In The Legend of Zelda: The Wind Waker, the world of Hyrule exists as a large ocean known as the Great Sea dotted by small islands across which a few different peoples eek out a living. These survivors of the Great Flood live on the mountaintops of their homeland, the ancient kingdom buried beneath the waves.
After the events of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, in which the Hero of Time defeats Ganon the King of Evil by sealing him in the Sacred Realm, the seal on Ganon began to weaken, letting his evil spill forth into the world. He broke free, and his armies spread across the country. The legendary hero, who always arose to face evil, did not reappear to end Ganon's campaign, and so the people of Hyrule had no choice but to hope for salvation from on high. They prayed to the gods in their hopelessness, and they did not go unanswered.
While Genesis holds no monopoly on a flood narrative, specific similarities appear in this form of a flood story. In Genesis, God taps Noah as a righteous man to survive the flood with his family. Just like the God of the Old Testament, the evil of the world overwhelmed the gods of Hyrule, and they determined to end it by flooding the world. In contrast, while the God of the Old Testament only selects a few people to survive, the gods of Hyrule picked any of the good Hyrulians who would listen. Despite this, Link becomes the analogue of Noah, as the protagonist of the story who will eventually deliver the survivors into a world where they can start anew. In essence, the purpose of the flood is the same in both stories: to purify the world of evil and offer humanity a new beginning.
A Rito postman. |