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A page for the miscellaneous characters who live in Hyrule.

Beware of spoilers!

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Animals

    Patricia 
Riju's beloved pet sand seal who acts as her steed in the fight against Naboris, and also as her battle steed in general.
  • Action Girl: Independent of Riju, she's more than capable of fighting for herself. She impales Blademasters on her tusks.
  • Combination Attack: At many points, Riju uses Patricia's momentum to her advantage. Patricia will often swing her around with incredible force, allowing her to slice through foes with her own scimitar.
  • Evil-Detecting Dog: She and Kali freak out when they sense that Moldugas and a Molduking are coming.
  • Face of a Thug: She's a sand seal, and thus looks very intimidating and frightening with her enormous tusks. Nonetheless, she's shown being a sweet loyal pet to Riju.
  • Surprisingly Realistic Outcome: In Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity, her motion animation with Riju has her swimming through any and all materials without a struggle. In here, she can't swim through anything except sand, so the Bridle of the Seven is given some magic that allows it to turn the immediate area around Patricia into sand.
  • Warm-Hearted Walrus: She's Riju's loyal pet.

    Kali 
A young sand seal in Gerudo Town who instantly takes a liking to Link, and pulls him along in the battle against Naboris.
  • Action Girl: Just like Patricia. In fact, the two of them fight side-by-side during the Yiga War, impaling Blademasters on their tusks.
  • Adaptation Origin Connection: Zelda says that in one life, Epona was a bird. This means that Link's Crimson Loftwing from The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword is Epona's earliest incarnation.
  • All Animals Are Dogs: Her behavior is likened to a dog by the narration, with how cuddly she is of Link.
  • Amplified Animal Aptitude: She seems to be quite intelligent, recognizing threats and also recognizing what she needs to do during the battle against Naboris. She does this again when she serves Link as her true horse self, knowing what to do and where to take Link so that he can destroy Dark Beast Ganon.
  • Ascended Extra: She starts out as another sand seal with a name who helps Link against Naboris. She comes back more and more as the story progresses, especially when she's a participant in the Yiga War, and even goes into battle against Calamity Ganon, where it's revealed that she's really Epona.
  • Canon Character All Along: She's actually Epona in reincarnated form. Zelda returns her to her true form as a horse to serve Link yet again.
  • Evil-Detecting Dog: She and Patricia freak out when they sense that Moldugas and a Molduking are coming.
  • Foreshadowing: Frelly takes notice that she seems to really like Link right off the bat. This is because she's Epona and recognizes her old master.
  • Love at First Sight: She's immediately very fond of Link upon the first time seeing him. Even her caretaker Frelly takes notice of it. It's eventually subverted because she already knows Link, because she's served him in previous lives as her horse form of Epona.
  • Past-Life Memories: She actively recognizes Link from past lives, even as a sand seal.
  • Pink Means Feminine: She's a sand seal who's colored pink.
  • Undying Loyalty: Even though she only just met Link, she takes an immediate liking to him, so much so that in the final battle, she charges straight for Link when it looks like he's in danger. Given that she's really Epona, Link's evermore loyal horse, it makes sense.
  • Warm-Hearted Walrus: She instantly takes a liking to Link, something that her master notices quickly.

    The Royal White Stallion 
A pure white horse of the breed made specifically for the royal family of Hyrule.
  • Demoted to Extra: There's no special quest for this horse. He's just there for Zelda at the end...somehow.
  • Generation Xerox: The horse Zelda rides at the end is a descendant of her horse from 100 years earlier, and looks just the same with the same purple Royal Gear.
  • Legacy Character: Zelda's horse in the end is the descendant of Zelda's original horse.
  • White Stallion: It's in the name. There's only one seen in either the flashbacks or the present. Zelda and Link apparently find the one present in Hyrule 100 years after the Calamity, allowing a white stallion to yet again serve Zelda.

Supernatural Allies

    Goddess Hylia 

Hylia, Goddess of Light

The goddess who fought the Demon King Demise alongside the Hero of the Skies, choosing to give up her immortality to fight with him. She has regained her divinity since then, and is worshipped throughout much of Hyrule as Hyrule's patron goddess, and the women of the royal family carry her divine power.
  • Big Good: She at one point surrendered her immortality to incarnate as a Hylian. She has regained her divinity and actively helps Link, as in the present Hero of the Wild, with divine empowerment. She even activates all the Sheikah Towers herself to give Link a full atlas of Hyrule right off the bat.
  • Celestial Paragons and Archangels: Her statues are described as having angel-like wings.
  • Deity of Human Origin: Hylia started as a Goddess, who then became mortal to incarnate as the original Zelda. Said Zelda had descendants through whom Hylia's power is passed even though Hylia has long since regained her godhood.
  • Ethnic Goddess: She's the namesake for Hylians. She's the most widely worshipped Goddess in the Hyrulean pantheon, with statues in the towns that are mostly populated with Hylians, and even in places where Hylians don't naturally live.
  • The Ghost: The only part of her that is seen are her hands. She otherwise only manifests as a voice and a gathering of light.
  • God of Good: She's benevolent and carries the power to smite evil, which is shared by her descendants. She's also more active than in canon, giving Link all of Hyrule's map information and Sheikah Towers, letting him move with much greater speed right off the bat.
  • Hero of Another Story: She claims to have once incarnated as a Hylian herself, referencing the events of Skyward Sword.
  • Our Founder: Hylians are named after her, as is Mount Hylia and likely many other locations that remained unnamed in the fanfic. The Sheikah Monks who await in the ancient shrines all dedicate themselves to Goddess Hylia.
  • Super-Empowering: Whenever Link brings her a single Spirit Orb, she grants Link empowerment, giving him eventual Super-Strength and Super-Toughness. She does the same whenever he destroys a Blight.

    The Golden Goddesses 
The three supreme goddesses of Hyrule. They are worshipped along with Hylia, but not as much as Hylia herself. Nonetheless, they are present throughout the story with a notable impact.
  • The Chessmasters: They set up a Long Game, as in running for 10,000 years, with the endgame of finally ending Demise's curse.
  • The Ghost: None of them actually appear, but they actually have a story presence unlike the canon games.
  • God Is Good: They've decided to intervene to finally put an end to the curse that has plagued Hyrule. They're playing a Long Game to ensure this happens.
  • The Gods Must Be Lazy: They don't do much actively. Instead, they relegate active goddess roles to Hylia. Though they all apparently started the Long Game they intended to end Demise's curse. And then it's subverted when it's revealed that they created the three spirits, the Boar, the Owl, and the Wolf, as far back as the original set of heroes.
  • I Did What I Had to Do: They're not happy with it, but they ensured that the Great Calamity would happen as part of their Long Game to destroy Demise's curse permanently.
  • Pragmatic Hero: They were willing to ensure that an apocalyptic event would happen, decimating Hyrule, if it meant destroying Demise's curse permanently.
  • Top God: They're the three most powerful deities. They're all Hylia's superiors.
  • The Unfettered: They seem to have reached a point where they'll do anything to finally get rid of Demise's curse. What do these include? Ensuring the Great Calamity would happen, and implicitly the creation of the Yiga Clan terrorist group as a part of that.

    Din 

Din, Goddess of Power and Fire

    Nayru 

Nayru, Goddess of Wisdom and Law

  • An Ice Person: Her spirit dragon is that of ice.
  • Color Motif: Blue.
  • Deflector Shields: Nayru's Love is her namesake spell, which allows the user to create a crystalline barrier to protect themselves. But it also has an offensive application.
  • Ethnic Goddess: The PDF for The Myth of Link & Zelda: Breath of the Wild marks the chapters centered entirely on the Zora with her symbol. Their collective color scheme is blue, and their symbol bears a great resemblance to the shape of the mystical Zora's Sapphire. They also live in the Lanayru Region named for her.
  • Gemstone Assault: Nayru's Love can be shattered to produce a Flechette Storm of sharp mystical crystals.
  • Making a Splash: Aside from her association with crystals and ice, she's also associated with water, as Divine Beast Vah Ruta lives within her

    Farore 

Farore, Goddess of Courage and Wind

  • Blow You Away: Farore's Wind can be used to literally push things with intense winds.
  • Color Motif: Green.
  • Ethnic Goddess: In the PDF for The Myth of Link & Zelda: Breath of the Wild, her symbol is used when the story shifts to the Rito, indicating a connection with them. As her main spell is winds and the Rito are Bird People, it makes sense. She's also implied to have a connection to the Koroks, given her implied status as a nature spirit.
  • Fertility Goddess: She's heavily associated with the natural world, especially with the fact that her chosen hero in canon usually finds his Master Sword in a lush green forest. In this case, the Korok Forest. Her region to the south, the Faron Region named for her, is described as being very lush, and one of the few areas entirely untouched by the Great Calamity. The Divine Beast Vah Eponia is the one closest to her region, and is said to be a nature-oriented Divine Beast.
  • Flash Step: Farore's Wind is primarily a teleportation power. It can be used by one person to teleport themselves and anyone else they touch.
  • Heroic Spirit: She's the one who chose Link, and as the Goddess of Courage, she granted Link complete and utter fearlessness.
  • Mother Nature: She's Hyrule's Fertility God, and she's also the most motherly of the Golden Goddesses. It's stated that unlike the Springs of Wisdom and Power, none are forbidden from entering the Spring of Courage. The narration says that "all were welcome in the arms of Farore".
  • Shock and Awe: Aside from wind, she has a loose association with lightning through her dragon, Farosh.
  • Wind Is Green: Farore's Wind manifests as green winds.

    The Dragons 

Dinraal, Naydra, Farosh

Three ancient dragons who are associated with Din and the Spring of Power, Nayru and the Spring of Wisdom, and Farore and the Spring of Courage respectively.
  • The Ghost: None of them have been seen for thousands of years, and this carries over into the present. They are only ever mentioned by other characters who have either read or heard stories of them. They make their grand return from the sky at the end of Breath of the Wild.
  • Dragons Are Divine: They are revered as gods in their own right.
  • Fire, Ice, Lightning: Stories say that Dinraal is the spirit of fire, Naydra is the spirit of ice, and Farore is the spirit of lightning.
  • "Just So" Story: One of them apparently broke apart the mountain that would then be called the Dueling Peaks.

    The Master Sword 

Fi

The spirit of the Master Sword connected to the spirit of the Hero.
  • Ascended Extra: Her cameo in the canon game was only her iconic chime from The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword. She actually has a speaking part, and serves a greater role and presence in the story.
  • Big Damn Heroes: When Link is killed in the Calamity, she saves Zelda from giving up by telling her to take him to the Shrine of Resurrection.
  • Call-Back: In Skyward Sword, the first time Link sees her, she's guiding him to the Goddess Sword. She repeats this with our Link, guiding him through the Lost Woods to find the Master Sword.
  • The Chooser of the One: She's the one who makes the choice as to who wields her. She makes sure that Link is worthy to wield her after 100 years.
  • Excalibur in the Rust: The Master Sword was all rusted up and damaged because of the Great Calamity. But the sword has since healed by the time the story actually begins, and she actively waits and calls out to Link.
  • Forged by the Gods: She's a product of Hylia, created to combat Demise in ancient times by the chosen hero of the time.
  • The Ghost: For once averted. Fi herself does appear, and she guides Link through the Lost Woods to Korok Forest. She also explicitly is shown speaking to Zelda when saving Link's life.
  • Good Is Not Soft: She makes sure that Link is worthy to wield her again by putting him through an incredibly painful experience. He proves his worth again when he powers through it.
  • Living Weapon: Fi is the Master Sword, not just the spirit who inhabits the sword.
  • Ms. Exposition: She provides most of the reveals. Specifically, she reveals the existence of the three spirits of the Wolf, the Boar, and the Owl, and how the Boar was meant to be wielded by Ganondorf. Ganondorf is the reincarnation of the unsung hero Groose, who was corrupted by Demise's curse, and thus kickstarting the events that have plagued Hyrule for thousands of years.
  • Minor Major Character: She's the Master Sword, but she only serves an integral role in a few scenes, namely by saving Link's life, testing Link's worthiness, guiding him through the Lost Woods, and finally acting as Ms. Exposition.
  • Mythical Motifs: Her singing voice calls out to Link, and it's explicitly described like a siren call.
  • Painting the Medium: Her speech is bolded.
  • Small Role, Big Impact: Her role is bigger than in the original game, but it's still small overall. She saves Link's life, guides him through the Lost Woods, and reveals the nature of the curse and the three spirits created by the Golden Goddesses.
  • Spell Blade: The sword is imbued with great power to combat the Calamity. Unlike the game, Link doesn't need to go through a trial to unlock its power. He gets it right off the bat. He can also use it as a conduit for the magic of Urbosa's Fury, the Wolf Spirit, and any power stored in the Daybreaker Bracelets.
  • Sword of Plot Advancement: Link obtaining the Master Sword yet again is what marks his official rebirth as the Hero of Hyrule. It's only after he obtains it, and a little bit of a breather chapter, that he finally goes on the quest to free the Divine Beasts.
  • Telepathy: She can call out to Link by telepathically singing to him.
  • Time Abyss: She's been around since before Hyrule's creation, specifically since the creation of Skyloft thousands of years before the creation of Hyrule, which itself is 120,000 years old.
  • Undying Loyalty: She's been loyal to the Hero of the Master Sword for 120,000 years.
  • Wrecked Weapon: She was wrecked in the intense Great Calamity, but she fixed herself up in the 100 intervening years. And unlike the game, she's fully recovered and ready for more combat.

    The Hero's Shade 
A strange figure that repeatedly appears in Link's dreams. He changes forms from a golden wolf with a wounded eye upon his initial introduction. He's really the Hero of Time speaking to his descendant.
  • And Then John Was a Zombie: He's the Hero of Time returned to a strange skeletal form.
  • Animated Armor: Link notes that he really isn't an actual skeleton, but rather a strange ethereal entity under some armor.
  • Ascend to a Higher Plane of Existence: He and the rest of the incarnations of the hero coalesce to become the Wolf Spirit, the most powerful entity meant to be wielded by the Hero of the Wild.
  • Attack Hello: When he first meets Link, they share a vicious duel. It ends with them committing a Mutual Kill, or at least what would have been one if this wasn't a dream.
  • Black Knight: He gives this appearance, but he's a heroic character.
  • Canine Companion: He has a whole pack of spirit wolves with him, but two specifically stand with him: the red wolf with a feathered collar, and the black-grey wolf with the shackle on its foreleg.
  • Continuity Nod: His first encounter with Link is in a duel, much like what he did with Hero of Twilight. This one goes in a very different direction.
  • Creepy Good: He unnerves Link when they first meet, given that he's a skeletal monster wearing armor, but he's a heroic guy who aids Link.
  • Dark Is Not Evil: He's a golden wolf that transforms into a skeletal monstrous knight that unnerves and immediately fights Link, but even though they seem to mutually kill each other, he turns out to be quite a decent and good person.
  • Deadpan Snarker: He makes a little snarky joke about how he long healed from the wound caused by the death of his son...even though he doesn't look like it being a rotted skeletal monster.
  • Dream Walker: He appears to Link in dreams.
  • Foreshadowing: The first time Link speaks with him, the Hero's Shade says that Link is meant to become the most powerful of the heroes.
  • Hero of Another Story: In canon, he's the Link who fought Ganondorf in Ocarina of Time. The Hero's Shade references this, claiming that he and the other ones present were all heroes of their time.
  • Heroic Lineage: He's the ancestor to the Hero of Twilight and Link, and the Shade himself descends from the Hero of the Skies.
  • Iaijutsu Practitioner: His technique of the Mortal Draw lets him One-Hit Kill foes from an unprotected sheathed position.
  • I Never Told You My Name: Somehow, Link automatically knows to call this entity the Hero's Shade. And the Shade also knows much about Link. Obviously this is because he's one of Link's many predecessors.
  • Legacy Character: He's a long deceased incarnation of Link, specifically the Hero of Time.
  • Magic Knight: He can use magical attacks as well as using sword-and-shield attacks with equal proficiency.
  • Master Swordsman: He did once use the Master Sword in an ancient time past. Many of Link's new techniques inherited from his past selves are from the Hero's Shade's own hidden techniques.
  • Mr. Exposition: He's the one that tells Link that the Master Sword spirit Fi is calling to him. He even calls it a female weapon, and tells Link where he can find her.
  • Nigh-Invulnerability: He's already dead, so the best Link can do is just down him.
  • Noble Wolf: A motif that ascends to Link's Animal Motif in general. He manifests himself as a one-eyed golden wolf upon introduction to Link.
  • Outliving One's Offspring: He reveals to Link that he lost his own oldest son when he fell into a lake and drowned when he was little.
  • Posthumous Character: He's the long dead Hero of Time's spirit.
  • Spirit Advisor: The two times he appears before Link gets the Master Sword, he gives Link advice on not giving up, and advises Link where to find the Master Sword.
  • Turning Back Human: He adopts his true form as the young adult Hero of Time once Link draws the Master Sword.

    The Wolves 
A pack of spectral wolves that accompany the Hero's Shade in the Spirit World.

Tarrey Town Residents

The residents living in the Akkala town of Tarrey that Link helps to construct and populate.
    General 
  • Adaptational Badass: None of these four are ever shown having combat capabilities. They all get a chance to fight against the Yiga Clan, and eventually in the final battle.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Four of the five residents come to rescue Robbie and Jerrin from ambushing Yiga Clan members.
  • Contrived Coincidence: Link lampshades this all the way through. He's astounded that there always happens to be a character with their name ending in -son that are unhappy with their dispositions in life...and have the perfect skills Tarrey Town needs.
  • Desperately Looking for a Purpose in Life: Each one of the characters Link sends to Tarrey Town, even Kapson who wasn't a request by Bolson, are all dissatisfied with their lives in their native homes for different reasons.
  • Normal Fish in a Tiny Pond: Most of these people aren't notable in their own hometowns where lots of people share the same skill set. But their skills are integral to the survival and construction of their new hometown.
  • Theme Naming: Enforced by Bolson, who says that Link must find people whose names end in -son to send to the town, along with the fact that they must fulfill the niche that must be fulfilled.
  • True Companions: Not long after being brought together, they develop close kinship. Enough that they're willing to fight together against the rising army born of Calamity Ganon.

    Bolson 
The namesake leader of the Bolson Construction Company, and apparently the only builders left in Hyrule. Tarrey Town is his brainchild.
  • Ambiguously Gay: His behavior is effeminate, and is described as speaking in a feminine singsong voice, as well as looking at Link with flirtatious eyes. Link even hopes that Bolson won't try to kiss him out of the blue, which he doesn't. He also wears pink pants and a neck charm to complete the look.
  • Benevolent Boss: He personally leads the construction of Tarrey Town, and is quite pleasant towards his people. When Link comes to apologize for taking so long with the people, Bolson actually thanks him because all the people he sent happened upon the town in close succession with each other, allowing the town to really get finished fast. He even pays Link far in excess of their original deal. He's not mentioned during the Yiga War or Calamity Ganon's awakening, but it's implied he fights alongside his people.
  • Bunny-Ears Lawyer: He may be a bit eccentric, and have an odd rule about names ending in "-son", but he nonetheless found a perfect spot for a town of commerce and shelter in the Akkala wilderness.
  • Decomposite Character: He takes Hudson's role in leading construction of Tarrey Town.
  • Nice Guy: He's odd, but he's reasonable and generous. Generous enough to let Link have millions of rupees' worth of gemstones.

    Hudson 
One of Bolson's construction workers.
  • Demoted to Extra: His role as leading the construction of Tarrey Town is given to his boss Bolson. In fact, his name is barely ever mentioned even in narration. His name is only said four times.
  • Happily Ever After: He and Rhondson intend to marry and they invite Link to attend the wedding.
  • Huge Guy, Tiny Girl: He's a Hylian marrying a Gerudo girl, so it comes naturally.
  • Number Two: Bolson's chief worker.

    Karson 
A young worker who works with Hudson and Bolson.
  • Demoted to Extra: He was barely there in the original game, but in this fanfic, his name is literally only mentioned once.

    Greyson and Pelison 
A pair of Goron brothers who originally stayed in the Southern Mine of Death Mountain. The older brother Greyson felt underutilized as just another Goron miner among many. Link approaches him about Tarrey Town, and he jumps at the prospect of actually being helpful with something for a change. He takes his younger brother Pelison with him.
  • Adorably Precocious Child: Pelison is super young, but he takes to running his and Greyson's jewel store in Tarrey Town.
  • Chainsaw Good: Greyson is given an Ancient Bladesaw, which has an energy chainsaw blade, for the final battle.
  • Cheerful Child: He's introduced as a little Goron child enthusiastically running up to Link and introducing himself. He's just as happy and playful in Tarrey Town.
  • Normal Fish in a Tiny Pond: Greyson's a Goron miner who lives among an entire race of powerful miners. In Tarrey Town, he's the literally strongest person in the town, and his efforts in clearing out the old boulders are literally the most important aspect to the town's creation.
  • Took a Level in Kindness: Link's first encounter with Greyson has the latter being quite distant and aloof. But he warms up when Link tells him about Tarrey Town, and is considerably kinder afterwards.

    Rhondson 
A Gerudo tailor who is not happy that she has not yet found a husband after multiple years of seeking one out. When Link tells her about Tarrey Town, she decides to give that town a chance and see what life would take for her, instead of lounging around in Kara Kara Bazaar all day. She sells Link his "Desert Voe" armor that allows him to wander the desert safely.
  • Action Girl: Like every other Gerudo. She's given an Ancient Shield and an Ancient Short Sword to fight with.
  • Amazonian Beauty: Like every Gerudo, she's a tall muscular woman. Hudson ends up attracted to her and they get into a relationship.
  • Gender-Blender Name: "-son" is a suffix that usually denotes a male name, aside from "Alison".
  • Old Maid: She's worried about staying single since she's starting to age and hasn't yet found a boyfriend, though she isn't that old. She even asks Link for some advice when on trying to find a man. She finds a lover in Hudson.
  • Single Woman Seeks Good Man: She wishes to find a husband have a family, which is the reason she moves to Tarrey Town. Given Bolson's personality, he's more than likely to hire nice guys to work with him and live in his town, like Hudson.

    Fyson 
A young Rito who doesn't want to join his mother's business, wanting to own his own store. However, he doesn't want to be his own mother's competition. He jumps at the chance to open his own general store in Tarrey Town.

  • My Beloved Smother: He loves his mother dearly, but thinks she far too overbearing.
  • Start My Own: He chooses to run his own store away from the village.
  • "Where Are They Now?" Epilogue: In terms of Tarrey Town's origin story, Fyson does something like this, delivering a letter to Link telling him how everyone is doing, including the fact that Rhondson and Hudson are engaged.

    Kapson 
A retired elderly Zora priest who Link invites to Tarrey Town. Unlike the others, Bolson did not request a Zora priest. Link anticipated that Rhondson may need help finding love, and as such sent Kapson there to do that and maybe officiate their wedding.
  • Crystal Dragon Jesus: He's a priest to Goddess Hylia, which shares many similarities to Christianity. He requests that Link find one final couple for whom Kapson could officiate the wedding before he passes on. If you take the request out of context, you would think that he was an old Christian priest.
  • Hidden Badass: Link was surprised to see Kapson with a spear. Kapson calls him out, telling him that he's a priest, not that he's helpless.
  • Nice Guy: He doesn't hold much resentment towards Link for Mipha's death, in his own words, saying that the true blame falls on Calamity Ganon.
  • Retired Badass: He actually gets a chance to be badass. He spears a Yiga member in the back to help his friends. That being said, he's not a combatant, so as a result, he doesn't partake in the final assault against Ganon's army.
  • We All Die Someday: He gives this kind of speech to Link about the afterlife inevitably calling everyone who lives. This is why he chooses to move to Tarrey Town, in the hopes of finding a loving couple for whom he could officiate the wedding, spending the end of his life doing something he loves.

    Granté 
  • Edible Theme Naming: He's named after "pomegranate", which his name being a corruption on the last syllable.
  • The Ghost: He's not seen when Link first goes to Tarrey Town, even though he was supposedly helping them build the town.
  • Hidden Badass: He may be rather timid and shy, but the moment he sees his parents are in danger, he jumps to go protect them. He doesn't fight, but he was more than ready to.
  • Hiding Behind Your Bangs: He wears a large bang over on of his eyes, indicating his rather shy personality.
  • Mystical White Hair: Nope. His hair is not white, but it's blonde. A little bit surprising since Robbie has white hair.
  • Mythology Gag: His store is called Granté's Rare Artifacts, clearly as a reference to his game counterpart being an Anti-Frustration Feature that kept players from losing things like the Hylian Shield permanently.
  • Shrinking Violet: He's rather shy. Link doesn't even see him the first time he goes to Tarrey Town, and in his few appearances, he hardly even speaks, and when he does, it's not very loud.
  • Wacky Parent, Serious Child: Robbie is silly and bombastic, Jerrin is much less so, but Granté is a friendly and completely serious person through and through al the way.

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