The Fifth Divine Beast in Breath of the Wild

<p>To start with, there are a few assumptions we have to make:</p> <ol> <li>The kingdom of Hyrule exists on a planet, and that planet is called &ldquo;Planet Hyrule.&rdquo; Because, well, we have to call it SOMETHING.</li> <li>Planet Hyrule is spherical and more or less Earth-like. I was able to collect some weak evidence supporting this Round Hyrule hypothesis (see&nbsp;<a href="https://medium.com/@kepler_82392/the-fifth-divine-beast-in-breath-of-the-wild-221ae87bedc5#f4ae" rel="noopener ugc nofollow"><strong>Addendum 1</strong></a>). It&rsquo;s possible Planet Hyrule is flat, but that would create a wholly new dynamic I&rsquo;m not prepared to address (primarily because most of it would just be magic)</li> <li>Objects in Hyrule (such as trees, animals, and fruits) are in roughly the same proportions as the corresponding objects on Earth. While the sapient races in Hyrule are unique to that world, the plants and animals are pretty much the same proportional sizes to each other as the equivalent plants and animals are on Earth, so this is a fair assumption.</li> <li>Gravity on Planet Hyrule functions the same, with roughly the same pull as Earth&rsquo;s 9.8m/s&sup2;. This is reasonable because of the famous amount of effort and realism the developers brought to their physics engine: swinging, throwing, wind, rain, lighting &mdash; they even got rainbows right! They spent an enormous amount of effort making sure it mimicked real-world physics and it shows in every minute of playtime (except for the sailboats, which were clearly designed by Bugs Bunny).</li> </ol> <p><a href="https://medium.com/@kepler_82392/the-fifth-divine-beast-in-breath-of-the-wild-221ae87bedc5"><strong>Click Here</strong></a></p>
Tags: Divine Beast