Tears of the Kingdom fans are making sweet tunes with Zonai devices

There’s a lot to do The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom, from bullying Koroks to hunting shrines. But the game’s incredible depth has led fans to discover more unusual ways to pass the time. For example, the game’s stakes each produce a unique tone when hit, if you place them at different depths and angles. Players have spent their time in the game recreating hit songs and putting on the most incredible concerts Hyrule has ever seen. It takes a little effort, but with Ultrahand and a little elbow grease, there’s nothing Link can’t accomplish.

A player on Twitter showed off their rendition of the Undertale song Megalovania,” which plays when the laser beam hits a sequence of perfectly matched bets. The video has garnered over 100,000 likes on Twitter, and it’s undeniably impressive to see this impromptu musical structure at work.

In this TikTok, usually user Melbourne represents an evolution of the process. Someone like me, who is very impressed when they realize they can attach monster horns to weapons for better results, will probably activate a stage 1 or 2 machine with weapons or arrows. However, a great brain genius can build an automated device that hits the stakes and creates a beautiful Christmas tune.

You can even use minecarts to make a nice song as shown by Notable on TikTok. Ganon, the absolute fool, bided his time in the shadows, waiting for a legendary hero to emerge. He didn’t expect, I suppose, that this hero would ignore him and make sick music tracks using ancient magic and a minecart.

Note-able, a leading intellectual and opinion leader in dynamic video game play, has even gone ahead and started prototyping a rickroll machine. I try to defeat the Yiga clan and find some nice apples for a good meal. These players create works of art. It is clear that we are not the same.

Tears of the Kingdom offers an incredible amount of player freedom, and it’s fascinating to see all the tools that are created as a result. Personally, I’m just glad this ingenuity isn’t being used to set fire to the Koroks.