Archive:Timeline Theories/Deku Tree's Success

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"Deku Tree's Success" is a common term in the Zelda theorizing community refering to the uniting of islands into a single land. This phrase comes from a quote in Wind Waker in which the Deku Tree states that every year, the Koroks fly off and plant seeds that will grow into trees.

There is some disagreement in the theorizing community as to how exactly the trees accomplish this. Some hold that the trees cause the islands to expand in size until they are connected as one. Others believe the trees cause the islands to pull closer together until they connect. Still others believe that the trees cause a deflooding process, bringing about the unity of the land. Whether the Deku Tree succeeded in his attempts or not is unconfirmed.

Possible Indications of Deku Tree’s Success

Theorists who believe in the existence of games taking place after Wind Waker and Phantom Hourglass point to several geographical occurences as potential proof of Deku Tree's Success.

Deku Tree's Success in Adventure of Link

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Adventure of Link's watery Hyrule.

Despite Hyrule being described in A Link to the Past as a "beautiful land surrounded by forests and mountains", the Hyrule of Adventure of Link is largely water-based. The map depicts Hyrule as a large western landmass, and two medium-sized islands in the east. The game's manual also makes specific note of Hyrule's watery state over an extended period of time, as the tale of the hiding of the Triforce of Courage (said to happen long ago) denotes that it was hidden on "the largest island in Hyrule".

Both Adventure of Link and Phantom Hourglass feature a Maze Island, with the former being considerably larger than the latter. If they are the same island, this would support Deku Tree's Success in causing the island to expand in size.

Deku Tree's Success in Oracle of Ages

Labrynna's geography in the past compared to the present

When Link travels back in time in Oracle of Ages to a period 400 years before his time, there is considerably more water in the past than in the present. Several unnamed islands in the Zora Seas and Sea of Storms, as well as Crescent Island, have grown from past to present. Additionally, the island labrynth in the Sea of no Return, which guarded the entrance to the eigth dungeon in the past, is completely absorbed by the mainland in the present, so that only its southern side borders water anymore. Even that side extends farther out into the sea than it did in the past.

Oracle of Ages (as well as Oracle of Seasons) features an entity known as the Maku Tree, clearly drawing its origins from the Deku Tree. Some theorize that the Maku Trees carried on the process which Wind Waker's Deku Tree began.

Deku Tree's Success in Four Swords Adventures

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A top view of Four Swords Adventures' map

Four Swords Adventures features a Hyrule composed of a single, large island, again in contradiction to A Link to the Past's description of landlocked Hyrule. Identity as an island aside, Four Swords Adventures and A Link to the Past are more geographically similar than any other two depictions of Hyrule.

A top view of Four Swords Adventures' Hyrule gives it a fragmented, watery look. This lends itself to either the concept of islands growing together, or the concept of the islands pulling together fairly well. Because A Link to the Past's Hyrule is less fragmented, and features trees north of Death Mountain where Four Swords Adventures has water, it is believed that Four Swords Adventures' Hyrule grew into A Link to the Past's Hyrule by Deku Tree's Success.

Deku Tree's Success in Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland

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The First Continent in Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland.

The spin-off game Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland has an overworld made up of three continents. Each one of these continents is composed of several large islands that are close enough to be connected by bridges.

Among the continents of the overworld are places with names resembling that of pre-flood Hyrulean locales. Such names include "Lon Lon Meadows", "The Deku Forest", and "Mount Desmas" which is believed to be Death Mountain. The continent Hyrule and the familiar names both serve as possible indications of Deku Tree's Success leading to a New Hyrule resembling the old one.