Helmasaur King

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The Helmasaur King is a recurring Boss in The Legend of Zelda series.(ALttP)[1][name references needed] The Helmasaur King goes unnamed in A Link to the Past 4-koma Gag Battle.

Characteristics

A Link to the Past

The Helmasaur King guards the first Crystal in the Palace of Darkness, the first Dungeon found in the Dark World. It is a large quadrupedal reptile with a large mask on his head, and a long tail with a deadly mace-like tip. It must be defeated before the first Crystal can be acquired and the first Maiden can be rescued.

Before the Helmasaur King can be damaged, his mask must be destroyed with the Magic Hammer or Bombs. The Magic Hammer takes considerably more hits and requires getting up close but it can be done faster overall, while it only requires five Bomb hits and you can keep your distance to avoid damage if you use them carefully. The monster fights by spitting fireballs that will split into three, and then each into four as they disperse. To avoid those, Link must attempt to stay at right angles to the fireballs, as they always split diagonally. It will also attack by swinging its long tail like a whip, which can be avoided by staying up close to the monster's head, or keeping a large distance where possible.

After attacking the helmet on its face enough times, it will shatter to reveal the face of the monster, and a large green emerald on his forehead appears. This can be hit with the arrows or the sword. When struck enough times, he is defeated and explodes. When defeated, he leaves behind a Heart Container and the first crystal in which one of the seven maidens is entombed

In A Link to the Past & Four Swords, the Helmasaur King returns in the Palace of the Four Sword, a secret dungeon only available after beating both A Link to the Past and Four Swords. This green Helmasaur King guards the Red Four Sword and is considerably stronger than the original, although the battle is similar at first. Once the mask is destroyed however, instead of spitting fireballs, it will drop small blue Helmasaurs from its mouth, and the gem will be invulnerable to arrows. Furthermore, once the gem is damaged enough the mask will reform, and Link will be forced to destroy it again. Once the second mask is destroyed, the gem will have been replaced by a huge third eye (identical to Vitreous's) on its forehead. A single Silver Arrow to this eye is enough to destroy him at this point.

Other Appearances

Ancient Stone Tablets

The Helmasaur King appears as the Boss of Level 3, in Week 2 of Ancient Stone Tablets. Its behavior and strategy is the same as in A Link to the Past, although as with other returning Bosses, the Boss is weaker than in the original game. There are less Heart Containers available prior to this battle, however, making it still a dangerous opponent.

A Link to the Past 4-koma Gag Battle



A Link to the Past (Himekawa)



Nomenclature

The Helmasaur King and the Helmaroc King have the same name in Japanese, but they have different English names and official romanizations: the official Japanese website romanizes the Helmaroc King's Japanese name as "Zeeklock",[2] whereas the Japanese ending of A Link to the Past romanizes the Helmasaur King's Japanese name as "Jeakrock".[citation needed] A Link to the Past (Barcode Battler II) alternatively romanizes the name as "Geekrock".[3]

ZW Nomenclature Asset.png Names in Other Regions ZW Nomenclature Asset 2.png
LanguageNamesMeanings
Japan
Japanese
ジークロック (Jīkurokku)[5] 
The Italian Republic
Italian
Re Elmasauro[4]King Elmasauro
This table was generated using translation pages.
To request an addition, please contact a staff member with a reference.

Gallery

Trivia

See Also

References

  1. Encyclopedia, Dark Horse Books, pg. 184 (ALttP)
  2. Nintendo, zeeklock.jpg (web archive), Nintendo.co.jp, retrieved January 3, 2015.
  3. "Geekrock" — N/A (A Link to the Past (Barcode Battler II))
  4. "Re Elmasauro" — Credits (A Link to the Past, Italian localization)
  5. Nintendo Official Guidebook: The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past Vol. 1, Shogakukan, pg. 133