Skip to main content

This ‘Tears of the Kingdom’ Character Had the Best Glow-Up From ‘Breath of the Wild’

Good god Purah looks good!
Recommended Videos

When I met Purah in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild, and she was an example of a JRPG trope I absolutely CANNOT stand—oopsie! Reversed my age, so I’m over 100 years old but I look like a baby!—I just sort of gritted my teeth and bore it. I knew it couldn’t get too weird, because The Legend of Zelda is a family-friendly franchise, but I still side-eyed the whole thing. Thankfully, Tears of the Kingdom has made the best change on this front.

The trope often has the story/characters go to great pains to explain that a character who looks like a little girl is actually a 1000-year-old something or other. Fire Emblem is a repeat offender of this, with one particularly nasty example being Nowi the Manakete from Awakening. Nowi looks like a little girl, but she’s “actually” a very, very old dragon, that you can … urk … have children with.

Tears of the Kingdom, meanwhile, has seemed to clue into who their audience was and what they want, because they did the absolute best thing they could have done with Purah’s character: they aged her UP to her twenties, and good god, they made her a baddie.

This is, like, the reverse of all those creepy age tropes, and I’m so here for it. They didn’t even really provide an explanation for why she aged up so rapidly. They just left it for us to speculate over. And you know what? I’ll take it. Look at Purah. Look at her. The minute her red tights and high heels kicked down the door, my bisexual ass was standing at attention.

It’s the least they could do, after giving us an actual non-baby Purah in Age of Calamity, and then leaving us to wonder why we needed a baby in the first place:

https://twitter.com/YamanataVault/status/1657933976194125824

Nintendo? You did good. Thank you for knowing your audience.

(featured image: Nintendo)

Have a tip we should know? tips@themarysue.com

Author
Madeline Carpou
Madeline (she/her) is a staff writer with a focus on AANHPI and mixed-race representation. She enjoys covering a wide variety of topics, but her primary beats are music and gaming. Her journey into digital media began in college, primarily regarding audio: in 2018, she started producing her own music, which helped her secure a radio show and co-produce a local history podcast through 2019 and 2020. After graduating from UC Santa Cruz summa cum laude, her focus shifted to digital writing, where she's happy to say her History degree has certainly come in handy! When she's not working, she enjoys taking long walks, playing the guitar, and writing her own little stories (which may or may not ever see the light of day).

Filed Under:

Follow The Mary Sue:

Exit mobile version