The story of The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time spends much of its time re-developing the lore of Hyrule first generated by its predecessors, namely Link to the Past. One thing it keeps in spirit but changes are the Spiritual Stones and their exact purpose.

Much of Ocarina of Time's story revolves around the three goddesses Din, Nayru, and Farore. After the three goddesses created the Earth, the law, and life respectively, they left behind the Triforce. However, leaving the Triforce in the mortal world led to a Hyrulean Civil War that takes place before the events of the game, one that has lasting ramifications for Link.

RELATED: Sorry, The Nintendo Doesn't Need Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time

Spiritual Stones and Their Narrative Weight

Nintendo's story-driven formula for the Zelda series starts with the release of A Link to the Past, which first tasks players to acquire the Master Sword by obtaining the three Pendants of Virtue. These Pendants served as the first iteration of a now-recurring three MacGuffin quest, and in Ocarina of Time Nintendo chose to turn the Pendants into the Spiritual Stones. The Pendants of Virtue grant Link the ability to draw the Master Sword from its pedestal, and the Spiritual Stones grant him the same access. Yet, the stones have more narrative weight behind them.

The Spiritual Stones are divine items that are essentially useless on their own. Before the events of Ocarina of Time was the Hyrulean Civil War. The point where the three goddesses of creation left the world is the location of the Triforce, which has the power to grant any wish to the one who comes into contact with it, and so all of Hyrule waged war over that power. In order to stop the war and restore balance to Hyrule, the Triforce was sealed away in the Sacred Realm behind the Door of Time. The location of the Triforce was supposed to be kept a secret in Hyrule's royal family.

Sealing the door is the power of the three Spiritual Stones gifted to the three races' guardians: the Kokiri's Emerald was gifted to the Great Deku Tree, the Goron's Ruby to Darunia's ancestors, and the Zora's Sapphire to Zora royalty. Ganondorf's evil plan to claim the Triforce is discovered by the guardians and he is not granted the stones, which leads him to curse each of the guardian deities.

RELATED: The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time Is Nintendo's Skyrim

ocarina of time link ruto zora sapphire

The player's quest for the Spiritual Stones starts with acquiring the Kokiri's Emerald, bestowed onto Link by the Great Deku Tree: the guardian deity of Kokiri Forest. The Great Deku tree dies after gifting the stone to Link, but not before explaining Hyrule's creation story. This is a powerful moment as it goes to show how strong Ganondorf could become if he obtains access to the Triforce - which generates a real sense of urgency in the world. With the first stone in hand, Link goes on to receive the other two.

The Spiritual Stones backfire on the land of Hyrule, however, as Link breaks the seal on the Door of Time and grants Ganondorf access to the Sacred Realm where he obtains the Triforce of Power. In this sense, it seems that the duty of the Spiritual Stones to protect the Triforce only delayed the inevitable. However, the Triforce did not grant itself entirely to Ganondorf, leaving him to collect the other two pieces from their owners: Link and Zelda. Perhaps it was only a matter of time until someone evil gained access to the Sacred Realm, it would make sense then that the seven sages are a backup plan for order to be restored, which takes up the rest of Link's adventure.

The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time 3D is available on the 3DS.

MORE: Where is the Master Sword in Zelda: Breath of the Wild 2?