Despite all signs pointing to her return, Fi’s absence inThe Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdombegs the question of how long the series can go on until it gives her the opportunity to bring some closure toThe Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword. Though she remains as arguably one ofZelda’smore controversial characters, the significanceSkyward Swordhas for the series' canon and Fi’s relationship to the Master Sword often leads to speculation about her possible return in a future game. Among other factors, this is likely what prompted fans to suspectFi might return inTears of the Kingdom.

Beyond this initial speculation,The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdomgave far more hints that Fi was going to play an integral role due to early teases of the Master Sword’s decayed state and the heavy emphasis on old kingdoms and sky islands. However, besides several references that seemed to pay tribute to Fi, such as her theme making a reprisal during cutscenes with the Master Sword, Fi never wound up appearing inTears of the Kingdom. But Fi will always remain a contentious sticking point among fans as, unlike previousZeldacompanions, she is technically always present within the Master Sword and in need of overdue closure.

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How Skyward Sword and Fi Influenced Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom

Leading up to and even after its release,Tears of the Kingdomcontained many ideas and themes that seemed to have beeninspired bySkyward Sword. For instance, early trailers were quick to advertiseTears of the Kingdom’ssky islands, while post-launch players soon pieced together its time-travel plot that appeared to parallelSkyward Sword’sown plot of Hyrule’s formation and islands lifted into the sky to escape evil’s reach. Strengthened by the fact thatBreath of the Wildalso hinted towards aSkyward Swordconnection with uncanny similarities with locations like the Spring of Power or the Forgotten Temple’s Goddess Statue.

But beyond general speculation such as arguing thatTears of the Kingdomseems to breakSkyward Sword’scycleand Fi should have returned as part of this closing narrative arc, there were more explicit signs that Fi would have returned. Between her theme being played during vital story cutscenes involving the Master Sword, the sword itself appearing to have some sentience signaled through glowing light, and characters referring to the sword with she/her pronouns, Fi’s presence was keenly felt. Even in spite of the perfect storyline for her return involving the Master Sword’s recovery from Ganondorf’s Gloom, Fi remains canonically relevant but crucially absent.

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Zelda Needs To Acknowledge Fi Eventually

Though she hasn’t outright featured inTears of the Kingdomyet, futureZeldagames will need to address Fi eventually, as her role within the series narrative has been overlooked. For any other supporting characters like Navi or Ezlo, this wouldn’t be an issue because their significance is limited to just one or two games, but Fi’s purpose within theMaster Sword spans the entirety ofZeldacanon, making her Link’s silent but ever-present companion. Given that Fi’s character arc explored her relationship with Link and her own emotional development, her bittersweet goodbye and lack of sufficient closure have only been amplified by her continued absence.

More specifically,Skyward Sword’sending hinted at Fi’s potential return at some point in theZeldaseries, as she told Link that she hopes to meet him again. While this could have been Nintendo’s way of tying up any loose ends forZeldalore, it does imply that, alongside her Master Sword role, she would feature in another game. AsTears of the Kingdomhas so far come to the closest to her return, Nintendo shouldn’t hold back anymore and give Fi an arc to completeSkyward Sword’sstory, perhaps throughfutureTears of the KingdomDLCor even all-newZeldagames.

The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdomis available now on Nintendo Switch.

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