was controlling a skeleton undoing all the work he did in life.
All of the masks are trapped souls.
Some of them, like the stone mask, are pretty obvious, but every mask with any power is a trapped soul, not just the god masks, the zora/goron masks, and Majora's mask. The inhabitants of the (aptly named) Termina harvest peoples' souls for the Happy Mask Salesman.
Majora's Mask or Link's Awakening is a retelling of the other.
Part of a guess on the main The Legend of Zelda page is that some games are corrupted retellings of others.
The "Fierce Deity" is the personification of the future.
The Fierce Deity is shrouded in mystery. Plus, it is the last mask to be found in the game. If this is the OoT link, then it cannot be a past Link, because apparently he is the first Link. Many future Links wear different tunics, so this one is a comination of those. One of his attacks is to shoot a beam out of his sword. This is attack is commonly used by later Links. His fate might be to become a god-like being, hence his appearance. The Helix sword is an amalgam of all of his swords to be gotten in the future.
I (Fairy Red) believe this, too. Link's sulking as he and Epona trot on for a bit. He stops suddenly, then looks around some. And then...he rides off. We don't see which direction Link rides off to in the end. It's not at all unusual idea for him to want to stay in Termina. You do see "Mikau" in the band playing the guitar. I mean, thanks to the Groundhog Day Loop, he's probably become emotionally attached to everyone in Termina. He cares for them a whole lot. Maybe he learned that Navi won't ever return, or he simply forgot about her, knowing all the chaos he was going through in MM. And sure, Tatl told him to leave, but she clearly didn't want him to leave. Maybe Link and Tatl and Tael and the Skull Kid live in Termina happily.
The horse Link found in Majoras Mask was NOT Epona
Romani never says that they found the horse anywhere, so it is to assume that it had been there on the farm for a long time. Also, the horses name is never mentioned and there are identical-looking counterpart of almost everyone in Termina. It's just Tatl who thinks, that the horse could be Epona. The real Epona has been killed by the Skull Kid right before he put the curse on Link.
The Bombers (or most of them, anyway) are orphans.
They're hanging out around the town at all hours, and don't leave even on the final day, when everyone but essentual staff and a few other people are evacuating. There aren't enough married or widowed/widowered adults in town to account for all of them unless several are siblings, which isn't really that major a point. Aside from the three days you spend playing the game, they spend a lot of time at the astronomer's lab and in an underground waterway with at least three giant, person-killing spiders.
At the end of the game, Link uses the Elegy of Emptiness to ressurect Mikau, Darmani, and the Deku Boy.
He makes the statues, places the masks on them, (Song of Healing optional) and they come back to life and go on with their lives. Because I don't see a good reason why not.
The Blast Mask was a weapon for terrorists, specifically suicide bombers After the end of the game, he gives up being Link and acts as Darmani and Mikau full-time. It would be very difficult, but not impossible.
The Blast Mask was designed as an emergency tool for trapped miners.
Such as the guy who was picking through the boulder in front of Romani Ranch. They carry the mine, and either due to their intense defensive training, a lot of single-use (or one reusable) healing items, their knowledge of the proper workings of the bomb mask, or all of the above, they can use the mask to blast the way through the rubble in a pinch. There may be some trick to using it that increases the power to something similar to a Goron Keg and a trick that decreases or nullifies the damage done to the wearer, but Link did not have the time (or local knowledge) to find and learn from a master of the Art of the Bomb Mask. Similarly, the All-Night Mask was designed for watchmen (yeah, right). The abandonment of equipping the guards with the All-Night Mask (likely due to only having the prototype, and it not being worth it to make more) results in Sakon being able to run right past the guard who was asleep on his feet.
Read the article and tell me that it's not really interesting and you don't have too much free time.
Link is a Kamen Rider.
He wears masks. He transforms. He rides Epona. He takes an evil power (the Fierce Deity's Mask) and uses it for good. He even has a kicking move as Zora Link (though, rather like Kamen Rider Kabuto, it's not the standard jump-kick). Also, Romani nicknames him "Grasshopper", which is a popular theme for Riders.
The game is one of the many alternate-universe tellings of The Dark Tower.
Obviously, the Clock Tower is The Dark Tower. It's at the center of everything, it's the key to saving the world, it's a tower. Link is Roland, continually cycling through timelines which are almost identical until he gets it right — until he manages to free all four Giants. The reason he is able to succeed in his quest is that he retrieves the Horn of Eld, in this case his ocarina. Link left a faraway, magical land he can't get back to and left behind a beautiful blonde lover — Zelda, this universe's version of Susan who didn't get horribly murdered.
The Giants themselves represent the Beams, which support the tower and keep it safe from harm.
Each of Link's transformations is a version of Rolan'ds ka-tet. Jake is the Deku Scrub because Link/Roland "meets" him first and they're small and young. Eddie is the Zora, a tall, lean rogue. And Susannah is the Goron by process of elimination. Oly is Tatl, the tiny companion with Roland/Link to the very end.
Each of the other masks represent Roland's guns. They're what makes Link special.
Majora is the Crimson King. The arch-villain, uber-powerful, and you never get a satisfying confrontation with the man himself. The Skull Kid is Mordred, the Crimson King's greatest pawn and the character Link/Roland gets to fight. The Mask Salesman is Randall Flagg, a more fortunate soldier in this incarnation because at the end he gets the mask, and as shown in many Stephen King stories, Flagg always survives.
Igos Du Ikana is actually King Harkinian.
He helped you strive for peace like a true warrior. Also...
The King's servents are Gwonam and Morshu.
Your sword was enough for them, but they didn't give credit.
The cattle-stealing aliens are actually some versions of Garos, summoned by the Gormon Brothers
Think about it. The professor in Ikana Canyon says that Garos have been sited in the ranch. It's possible that he mistook the Gormon Brothers in their masks, but that seems like a very silly mistake for a professor who's dedicated his life to studying spirits to make. Going off of that though, the Gormon Brothers have Garo masks. Which means they have the power to summon Garos. The game makes it quite clear that the Brothers' milk is of much lesser quality than Cremia's and it's implied that they've resorted to other vandalism and theft to get rid of competition. The aliens only steal the cows and Romani says that they come every time the carnival approaches and always just take the cows. On the third day, if you don't stop the invasion, the Gormon Brothers are extremely gleeful and tell Link that they're now the only ones around who can provide milk, now that Cremia has none.
All timelines converge at the end
Think about it. The ending seems to indicate that everyone in Termina got their happy ending. This can only mean one of two things: Either all the possible timelines created by travelling through time ended up converging upon Majora's destruction, or Link went back in time again and helped absolutely everyone.
The entire series of events is a massive scheme by... someone to prepare Link for a future challenge
Simply put, after his return from Termina Link has all the abilities he had before getting sent to the past. Even some items that would have been too large for his child form but just happened to come in compatible size in Termina. And all in three days. There is no way that's simply a coincidence. The only question is whether the someone behind the scenes orchestrated the attack in the first place, or only brought Link to the right place at the right time.
The game takes place in the future
Specifically, the First Day is December 18th, 2012, and the Last Day is December 21st, 2012. Hey, SOMEONE had to say it.
Cremia is the Termina counterpart of Malon's mother.
Her Termina counterpart didn't die as Malon's mother did. Perhaps there's a lot of mother-daughter resemblance, Malon always was a bit of an The Ugly Guy's Hot Daughter.
Building on the 'all masks are lost souls' theory, Kafei's mask is the soul of his real father.
It's not the mayor. Madame Aroma had an afair with someone who died/was transformed into the mask. Kafei just looks exactly like a child version of his father.
Tingle is Michael Jackson
Think about it: Widely hated in the United States (Not so much since Michael died, but his image was tarnished when MM came out. And when TWW came out, the second round of trials were beginning, which really cemented him as a paedophile in a lot of people's minds)... Behaves childishly... Is strangely fond of Link to the point where people suspect paedophilia... Also manages to be fantastic at something which is overlooked because of his personality (in Tingle's case, cartography. In Michael's, singing and dancing)...
Ben haunts every Majora's Mask game. The Majora's mask is the herald of the anti-spirals, when Link came into Termina it pushed the population limit put on by the Anti-spirals to the point where the Human Elimination Device had to be activated.
The Majora's Mask is an Eldritch Abomination, just the same as the anti-spiral
Link is a determinator as big as Simon (post time-skip), he never falters despite all the things he has live through
His Spin Attack is a form of spiral Energy.
The Fierce Deity Mask sword is a double helix, a shape the anti-spiral itself deemed as the natural form of Spiral Energy.
Romani gets lobotomized on the night she is abducted along with the cows.
The Fierce Diety was a Chaotic Neutral War God that pre-dated the Four Giants.
The Fierce Diety does look a lot like Link, but the elements unique to him give him a distinctly ancient, even primordial feel. He seems to wear war paint, and even painted designs on his armor. His equipment looks like a split between hewn stone and metal, and his gigantic stature and grim appearance just sort of give the feeling of something left over from a more brutal, warlike age. It's possible that the Fierce Diety was neither heroic nor malevolent, simply ferocious and violent, and was sealed in a mask because the people of Termania (or perhaps the three goddesses) wanted to contain his rampages. Afterwards, the Four Giants replaced him as the gods of Termania, giving the people more benevolent protectors and leaving the Fierce Deity trapped in the mask until Link awakened him to fight for Termania one last time.
The Garo are the Terminan counterparts to the Sheikah.
As well as a near inverse, attacking rather than swearing allegiance to the Royal Family (Ikana), but they have a lot of similarities in values and fighting style and are nearly as mysterious.
Cremia isn't in love with Kafei.
She's in love with Anju. Romani says there is someone in town that Cremia likes, but not by gender:
Romani: Romani knows... My sister, Cremia, has someone in town she likes... But that person will get married the day of the carnival. It's hard for my sister... Going into town...
Cremia doesn't mention Kafei either when talking about Anju's upcoming wedding.
Cremia: In town...I have a friend. Her name's Anju... Anju... The day after tomorrow is her wedding.
I know it doesn't make sense, but every time I go to the ranch at the 2nd night to help Cremia, I can't help but think that it might actually be Anju that Cremia loves, even with Anju's mother trying to imply that Cremia and Kafei ran off together.
Oni Link is God
Tael was a Poe.
The Banker is a Time Lord.
And the cow ornament is really his TARDIS. How else can he hold on to Link's ruppies when he travels back in time?
The Fierce Deity was the one who originally defeated Majora, and also a predecessor of the line of Heroes from which Links spawn.
In the Majora's Mask manga, there's a side story about a traveling warrior who wanders into Majora's realm and defeats him with music. This warrior has more than a passing resemblance with Link, and by extension, the Fierce Deity. So, what this troper proposes is, is that the Fierce Deity was a man or God, who defeated Majora. His lack of a hat can be explained as the events of Minish Cap not yet having occurred.
The Deku Butler's son was either a member of the Royal Guard or an Assassin
The Deku Scrub that the mask transforms you into is a lot better at combat than any of the other ones that you meet. He can walk on water, he can spit poison bubbles when he's magicked up, and he can perform a spin attack that stuns EVERYTHING and is carrying a very effective shield. You can actually take out most of the enemies in the game (including the Garo Master) using him. His dad also mentions that he and his son would regularly run the obstacle course under the Deku Palace, a course filled to the brim with traps that would be fatal to the average scrub. All this evidence paints a very nasty picture of whoever the Deku Mask used to be. He may have been on a mission from the Deku palace to find the Princess before the Skull Kid and Majora took him out.
The Fierce Deity Mask is just that.... an ordinary mask.
At the end of Ocarina of Time, we observe Ganondorf using the Triforce of Power to go One-Winged Angel and become Ganon. According to this theory of mine, the Fierce Deity is, in reality, Link's One-Winged Angel / Super Mode, using the Triforce of Courage to unleash his full potential at once. The mask, therefore, is nothing more than that - a piece of wood or plastic carved and painted in the shape of a face.... that just happens to be the Fierce Deity's face. The reason Link doesn't use this transformation until he gets the mask is because he's aware of the game mechanics and knows that, in terms of gameplay, he can't transform without a mask. In-story, it's because until Majora, that was no enemy strong enough that he might need his Super Mode in the first place. Why haven't we seen the Fierce Deity in any Zelda game before or since? Because aside from Majora, there's never been a villain Badass enough to warrant his intervention. Onox, Vera, Ganon(dorf), etc. were genuine threats, rest assured, but Majora's the only one whose true aim was The End of the World as We Know It purely For the Evulz. He/she/it also came much, much closer than any enemy before or since. As for why, even when facing Majora, Link only transforms while in the mask? Again, game mechanics. In-story? Um... Because Destiny Says So? Regarding the child on the moon who has a mask that resembles the Fierce Deity's face.... Hrm... possibly the result of either a Stable Time Loop or Timey Wimey Ball. Reason for this theory in the first place? Purely for Rule Of Cool.
The Goddess's created a trio of of Lesser Gods
Each one representing there powers.
The Hand in the Toilet, this is Japanese Zombie
THEY COME
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