У нас вы можете посмотреть бесплатно Zelda's Dark Truth Explained in 19 Minutes или скачать в максимальном доступном качестве, видео которое было загружено на ютуб. Для загрузки выберите вариант из формы ниже:
Если кнопки скачивания не
загрузились
НАЖМИТЕ ЗДЕСЬ или обновите страницу
Если возникают проблемы со скачиванием видео, пожалуйста напишите в поддержку по адресу внизу
страницы.
Спасибо за использование сервиса ClipSaver.ru
Everyone talks about Ganondorf. Some blame fate. Others say the timelines are just “messy lore.” But the truth is simpler — Hyrule keeps breaking because of Zelda. This video breaks down how Zelda’s choices, magic, and bloodline repeatedly fracture reality, destabilize kingdoms, and guarantee that evil never actually ends. These aren’t accidents, misunderstandings, or neutral acts of destiny. They’re direct consequences of her decisions — officially documented, canon-supported, and repeated across the entire franchise. It starts in Ocarina of Time, where Zelda makes the single most destructive choice in the series: sending Link back in time. She believes rewinding events will fix everything. Instead, it shatters reality into three timelines. • One where Link is gone and Ganondorf wins. • One where the future is erased before it even happens. • And one where Hyrule collapses into endless cycles of war, sealing, and disaster. This isn’t theory — it’s confirmed in Hyrule Historia. Zelda doesn’t fix time. She breaks it, then leaves future versions of herself to deal with the fallout. From there, her pattern only gets worse. She defies royal protocol as a child, secretly plotting against Ganondorf instead of following political process. Her actions don’t expose him — they grant him access to the castle, the Sacred Realm, and the kingdom’s defenses. Her “rebellion” isn’t heroism; it’s reckless confidence backed by royal privilege. When Ganondorf finally attacks, Zelda flees the castle in panic, leaving soldiers to die covering her escape. Hyrule falls not because she was captured — but because she abandoned leadership when it mattered most. Later timelines don’t improve her record. In The Wind Waker, Zelda agrees to erase Hyrule entirely, flooding an entire civilization beneath the sea. This isn’t symbolic — it’s total erasure. A kingdom isn’t saved or restored; it’s buried forever with her consent. Her bloodline itself is a problem. Skyward Sword reveals Demise’s curse ties evil directly to Zelda’s spirit. Every generation of Zelda reignites the cycle, guaranteeing Ganondorf’s return. The royal family doesn’t repel darkness — it attracts it. She withholds critical knowledge across games, manipulating events by staying silent until disaster is unavoidable. As Sheik, she guides Link like a chess piece. In Twilight Princess and Wind Waker, she delays truth while the world collapses around her. In Breath of the Wild, her failure to awaken her sealing power in time allows Calamity Ganon to hijack the entire defense system, wiping out the kingdom and nearly killing Link. The plan fails because the key component doesn’t activate. Her magic doesn’t just seal evil — it erases agency. Tetra loses her identity. Leaders are overridden. Innocents are caught in seals meant for monsters. Even Link is turned into collateral across timelines. And yes — one timeline confirms it outright: Zelda’s time reset results in a world where Link dies, Ganondorf wins, and Hyrule enters its darkest age. She doesn’t strike the killing blow — but she creates the conditions for it. This video isn’t about hating Zelda. It’s about recognizing the pattern. She doesn’t destroy Hyrule with malice. She destroys it with control, secrecy, divine authority, and certainty that she knows best. Ganondorf swings the sword. But Zelda keeps resetting the board. Enjoying the breakdown? A quick tap on Subscribe keeps the deep dives coming — timelines, lore fractures, and villain arcs they never warn you about.