Deku Tree

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Greatdekutree.jpg
The Deku Tree in Ocarina of Time.
The Great Deku Tree
Species Tree Deity
Base Kokiri Forest (OoT)
Forest Haven (TWW)
Korok Forest (BotW)
Voiced by Sean Chiplock (2017)
Debut The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

The Great Deku Tree is a sentient tree who has appeared in several The Legend of Zelda games as a helpful figure. He is an earth spirit who usually functions as a type of guardian deity for the forest.

Background

Ocarina of Time

The Deku Tree was rooted within a grove of the Kokiri Forest. The forest was inhabited by the Kokiri children, whom the Deku Tree created and watched over. Although they were detached from the rest of Hyrule and did not usually accept outsiders, the Deku Tree did accept the responsibility of watching over the Spiritual Stone of the Forest, which was the Kokiri's Emerald. This was one of the three keys to the Sacred Realm. He was wise and very familiar with Hyrulian lore on the subject. His main problem was that, being a tree rooted to the ground, he could not move and was defenseless particularly towards parasitic attacks. The Deku Tree's body was hollow, and the interior had a dungeon-like structure. When a dying woman sought haven in the Kokiri Forest, the Deku Tree accepted her request to take her newborn son in and raise him as a Kokiri, as he was able to tell that the baby was a child of destiny whose fate would affect the whole world. This Hylian orphan was Link, who would grow up to become the Hero of Time.

One day, the Deku Tree was visited by a man from the desert known as Ganondorf who sought the Kokiri's Emerald. When the tree refused, Ganondorf cursed him and infected his body with monsters: Skulltullas, Deku Scrubs, Deku Babas and parasitic Gohmas led by Queen Gohma. The Great Deku Tree decided to call for Link and assigned him a fairy named Navi as his guide. The time had come to test Link's courage and wisdom, so the Deku Tree asked Link to destroy the evil within him. With Navi's help, Link succeeded in destroying Queen Gohma, which freed the Deku Tree from the curse. It was still too late for the Deku Tree, but he still passed on a lesson about the Triforce. In the Deku Tree's dying moments, he granted Link the Kokiri's Emerald and sent him to meet Princess Zelda. His body proceeded to wither.

Although that shell of the tree died, his spirit carried over to a sapling of the Great Deku Tree. Dark forces around Hyrule prevented it from sprouting until seven years later, when Link extinguished the evil from the Forest Temple. This sprout was presumably also born in the other two timelines connected to Ocarina of Time, although the Deku Tree has not appeared in any form within games set in those timelines.

The Wind Waker

Over the years many things changed. As Hyrule was flooded after the Hero of Time's disappearance, the Great Deku Tree and Kokiri were forced to move to a mountain that became an island, known as the Forest Haven. The Great Deku Tree was also given Farore's Pearl, a treasure of one of the Golden Goddesses. The Deku Tree now had a new dream- every year he held a ceremony in which he sprouted seeds, and the Kokiri, who had changed into Koroks, went and planted those seeds across the Great Sea. These would produce new Deku Trees, and maybe one day all the islands would be connected by the trees into one continent again.

In The Wind Waker Ganondorf struck at the Deku Tree again with a swarm of Chuchus. A boy in green named Link arrived to stop them and was able to save the Deku Tree. The Great Deku Tree was stunned by Link's appearance and begun speaking to the hero in the old language until he realized that this was not the same Link- this was a new one, discovered by the King of Red Lions. He had come for the pearl. The Great Deku Tree granted it to Link only after he saved Makar from the Forbidden Woods. The Great Deku Tree then resumed his peaceful existence in the Forest Haven, patiently awaiting the day his vision comes true.

Breath of the Wild

In Breath of the Wild, the Deku Tree resided in the Korok Forest with the Korok tribe and claimed to have looked after Hyrule "since time immemorial". He specifically watched after the Master Sword, with its pedestal being located on the ground directly in front of him. Link had claimed the Master Sword and originally met the Deku Tree during the first conflict with Calamity Ganon. However, that battle ultimately ended in failure, at which point Princess Zelda came to the forest to restore the Master Sword to its pedestal, where it could rest until Link was restored and ready to reclaim it. The Deku Tree asked Zelda about what she planned to do next and commended the dedication that he sensed in her. Zelda tried to give him a message to relay to Link upon his return, but the Deku Tree cut her off before she could verbalize it, because he felt that any message for him would sound better coming directly from her. This expressed his belief that Zelda and Link would be reunited, and it brought a smile to Zelda's face.

The Deku Tree and the Koroks awaited the eventual return of the hero, and some of the Koroks went as far as to set up shops and services within hollowed out parts of the Deku Tree's stomach that the Hero could use upon his return. Link did eventually return one hundred years later, although the Deku Tree soon realized that he had lost his memories and grown weaker. The Deku Tree urged the hero only to try to claim the Master Sword when he was stronger (a strength measured by his heart meter), and he would also cut off any first attempt in which Link was on the brink of draining his heart meter to pull out the sword. If Link ultimately succeeded in reclaiming the Master Sword, the Deku Tree would proceed to advise Link about its proper usage. He also mentioned his hope to see the lost princess's smile once again.

Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland

In Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland, the Great Deku Tree existed in the Deku Forest on a small self-contained island. Although he was strong and healthy, his child sapling had become ill from the pollution by humans. He was approached by Tingle who was busy on his quest to get enough rupees to reach Rupeeland. With the assistance of the resident hero, Junglo, he has traversed the forest maze to reach the Deku Tree's location.

The Deku Tree bid Tingle to enter and go to his roots and retrieve a bottle of Life Dew, which would cure the Deku Sprout. However Tingle had difficulty entering and had to pay a fine to open the way in (an amount of no specific value, the Deku Tree transferred that amount to a chest as his entire 'savings' to fight pollution). Inside Tingle found that three poisonous plants were blocking the way to the Life Dew and he had to defeat the three of them.

At the bottom of the Deku Tree was a vat full of Life Dew, but it had been polluted beyond use. Tingle discovered that a monster in possession of a Super Rupee had been polluting the Life Dew. Tingle defeated the monster and in doing so, purified the Dew Water and healed the Deku Sprout. But in doing so, the Great Deku Tree wilted, allowing the sprout to succeed him as it had been done with previous trees.

Other Appearances

Video Games

  • In Nintendo Land, a non-speaking recreation of the Deku Tree appears as part of the scenery in the "The Legend of Zelda: Battle Quest" game. The Deku Tree can also be won as a prize in the game.
  • In Hyrule Warriors, the Deku Tree is part of the Faron Woods map, and its hollow inside acts as a fortress. It shows no signs of being conscious. Additionally, some of Lana's spear attacks involve making a Deku Tree grow around the enemy or summoning the Deku Tree Sprout to help attack, and her Focus Spirit special move involves riding the sprout.

Other Media

  • The Great Deku Tree also appears in the Ocarina of Time manga. This version follows the game's story, but with some changes such as Link carving his Deku Shield from the Deku Tree's remains, and the Deku Tree sprout not being seen until the end of the last chapter. The Deku Tree also appears in a two-part side chapter starring the Kokiri characters and set before the events of the manga, which shows the Bagu Tree as the dark rival of the Deku Tree.

Trivia

  • "Deku" is Japanese for "wooden figure or doll/puppet", and within the series the term is used to refer to various other creatures or items associated with the forest such as Deku Scrubs and Deku Babas..
  • There appears to have been a succession of at least three Deku Trees. If each appearance is considered to be a separate incarnation, there could have been as many as six.
  • In Ocarina of Time, the Deku Tree is shown to speak in a form of Old English. The Deku Tree sprout instead speaks standard English and is more upbeat.
  • Oracle of Ages and Seasons, Link meets the Maku Trees (one male and the other female), who are similar to the Deku Tree.