Characters in The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask
This article is about fictional characters from the video game The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask for the Nintendo 64.
Anju
A young woman that runs an inn with her mother. Anju falls in love with and later marries Kafei (after the events of the Majora's Mask)
Anju was modelled after the Cucco Lady who could not handle her Cuccos on account of her allergies. Her brother lived in the Lost Woods for being a freak. He helps Link in a trading quest to acquire the Biggoron Sword.
Anju's Grandmother
A very old and senile woman who thinks Link is her dead son Tortus (it may be inferred she is partially blind and sees blurred images). She hates her granddaughter Anju's cooking. She tells extremely long stories that only ones with a rare Mask - namely, the expensive All-Night's Mask bought from the Curiosity Shop - can listen to, due to their long nature.
She shares the model of the old hag that makes the odd potion to aid in the Biggoron trading quest in Ocarina of Time.
Beaver Bros.
Two beavers that are brothers that live in a waterfall near the Zora city in Termina. They horde bottles and heart pieces and refuse to give them to anyone who can't outswim them both. They defeated Mikau in this game.
Bombers Gang
A group of children out to help people in Clock Town of Termina. There are six members; one of which guards the entrance to the Astral Observetary that they use as a hideout. As a Deku Scrub, Link must play hide and seek and find five of them in order to get the password to their secret base. Once he learns the password, when he becomes Link again, he can use it to easily join their club. They give him the Bomber's Notebook, which can be used to catalog items, people and events.
They are based off of the boy who impersonates Dampé and takes the spooky mask from you.
Cremia
A young girl who runs Romani Ranch with her sister Romani in Termina. They're famous for their prized Romani Milk but lately bandits have been stealing it. Mysterious ghosts/aliens are also plagueing the ranch, stealing the cows that make the Romani Milk. Romani tries to defend the cows by practicing with a bow, but if she fails, then she too, will be taken away by the aliens.
She is based off future Malon.
Darmani
A Goron warrior who fell in battle trying to end the long winter in the Goron Village of Termina. After Link plays the song of healing for Darmani's spirit, Darmani gives his spirit, in the form of a mask, to Link so Link may carry out his final mission. He was also a fairly accomplished Goron racer. He's the Goron Elder of Termina's son's hero.
He is vaguly based off of Darunia from Ocarina of Time.
Goron Elder
He is the patriarch of the Goron Tribe in Termina and thus leader of them all. His son, while more than 12 years old is still only a child, a toddler at most. It's not known how old the Goron Elder is, but according to his diminished physique and degenerative body, it's obvious he is exceedingly old.
Goron Elder's Son
The only son and by birth rite, heir to the patriarchy, even though it actually up to the Goron Elder to decide who will succede him. He cries alot when his father is not around, and can only be calmed by the Goron's Lullaby.
Deku Butler
A butler to the Deku King of Termina. If Deku Link can defeat him in a race, the butler will give him the Mask of Scents. The depressing dead Deku Tree seen early in the game and at the end of it is believed to be his son.
Deku King
Ruler of the Kingdom of Deku in Termina, his daughter is the Deku Princess. The deku population in Termina is much more different than what it is in Hyrule, as it has developed in a fully fledged civilisation with an apparent social structure.
Deku Princess
First introduced only after Link has defeated Odolwa, boss of Woodfall Temple, the Deku Princess is eventually returned to the Deku King, her father, after Link has rescued her. Apparently, she is able to ride inside one of Link's bottles
Japas
Friend of Mikau's and another member of the Indigo-Gos, a Zora band. Like Mikau, he is a guitarist and they regularly play music together. Occasionally they play so well together that the other Zoras can hear them playing outside Japas' dressing room.
Kafei
Boyfriend and later husband of Anju in Termina. Before the wedding was to take place, he and Anju constructed masks to use in the ceremony. Anju made the Mask of the Moon, Kafei, the Mask of the Sun. On his way to visit with his fiancé, he bumped into the Skull Kid wearing Majora's Mask, who used its evil magic to transform Kafei into a child. To make matters worse, Kafei then encounters Sakon 'the smiling thief', who takes the Mask of the Sun and runs off with it! Kafei spends the three day cycle hidden in the back of the shady store, constantly wearing the Keaton Mask.
If Link intervenes, Kafei can get the Sun Mask back, and be reunited with Anju, who still loves him even though he is a child. When they reunite (moments before the moon hits), they join their masks together to form the Couple's Mask, and become a couple. It could be that they were just wed, since they give Link the mask for being their witness. The ending credits show Anju in a wedding dress walking down the aisle, though the camera is in Kafei's perspective, so it is never definitively shown whether or not Kafei transformed back into a man when Majora's Mask was destroyed.
It is notable that during this optional quest to recover the Sun Mask, the player is able to directly control Kafei for some segments, the only character not carrying or being inhabited by Link to be under such control.
Link
The protagonist. The Link in Majora's Mask is the same "Hero of Time" Link found in Ocarina of Time. He was sent back in time to relive the years of his childhood he had missed, and is on an adventure to find a missing friend. He is robbed by the Skull Kid, who turns him into a deku scrub, and then draws him into a parallel world called Termina where he must track down his stolen possessions, change himself back, and save the people of that world from the cataclysmic event using his power over time. See Link.
Lulu
Singer of the IndiGo-Gos band of Zoras. She lost her voice, and needs to hear the 'New Wave Bossa Nova' , a special song Link learns from the Zora Eggs he rescues from the Gerudo pirates and from the cave filled with Eel Monsters. Apparently they are her eggs and apparently were magically concepted but it is never explained. Her voice has the ability to summon the Giant Turtle, a sleeping turtle with an island on its back, for Link to ride to the Great Bay Temple.
She is based off of Ruto but one major difference is that she is clothed where Ruto is not.
Skull Kid
Skull Kid, in the game spelled Skullkid, is a mischievous child who uses the powerful Majora's Mask to cause most of the conflict in the game.
In Majora's Mask
In Majora's Mask, his two fairy sidekicks Tatl and Tael (a pun on tattle-tale) scare the horse Epona, which causes Link to be thrown off and knocked unconscious. He comes and pats down Link, looking for anything valuable, settling for the Ocarina of Time, which he begins to blow into, waking up Link. He lunges for Skullkid, but he hops on Epona for his getaway. After holding on a while, Link falls off, and follows him into a hollow log and falls into an abyss (disputedly, this is how Link travels to Termina). Then Skull Kid turns Link into a Deku Scrub and leaves. He tries to make the moon fall on Termina and the player finds out later that Majora's Mask is controlling him.
In Ocarina Of Time
Skull Kid makes a brief, unnamed appearance in Ocarina of Time. He can be found in the Lost Woods dancing on a tree stump. The player can teach him Saria's Song on the ocarina. When completing the side quest, the Skull mask is given to him. Also, later in the game, after you receive the Biggoron Sword, if you return to the Lost Woods as an adult and kill the Skull Kid you will receive a giant rupee worth 200 rupees. His past is shrouded in mystery, and no one knows where he came from. Some say he is simply a forest sprite, but the Ocarina of Time manga states that while his family was on a picnic, a young child ventured into the Lost Woods, deaf to his mother's warnings. He wanted to catch a fairy, but instead got lost. After the fear subsided, he breathed in the dark air easily, and was gradually transformed into a Skull Kid, the final form that befalls Hylian children or Kokiri who venture into the Lost Woods. It is seen in the manga and in the game that there is more than just one Skull Kid.
Name origins
In manga and in early translations, his name is roughly translated as Star Kid, coming from the name Sutaru Kiddo (スタルキッド), since the Japanese language spells foreign words based on phonetics rather than spelling. This was, however, an error; the character is known as "Stalkid" in Japan,1 based on the traditional Zelda skeleton enemy known as Stalfos.
==Tatl and Tael==
Tatl and Tael are fairy companions of the Skull Kid. Tatl is female and glows with a light color, while Tael is male and glows with a dark color. It is believed that Tatl and Tael's names are derived from the phrase "tattletale," hinting at their childish natures. The early translations "Chat" and "Trail", respectively, were used by importers to discuss the characters before the North American version became available.1
After Tatl is separated from her brother Tael, she befriends Link on his journey and helps him along the way, playing the same role Link's fairy Navi played in Ocarina of Time. She has a bossy disposition but eventually warms to Link. Tael stayed with the Skull Kid while Tatl went on her journey with Link, but in the end they were reunited.
The Four Giants
The Four Giants are ancient, long forgotten Terminian gods that protected the people of Termina from danger in ages past. They assumed the responsibility of protector deities and stood guard in the four compass directions. Skull Kid felt his friends wronged him and, using the power of Majora's Mask, sealed them in evil deity masks in four temples throughout the land. These four gods of Termina are worshipped at the Carnival of Time with song at the top of the Clock Tower with hopes of a good harvest in the year to come. They may be compared with the Four Heavenly Kings of the Buddhist faith, which are also gods associated with the four cardinal directions.
Footnotes
1. This walkthrough says "Stalkid: An imp with only two friends, Chat and Trail, [...]". A fan site says "Stalkid - An imp who once had no friends, he is the companion of Chat and Trail." Also, the French-language Majora's Mask FAQ says "Ces deux fées s'appellent Chat et Trail (JP), connues sous les noms Tatl et Tael dans la version nord-américaine." This translates to: "These two fairies are called Chat and Trail (JP), known by the names Tatl and Tael in the North American version."