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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Tpganon (talk | contribs) at 16:13, 22 November 2006 (Ganon in Ocarina of Time). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

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Template:Zeldaproj


Deaths

It occurs to me that the number of times ganon is killed is more than ganon is revived. By my count he is killed at least four times, and is revived once or an attemted twice (AOL). Is there anything that can explain this?

Two words; Plot hole. :p --Luigifan 17:17, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, to be serious, a lot of the times that Ganon is "killed", he's really only being sealed away. So, he wouldn't need to be revived, per se; the seal would have to be broken before he could come back. --Luigifan 17:20, 22 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
And, the timeline in the Zelda series is quite loose, and the games don't neatly fit in a particular order. Also, some clearly occur in relation to others; for example, Link to the Past takes place after Ocarina of Time, so Ganon was still in the realm that he'd been sealed away to.
Deaths count. LttP, TWW (imo), OoA/S, LoZ. Sealed away count: OoT, FSA. Resurrected: Once in OoA/S, possibly reincarnated and later reunited with his consciousness in FSA. Either way, none of this belongs in the article because all of us are simply theorizing, which is OR.~ZytheTalk to me! 12:36, 20 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Miyamoto was quoted in an interview saying that it its not always the same link in each game. In that event it might not be the same Ganon or same reality even.

68.206.251.137's recent edit

This change refers to details that probably derive from a timeline theory. Now Miyamoto confirmed that there may well be more than one Link, but he never said anything about Zelda, nor did he say which Link was in which game. Therefore, is this "wrong"? Master Thief Garrett 03:24, 29 Apr 2005 (UTC)

I'm not really sure what you're asking... If you mean to ask whether the stories of Majora's Mask -> Wind Waker are continuous, I was about to ask the same thing. Then after I wrote a long reply I remembered the intro to Wind Waker saying something about a "Hero in Green" defeating Ganon and leaving the world, but not returning when Ganon attacked again. Naturally it is implied that the WW Link is different from the previous hero since he has a family on the island and doesn't know about Zelda of Ganon or anything else really. But logically, if it is the same story, I think it could work (theoretically) for Zelda to be the same one as from Ocarina.
Again, I'm not sure on a lot this, but I bet any devout follower of the series could tell you this off the top of his head. So, uh... find one of those. Phort99 06:32, 31 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
There are at least two Zeldas, as AoL sleeping Zelda is not the same one as from the first game. Zelda in TWW could only be the same as Zelda from OoT by some very strange plot manipulation, like making her lose her memory, and her living for 100s of years. I'd say that's unlikely. There may be more, but I can't think of it at the moment. Setokaiba 10:58, 31 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

What sword can wound Ganon

Quick fact: any sword will damage Ganon, not only the "magical" sword. --Feitclub 00:17, Sep 19, 2004 (UTC)

Good work, I should've caught that one. Andre (talk) 00:18, 19 Sep 2004 (UTC)
I believe the manual says you need the Magic Sword, which is probably why you made the error. (Garrett, 17:33, Apr 12, 2005 (GMT)
Surely you mean the Master's sword? --Jpawloski 12:29, 14 February 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The Master Sword is required in A Link to the Past, but the Level 2 Sword (MS 1) requires you to perform spin attacks. Also, in Ocarina of Time, you can only deal the final blow with the Master Sword. In The Wind Waker, you have no option but to use the Master Sword to fight and finish off Ganon. --TSA 21:49, 1 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That seems like more of a plot arc to me though, since the giant blade is actually a way better weapon against him in all forms :p Tyciol 04:51, 12 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganondorf Dragmire? Mandrag Ganon?

He's never called Dragmire in ocarina of time, that Mandrag/Dragmire stuff was added for the American version of "A Link to the Past and has no canonicity. -Unknown

The American Link to the Past predates Ocarina of Time and is canonical. Andre (talk) 21:07, Feb 11, 2005 (UTC)
Actually, you're both partly wrong, he's NEVER called Dragmire in the LTTP game text. This name ONLY appears in the manual, and was apparently a horrendous mistranslation much like Gannon with two Ns. -Unknown
And as for saying LTTP had no canonicity, what the?!? there's more to Zelda than OOT! The series was already rich and diverse before OOT entered the scene at its relatively late date. OOT is NOT the be-all and the end-all of Zelda, it didn't define was Zelda is, that had already been done, indeed many would argue that LTTP did that! I smell a fanboy... (Garrett, 17:33, Apr 12, 2005 (GMT)
I believe the original anon was arguing that it lacks canonicity because it was not present in the Japanese version of LTTP, although I don't know if this is true. Deco 05:20, 29 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Possibly, but how many fans actually know about that fact? And seeing as the comment refers explicitly to OOT rather than specifying any Japanese differences, I'd say that the main point is revolving around OOT as defining the "facts". Or maybe I'm just mistaken. Regardless, this has now been cleared up and worded in a fairly straightforward manner. Master Thief Garrett 06:00, 29 Apr 2005 (UTC)
This is true, Deco. Please see Zelda Legends' ALttP Translation Comparison: 'The names "Dragmire" and "Mandrag" are simply not in the Japanese text. Which explains why these names did not appear in OoT or TWW. It just says that "the man's name was Ganondorf, and his common name was Ganon of the race of evil thieves." The thieves are not "enchanted" either, so Mandrag is totally out of place.' Davogones 11:00, 6 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Might be worth noting, though I doubt it: IMDB has the voice actor for Ganon in SSB Melee, Takashi Nagasano, credited for "Ganondorf Dragmire's" voice. (The game is listed under its Japanese name.) I was about to ask this question. Heh. Cernen 09:09, 9 January 2006 (UTC)[reply]

About the statement above^^^

SSB Melee isn't in the timeline. =P

Ganon or Ganondorf?

It's speculation. Consider the possibility that the change in form created a change in personality - while Ganondorf pre-OoT is evil, he's not nearly as evil as Ganon is. It's a similar situation with Darth Vader and Anakin Skywalker - Obi-Wan said that he ceased to be Anakin and became Darth Vader. Consider that the Maiden was speaking that he was no longer Ganondorf, but Ganon, the King of Evil. Deleting for non-neutrality. -Unknown

Um, what? I'd like some more feedback before you remove that, please. After all, this is also your own non-neutral view. Master Thief Garrett 03:21, 18 Apr 2005 (UTC)
You changed it?!? What the **** did I just say?!? You need more of an explanation! Master Thief Garrett 04:02, 18 Apr 2005 (UTC)
Because the whole statement was basically speculation that it's fact that Ganon is merely a nickname. And my view was neutral - I gave both sides of the argument. I've already heard both the arguments in a debate, so I know that both of them are accepted by others. The way it is now, people get both arguments without seeing one or the other as more legitimate.

--A Link to the Past 13:43, Apr 18, 2005 (UTC)

Ah, that's OK then. As long as there's some rational thought behind it. Which was what I was trying to establish from the beginning, but you went and changed it *before* adding this longer explanation. Master Thief Garrett 22:27, 18 Apr 2005 (UTC)

WikidSmaht's edits

Thank you for the major rehaul, it did fix a number of problems I failed to notice. Even so, I have a couple of problems with what you changed (noticable since I had originally modified them):

  • Form in the sacred realm: In the Windwaker entry you reverted my alternative explanation to the critique of Ganon being in the form of an elderly Ganondorf. I think that it's silly to ask why it is unusual. Windwaker is obviously drawing on Ocarina of Time for inspiration (since that's what the shown form of Ganondorf is based on). Ganondorf has displayed the ability to transform into the pig, so it can be assumed he can transform back. I'd like to remove the 'original form' thing altogether, because last seen in OoT, he was in human form. If he goes pig in any of the future games, it can be assumed he (off-screen) transforms back, or that his ghost takes on a human form.
  • 'Usual blue'. I think specifying this is useful, as saying 'peach' alone doesn't say much, since that's the normal colour warhogs and pigs have. I would like to add back 'usual blue' since it helps contrast it.
  • Fought only with magic and minions: This is true, unlike in the games where he also fighs in melee combat. Why was this removed?
  • Please add back as usual to the games, since the object of most games (including Ocarina of Time) is gaining the Triforce of Wisdom. The Power thing was a typo, I meant courage, the Triforce of Courage was not present in the cartoon.
  • Apparently a wizard is unneeded. Ganon is a wizard in every game, wielding magical force blasts and the like, similar to Link. What's distinctive is that he's only a wizard/summoner, and not also a warrior like in the games, which I clarify better in mentioning that he doesn't fight hand to hand.

Thanks and hopefully I can resolve this. Tyciol 08:50, 14 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well:
  • No, he was still a large pig creature at the end of OoT, transformed by the Triforce of Power. How he regained human form is a mystery, as he didn’t show up human again in any other game.
  • The other sections mention or illustrate that he’s blue. In the context of the article, that’s already clear.
  • It just wasn’t good prose.
  • How could I possibly have known that you meant Courage? That does make more sense. I still don’t think it’s necessary to mention, though; because it’s the same as the game the cartoon is based on, it’s not a notable omission.
  • Then say it that way. “Ganon only fights with magic, or commands his armies to attack. Unlike the games, he never directly engages Link in combat.” Something like that, but a little less clunky. There’s enough terrible prose in the article already.
Hope that clears those up. -- WikidSmaht (talk) 11:46, 14 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganondorf Cult

There is a cult following and worshipping ganondorf - there are several sects in the uk and america. This is a valuable edit and shouldn't have been removed.

Cite a source or your edits will be removed again. Setokaiba 20:31, 17 March 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Are you sure there's a cult following and worshipping Ganon? If so that is very odd. Who would worship a fictional character?

Anon

Might as well worship Satan

Wait a minute. There's a cult out there worshipping Ganondorf?!??!!!? OK... I'm just going to curl up in a ball and quiver in fear now... --Luigifan 01:42, 25 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Four Swords Adventures?

He's the last boss in that game. No one's played it?

I have. --Luigifan 01:43, 25 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

SSB: Brawl

Someone added that most clones will be removed or given a new moveset. If no one can provide a source for this, I will remove it. Supermariorobot 21:19, 14 June 2006 (UTC)[reply]

history

Shouldn't Ganon's history be expanded upon on the Ganon page? it stops abruptly at the beginning of TWW. I know,due to timeline theories, that you can't explain which happened first to Ganon after TWW, but you can metion it, saying that you're not sure of which event comes first.--Superbub

I'm going to change the section, so if anyone wants to change it back, inform me before doing so.--Superbub

I'm considering removing that huge portion about TWW in Character Background because no one knows for sure how it fits into the timeline. It doesn't make any more sense to add it than it does to add a longwinded recollection of the events of any Zelda game that Ganon was featured in except OoT Xubelox 07:11, 9 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think we should surely discuss his role in a very narrow sense, with at best an extremely brief summary of surrounding events and setting. Deco 07:15, 9 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganondorf's Sword in SSB:M

I always thought his sword was based on the sword he used in the promo video of the TWW (before it went cell-shaded); that battle were a Realistic Ganondorf and Link fight. Whereas in the article about SSB:M the sword just comes out of the blue.--84.27.22.112 16:01, 12 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

It wasn't a promo for TWW. It was just something to show off the GameCube's capabilities. Xubelox 23:56, 21 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Irony?

In this appearance, Ganondorf was voiced by Takashi Nagasako, who, ironically, voiced the SEGA character Big the Cat around the same time.

How is this even remotely ironic? --4.254.116.93 00:26, 14 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I removed the second part of the sentence for a conspicuous lack of irony. --4.254.114.225 02:15, 18 July 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think the author was refering to the voice actor doing lines for a Nintendo and Sega game. Still, not very ironic. 83.151.197.97 16:08, 2 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I think that the irony's in the fact that the guy voice-acting for the wicked [wicked as in evil, and wicked cool] Ganondorf is also the voice actor for Big the Cat... who's rather infamous for being [arguably] mentally retarded. It's rather hard to believe that those voices, which are for two completely different personalities, could be provided by the same guy. --Luigifan 01:47, 25 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Though, now that I think about it, they sound somewhat similar... --Luigifan 20:14, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganon and Agahnim

However, he was somehow able to manipulate the evil wizard Agahnim to fulfill his agenda in the Light World (Hyrule).

Doesn't this imply Ganon isn't Agahnim and thus conflict with the Agahnim article, which states: Agahnim's status as Ganon's second self is subject to some controversy, but both images and dialogue in A Link to the Past, which is to be taken as primary canon, shows that they were the same being.

Well, I think it refers to the fact that exactly how Ganon managed to be Aghanim doesn't make sense within the games own laws. Ganon was trapped in the Dark World and couldn't get out. That was his entire goal. There has been some discussion and speculation about this, on Zelda storyline debates, though. Some feel Aghanim could be an astral projection or a Phantom Ganon (same attack pattern too). Some feel he may be a wizard who Ganon possessed. Some feel the uncanon Soul Calibur II games try to explain that a wizard/priest fell from grace after affected by the Soul Edge's evil, giving Ganon an opening to control him. All these go with Ganon's dialogue, that he is Aghanim.
Exactly how, however, isn't the place for a Wikipedia article, which is why fan theories aren't discussed in the article. Perhaps it would be best if someone simply used the in-game dialogue to let the reader assume what they will. ~ZytheTalk to me! 11:16, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganon as a single entity.

Can anyone cite an official source that states that the various Ganons are in fact one person? As of yet, I've been unable to find one, and am unwilling to assume that he is, nor that there are multiple versions in each Zelda game. As far as I know, it's never even been stated that every single one follows any sort of all-encompassing continuity, although many people editing this article seem to assume so. I'd like to know where people are getting their facts before I start another stupid revert war. Thus far I can only find a fairly good in-game implication that the Ganondorf in "The Wind Waker" is the same as the one in "The Ocarina of Time." So could someone cite some sources? -- Digital Watches! 18:46, 26 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well, I don't know if there are official sources other than the games themselves, which do not explicitly state anything but seem to (especially with Four Swords Adventures) imply there is only one "Ganon", even if that game suggests there might be a second Gerudo who was named Ganondorf. A credible but not official source, which discusses whether it's one Ganon or many, is [1]. This was written however before a few more recent games which do tend to make this clearer still. ~ZytheTalk to me! 11:08, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
That source, however, is a fan-made argument, which in no way reflects Nintendo's intended canon. I'm not saying I disagree, but until there's an official statement, or something VERY explicit in the games, anything regarding the number of Ganons or any continuous chronology throughout the entire series (Things like OOT and Majora's Mask being directly linked are fairly explicit) is either original research or speculation. Also: Just because Ganon only gets a backstory in OOT doesn't mean it's the backstory for every game's Ganon. -- Digital Watches! 22:10, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Also, what exactly do you mean when you say that newer games make it "clearer still"? I couldn't disagree more. -- Digital Watches! 22:21, 27 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Well, since TWW, they've been trying. Ganon from TWW is referred to as the man from the legend (OOT) and makes references to the Hero of Time, and even tries to follow up his promise that he'll kill their descendents. In Four Swords Adventures, the game is quite eager when we first hear of Ganon to present him as having been of this generation, when geography alone would imply this game can't take place anywhere near OOT. Then, Ganon takes the trident and Zelda calls him an "ancient demon reborn". Also, in games like LTTP, they speak of the Knights and Sages and maybe the hero fighting this same menace before. I'm sure while not official, the people over at the discussion boards for these things can come up with a very airtight argument.
But fan-made arguments aren't and will never be an acceptable source of official canon. And yes, it's very obvious that the Ganon in OOT is the Ganon in TWW. That much is entirely inferrable. But then again, OOT and TWW are quite inextricably connected in the first place, so it really says nothing for the other games' Ganons. This "Ancient demon reborn" argument is heavy with speculation as to what she means by that, and a lot of the LOZ storylines have Ganon as being an ancient evil, so it's a huge stretch to use that to draw any connection to the Ganons of other games -- Digital Watches! 18:41, 28 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
But no, Nintendo's never said "Oh yeah, there's only one Ganon" as far as I can tell. But I'm pretty sure the games make it very clear. For that reason, I think if you say "some fans think" you can always back it up with timeline articles by fans. ~ZytheTalk to me! 12:00, 28 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I disagree that the games do anything but give proponents of the theory some obscure fodder for speculation. From what I've seen, all of these theories are, like the Four Swords "Ancient Demon Reborn" argument, quite a stretch, and so until Nintendo comes out with something official, I think we should leave the number of Ganons entirely unstated in the article, as no one knows if there are multiple or a single Ganon, and the Polyganonists and Monoganonists will have a fit should the opposite perspective be presented. If you'd like a detailed argument as to why we shouldn't put fan speculation, even when labeled as such, in an article, I would cite a similar situation at Dizzy (Guilty Gear) and its respective talk page. It's not exactly the same, but it's kind of similar in problem. Either way, Wikipedia:Original research should apply to this situation as well. But no matter what we decide, I mean you no offense, so please don't view these statements as being an attack or in any way malicious. Thanks for your time. -- Digital Watches! 18:41, 28 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The thing is, Nintendo has not said that there is more than one Ganon, and until they do, we have to assume it's one being and treat the article that way. Since Nintendo has explicitly stated that there are more than one Link and Zelda, we can say for sure that they are not just one being. This is not the case with Ganon. So technically it could be considered original research and speculation to say that there may be more than one Ganon. I'll just use Mario as a random example. Has every single Mario game stated that the Mario in that game is the same Mario as every other game? Probably not, but that doesn't mean we should bring up the possibility on Mario's page of there being more than one of him. 199.126.137.209 11:05, 29 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]

That's entirely arbitrary. There's no reason in any canonical sources to "treat the article" one way or another. Anyone could say the same thing going the other way. Like I've been saying the whole time, I think that we should leave the whole debate out of the article until something official comes up. We can only maintain NPOV by not leading readers of the article to believe one way or another. -- Digital Watches! 22:56, 2 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Background story

I don't think this is nessecary as his history is already covered in ocarina of time. Also he never attackes Link's descendant. It's stated by the King of Red Lions when talking to Jabun that the Link in WW has no connections to the orginal Link. I think this portion should be replaced with something else. Maby his personality, his traits, nicknames, ect.. Not to be offensive, but it's also sort unorganized and not told well.

Why is "Gannon" a misspelling?

It's spelled that way in the first and second Japanese games, I would think they know how to spell their own characters' names. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 172.163.218.70 (talkcontribs)

The first two games also had Link finding "All of treasures" and a guy named Error. It's just something that was retconned, like the spelling Hyrulian. --Sparky Lurkdragon 12:34, 13 September 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Besides, the Katakana used to spell his name in Japanese does not place two "n"s next to each other. -SaturnYoshi THE VOICES 14:41, 1 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Good Job

Hey, whoever did the personality section, Good Job! The whole section is very true and does a great job of depicting Ganondorf and his comparison to other nintendo villains. You should erase the background story and replace it with this section. Again, good job.

Might I recommend against removing the background section as it is an important aspect of his character. KEEP THE PERSONALITY SECTION AS WELL THOUGH.

Anon

Goofy pic

Just a quickie. Couldn't a more up to date profile pic of Ganon be used? The curreent one is *very* early 90s. Surely a OoT or WW would be better suited? 83.151.197.97 16:07, 2 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I had the same complaint. The currnent photo is from the oracle series. It deosn't show Ganon at his most evil state and deosn't accuratly depict him. I changed it a while ago to a more suitable pick; the one right before he transfroms into Ganon fro OT. But the person who put this stupid picture seems so attached and put it back. I' ll find a better picture of Ganon.

Really, I think the new picture looks better, but it's by no means any more accurate than the previous one. Don't confuse aesthetics with accuracy. (OOT =/= end all, be all of canon). -- Digital Watches! 23:12, 2 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Well, that is the new one. I was talking about the picture before that. This is the one I uploaded. Your right that it's no more accurate than the other one, but that goes for all pictures since Ganondorf takes on a different form in each game. The other one though was not very menacing looking. This one is much more menacing and represents the struggle with Link he has in each game.

Let's make this article generally better.

I think that if the page for Link can get FA status, we can get this one up to speed as well. However, there are a few things we should consider in order to do this. Firstly, maintaining NPOV. I'm not just talking about the multi/single Ganon argument, it's also the entire personality section, which has a lot of obvious unnecessary commentary on the character {Stuff like "Manifestation of pure evil," and things that are entirely interpreted.), should be revamped, if not removed, and the storyline sections are far too long-winded and read more like a story than an encyclopedia article. One idea may be just to use the Link article as a model, as far as section layout, writing tone, and length/precedent of what warrants inclusion. We could also use some more real-world information about the character, as this article seems to focus exclusively on in-universe information. Either way, this article needs to be cleaned up. -- Digital Watches! 23:10, 2 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I really don't see the sections on Ganon's depiction in the games telling a whole story. They are simply telling about his plans and his deeds in the games which do require alot of room. I can understand your point, but all the information in thoses sections is accurate and none of it is speculation. It shows all his evil deeds which are accuratly depicted and in no way exxagerated and speculative. The personality section could use some fixing, but it is pretty accurate as far as my opinion goes.

The personality section isn't speculated, but it's very slanted. And that's not my main gripe. Just because all the information is correct doesn't mean that it all belongs in an encyclopedia article. The descriptions of all storyline details, including all the in-game plots, take far too much liberty with the form of the prose, making it read more like some sort of epic than an encyclopedia article. Almost every section could stand some MAJOR trimming. Again, I think that we should follow the example of Link's article, as it was and still is a Featured Article, and being a character page from the same universe, will be fairly close to the ideal structure for this page. As it stands, the article is long-winded, hard to follow, and contains only in-universe information. I've said it before and I'll say it again, just because the article is entirely factual does not mean that it shouldn't be modified. In this case, extensively. I need sleep. -- Digital Watches! 06:56, 3 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Also, it may seem like splitting hairs, but I think we need at least a few references for unsourced statements. -- Digital Watches! 14:24, 3 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]


Please Stop

Look, whoever keeps placing the oracle series version of Ganon as the lead picture, please stop. That is one of the most riduclous pictures of him. It's an insult to his name to have that as the first picture. I think I speak for alot of people when a say he looks like a complete and utter moron in that picture. We need a picture that shows his most evil version and I think that would be his human form from ocarina. This does not portray him well and is completly random. Why do like this picture so much? It's absolutly horrible. Look, I don't mean to be offensive, but this is really pissing me off. That is him in the oracle series and that is where it belongs. The picture we had with Ganondorf fighting Link was perfect and was much more menacing. This picture is a piece of crap compared to that one, he does not look evil. No, let me correct myself; It's a piece of crap in general. I cannot stress that enough, he simply does not look evil, menacing, indimdating or anything. He looks like an idiot so I'm going to change it. Look at the section on this discussion board; one says "Goofy Pic" So I'm not the only one. I'm going to change it and going to keep changing it if you do it again. You have to give me a good reason to keep, but this is a crappy ass photo.

Um, I like the picture of Ganondorf fighting Link as well, but thus far, you've given no logical reasoning as to why it's any better than the other one for this article. The point of an encyclopedia article is to provide information on the subject in a neutral and succinct manner. It doesn't really matter that he looks more "Menacing" or "Evil," as long as it's an accurate depiction. As far as I know, the Oracle series is just as canon as OOT, so I don't see where you're getting the idea that one canon image trumps another canon image because it "Looks more menacing." Also, I think that a declaration of intent to continue a revert war will serve this article poorly, and it would be better to discuss this issue with whoever keeps changing it. -- Digital Watches! 15:06, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
The other one is much better for an encyclopedic article as it is a simple image showing the subject. Displaying both Link and Ganon is stupid for the lead in/infobox image. Also, canonicity and OPINION are irrelevant with regards to the character from an out of universe perspective. Futhermore, silliness has at times been a part of Ganon's character (for instance, the cartoons - canonicity irrelevant to the nature of a character from an encyclopedic standpoint), even if I personally do not find it to look "goofy" or "crappy ass". ~ZytheTalk to me! 15:53, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Agreed. I'm all for you reverting it. -- Digital Watches! 19:33, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

The reason why the other pucture is good is because it shows Ganon's core. His back story is him always being a Geroudo, and theorfore a human. This picture does not represent him well, you yourself have not given me a reason for this one. Whenever I hear the name Ganon, the first thing that comes to mind is his human form. His full name is Ganondorf and that represents his human form. Ganon is another form that he takes, but he's still Ganondorf as a whole. Ganondorf represents both his human side and his evil side while Ganon just represents pure evil. That's why I like the other picture because it shows both his evil and his human form. That's the image want to introduce Ganondorf, his starting form and then how he transfroms into a creature known as Ganon. If anyone else agrees with me, please post.

You having played OOT first doesn't make Ganon any more human than he is a pig. That's entirely POV and opinionated. I agree with Zythe. -- Digital Watches! 19:33, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Also, since nothing about Ganon's multiplicity or lack thereof has been officially confirmed, any statement relying on Ganon having a consistent backstory throughout all of the games is both POV and Original Research. -- Digital Watches! 19:41, 8 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

No, I'm not assuming Ocarina is first. Almost every game had Ganon as human in his orginal backstory. In a Link to the Past he was a human in charge of a group of thieves until he obtained the Triforce and became Ganon. In the oracle series, the plot revolves around the withches completing GEROUDO rituals. That means he was a Geroudo once which are human. In four swords he was a Geroudo again until he stole the scepter of darkness and became a demon. Ocarina and Wind Waker have him as a human. The only games are the first and the second which don't give any backstory at all. Therefore almost every game have him once as a human then became Ganon. The only games which we see Ganon as a human is Ocarina and Wind Waker. Since ocarina came first, I think it's good to show a picture of him there. The picture of him fighting Link not only shows boths sides of Ganon; pure evil and humanity, but also represents the internal struggle he has with a "Link" in each game. The other one only shows one side of him; I don't view it as a complete characterzation, it merely shows one side of him. But I'm not assuming Ocarina is first, I am going by his history in all the games which seem to portary him as once human and then this demon called Ganon.

Sign your posts. Not the original game. And he only looks like that in OoT. AND the Oracle Ganon shape is a great pic of Ganon's most common form (LoZ, AoL, LttP, LA, end of OoT, Oracles, FSA...) whereas as he looks in OoT is only OoT, TWW is only TWW etc. Plus! It's a terrible pic, which has poor use on an encylopedic article about Ganon. By your logic, Jack Harkness' picture should be him kissing The Doctor cos that's part of his character. You simply dislike an image, which is your POV, and you've made that clear. Please refrain from adding the picture again unless a concensus of valuable points (subjective terms like which you prefer notwithstanding) - without the use of sock puppets, thanks, is able to form.
In summary: no matter how much you want that picture - it's bad because it doesn't picture only Ganon, it uses a form shown in only one game. The concensus at the moment is in favour of the Oracles picture, or any other fair use official art which shows Ganon in his pig form I'd imagine. ~ZytheTalk to me! 10:05, 9 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Which one is his Oracle picture, is it the pig-form or his human form? Might I just say that the pig-form doesn't really depict his character or personality very well which is one of the things the encyclopedia article aims to convey so maybe we should use the human form. It is after all the one most people associate with him. I agree with you that we shouldn't use the one that depicts him fighting Link as that doesn't just show Ganon, it shows two people, one of whom is Ganon but we should put it in somewhere down the page as it is very good. Who removed the sentence saying that he was arguably Nintendo's most evil villain because that is a fact.

Anon

Well, you picture is bad because it only pictures Ganon. His real name in Ganondorf, that's his full name and therefore him as a whole. Ganon stimulates from his personality and therefore represents that. Ganondorf represents everything he is becuase Ganon orginates from him. Ganondrof represents more of his personality than this picture does. Thanks to whoever wrote the post above this one. That's what I saying, is that Ganondorf's human form is the most assocaitive while Ganon is a monsterous form that stems from his human form. Ah, forget it, I doubt I'll convince you. I don't unerstand why you don't get it. Ganondorf's first backstory was introduced in Ocarina and I believe that's an iconic moment for the series, we should start with that then stem to his transformation as Ganon. His full name is Ganondorf and this article should be changed to that. C'mon someone else post, I'm defiantly not the only one here. I hate this picture, but mainly because it's a poor description. And wtf is the big deal, I'm not eliminating your picture, I' simply placing it in the oracle section of the artical. People can still see that form of him. Well, you have not given me a valid reason other than it's a form he is usually in. That's not a good reason and ONCE AGAIN, it does not describe him well at all. It's from the oracle games in which he was a mindless beast. That's not Ganondorf at all.

I'll give you a very good reason: Wikipedia has two policies that conflict with this. First is the Neutral Point of View policy. Simply put, valuing Ganon's depiction as Ganondorf in Ocarina of Time over other games violates this policy, which calls for a lack of bias. Giving more weight to one game's depiction of a character than any other equally canon games is a very biased move to make. The statement that the human-form Ganondorf represents the character better than any given canon form is a statement of bias. Secondly, there's a policy against original research. This covers any and all statements inferred by the editor instead of taken from a credible (in the case of fiction, that pretty much means official or nothing) source. Delving into Ganon(dorf)'s personality/whatever you want to call it beyond what is explicitly stated in the games or by Nintendo/Miyamoto. To say that a piece of official art does not well depict Ganon's personality falls within this, since I don't think there's been any press conferences in which Nintendo has declared Ganon's appearances in games other than OOT/TWW non-canon. Lastly, the image you would like to use depicts both Ganon and Link. While this could be labeled to show which one is which, it makes more sense to use a picture in which Ganon is alone, and depicted as he has appeared far more often than the other, if nothing else, then for the sake of those unfamiliar with the material. Please do not revert it again. -- Digital Watches! 02:20, 10 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I personally think we should leave the name of the article as Ganon as it really doesn't make any difference if it says Ganon or Ganondorf as they both refer to the same person. It's rather like trying to decide what to call the evil doctor from Sonic the Hedgehog, Robotnik or Eggman. You can't really come to a final agreement on it. That's my opinion anyway.

I'm going to have to agree with others in this instance that the pig pic is better, if for no other reason than that Ganon takes that form at some point in every game in which he appears, and in many of them appears only in that form. Deco 22:06, 16 October 2006 (UTC)[reply]
He never showed up as a pig in The Wind Waker. --Luigifan 23:17, 8 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
I suppose technically in the intro. His WW portrayal doesn't match his OoT one anyway. The game isn't "Ocarina of Time, sequels and spin-offs" it's "The Legend of Zelda". No one cares which incarnation you prefer. For the quality of the article, a standardized and more common depiction is preferred. ~ZytheTalk to me! 19:06, 9 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Ok, actually:
Ganondorf is human in OOT. He becomes Ganon. He gets trapped in the Dark World. Ganon escapes the dark world as a pig in WW. He reverts to human. He dies. In the Oracles, Twinrova revives him from the dead (though it is not specifically his death in WW) he gets sent to the dark world. He possesses Agahnim. He fights link in the dark world without actually escaping, and gets severely crippled and the seal is strenghtened. He escapes the Dark World in the original game (check the official website). As for four swords... well, who knows. So, he doesn't have a new backstory of changing to a pig in every game. Just Four Swords Adventures. Bly1993 16:45, 14 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
WP:OR, thanks. Zelda noobs. ~ZytheTalk to me! 11:44, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
Its not original research. Its from official sources. The only time i mentioned something that wasn't confirmed I said it was not confirmed. Bly1993 20:52, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]
While the games are official, your interpretation of how they interconnect isn't. The Zelda Timeline is in some places FIERCELY debated. For example, to play Devil's Advocate, one could argue that Ganondorf is a time traveller and so none of it is in order. Whatever. The only way to do an article like this is to present all the facts in the order the games were released and use the modal incarnation of Ganon to represent it pictorially, with an image for each different looking version (OoT, TWW, TP). It also breaks fair use legislation to put more copyrighted images than is necessary to illustrate the article.~ZytheTalk to me! 21:38, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I really agree to this. If Ganondorf isn't portrayed as "evil", than peaople might have to read! Ugh!

Category

I think that Ganon can fit the category of fictional mass murderers. Anyone else agree?- Darknessofheart

I do agree to this, but only somewhat. Ganon does evil things to get the things he wants, but he never is actually seen killing anyone. In fact, the closest time Ganon ever came to killing anyone is when you're fighting him. He will hurt people to get the things he covets, but he never actually killed anyone. sean7gordon@epix.net 11/13/06

Uh, Ganon has killed alot of people throughout the games. It has never been SHOWN but it has been mentioned. The composer brothers were murdered by Ganon, in A Link to the Past the king was killed and it states that almost all the knights of hyrule were wiped out in the battle of the seven sages, an event that Ganon was behind. The knights of Hyrule in Ocarina were destroyed as well as in Four Swords, thpugh they were replaced by dark versions in that game. Each game states that many were claimed in some event which was orchrestrated by Ganon. Naborru said Ganon stole from women and children and even killed people. So saying that Ganondorf has not killed anyone is like saynig Link is not a main character. Ganondorf is directly and indirtecly responsible for the sluaghter of thousnads perhaps millions. Alright, I have no proof his murders go that high, but he's defiantly killed enough to be a mass murderer. -Darknessofheart

Images are really beginning to clutter

We have 4 pictures of Ganon from Ocarina of Time in this article, and the recent Ganon picture change should really be reverted. Also, that TP image really sucks. 199.126.137.209 10:30, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Yeah, there's some persistent editors and their sockpuppets that stick a whole load of images of OoT Ganon everywhere because they have no concept of fair use images, or how an article should relate to a character. No one canon depiction is more important than another. I removed some of the unnecessary (albeit pretty) official art for OoT Ganon and that HORRIBLE, HORRIBLE n64 graphics Ganon picture. Just because OoT is a lot of people's favourite, does not make it the "main" Zelda game. Bah. I suppose I'll be monitoring the article extra closely. ~ZytheTalk to me! 11:55, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

TP Ganon Picture

I just deleted that picture which supposedly portrays Ganondorf in Twilight Princess. The picture cannot be proven to actually be from TP, and was of poor quality, so I should think it won't be missed. General Aurum 23:09, 15 November 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Ganon in Ocarina of Time

Do you all know how Ganondorf transforms into Ganon at the end of OoT? Well, I hear that the only time that Ganondorf's shape would change is in the Dark Realm. After all, Link turns into a rabbit there. Please respond!