Material

From Zelda Wiki, the Zelda encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Materials are a recurring type of item in The Legend of Zelda series used in creating new items.[1][2][name references needed]

Location and Uses

Tri Force Heroes

Main article: Magical Material

Magical Materials are used to craft various Outfits at Madame Couture's.

List of Magical Materials

See more Magical Materials in Tri Force Heroes

Breath of the Wild

Materials in Breath of the Wild can be found all throughout Hyrule, after defeating enemies, in Treasure Chests, or hunting for food. They cover a wide variety of items, and as such have a wide variety of uses. Materials can sometimes be eaten raw, but are best cooked together to create much more nourishing Food, that restore more hearts and have other positive effects. Each type of Material occupies its own slot. There is a maximum capacity of 999 Materials per slot.[3] Materials are also used to have the Great Fairies upgrade armor.

Materials can be sold for Rupees as well. The listed value is the price a merchant will pay Link for the item. Buying these items from most merchants will cost Link four times this value; Beedle will charge five times this value. Select materials may also be exchanged for Mon by Kilton.

List of Materials

See more Materials in Breath of the Wild

Tears of the Kingdom

Materials are used in a variety of ways. They are commonly dropped by Enemies but may also be found along the ground.

List of Materials

See more Materials in Tears of the Kingdom

Other Appearances

Hyrule Warriors

In Hyrule Warriors, Materials are similar to Spoils and Treasures in that each Material is a unique Item possessed by the Enemy that dropped it. Materials are dropped by nearly every Enemy type except Cuccos and infantry soldiers, and only when the Enemy does not drop a Dropped Weapon. They come in three rarities, with at most two rarities of item for each enemy type. The most common are Bronze Materials, which are the only item drops for the basic infantry Captains. Silver Materials are dropped by unique Captains, Warriors, and Giant Bosses. Rare Gold Materials are dropped only by Warriors and Giant Bosses. Enemies can be influenced to drop their rarer Materials by using Weapons with the "Material+" Skill, by creating a special Mixture in the Apothecary, or by activating the reward while using Focus Spirit.

Materials are primarily used to craft Badges for the playable Warriors, with each Badge having its own recipe of specific Materials. Materials can also be used to brew one-use elixirs by consuming a set amount of any Material of a given rarity.

List of Materials

Enemy Materials
Enemy Bronze Silver

Bulblin

Metal Plate

Stalchild

Monster Tooth

Bokoblin

Old Rag

Hylian Soldier

Soldier's Uniform

Goron

Rock

Aeralfos

Aeralfos Leather

Round Aeralfos Shield

Fiery Aeralfos

Fiery Aeralfos Leather

Fiery Aeralfos Wing

Gibdo

Gibdo Bandage

Heavy Gibdo Sword

ReDead Knight

ReDead Bandage

ReDead Knight Ashes

Lizalfos

Lizalfos Scale

Lizalfos Gauntlet

Dinolfos

Dinolfos Fang

Dinolfos Arm Guard

Moblin

Moblin Flank

Moblin Spear

Shield Moblin

Shield-Moblin Helmet

Metal Moblin Shield

Darknut

Piece of Darknut Armor

Large Darknut Sword

Stalmaster

Stalmaster Wrist Bone

Stalmaster's Skull

Big Poe

Big Poe Necklace

Big Poe's Lantern

Icy Big Poe

Essence of Icy Big Poe

Icy Big Poe's Talisman

Hylian Captain

Hylian Captain Gauntlet

Holy Hylian Shield

Goron Captain

Goron Armor Breastplate

Thick Goron Helmet
Boss Materials
Boss Silver Gold

Ganon

Ganon's Mane

Ganon's Fang

King Dodongo

King Dodongo's Claws

King Dodongo's Crystal

Gohma

Gohma's Acid

Gohma's Lens

Manhandla

Manhandla's Toxic Dust

Manhandla's Sapling

Argorok

Argorok's Embers

Argorok's Stone

The Imprisoned

The Imprisoned's Scales

The Imprisoned's Pillar

Cia

Cia's Bracelet

Cia's Staff

Volga

Volga's Helmet

Volga's Dragon Spear

Wizzro

Wizzro's Robe

Wizzro's Ring

Link

Young Link

Link's Boots

Link's Scarf

Lana

Lana's Hair Clip

Lana's Cloak

Zelda

Zelda's Brooch

Zelda's Tiara

Impa

Impa's Hair Band

Impa's Breastplate

Ganondorf

Ganondorf's Gauntlet

Ganondorf's Jewel

Sheik

Sheik's Kunai

Sheik's Turban

Darunia

Darunia's Spikes

Darunia's Bracelet

Ruto

Ruto's Earrings

Ruto's Scale

Agitha

Agitha's Basket

Agitha's Pendant

Midna

Twili Midna

Midna's Hair

Midna's Fused Shadow

Fi

Fi's Heels

Fi's Crystal

Ghirahim

Ghirahim's Sash

Ghirahim's Cape

Zant

Zant's Magic Gem

Zant's Helmet

Hyrule Warriors Legends

Materials in Hyrule Warriors Legends are primarily the same as those in Hyrule Warriors, with the addition of new Materials for Warriors who did not yield any in Hyrule Warriors, as well as for monsters and Warriors who exist exclusively in Hyrule Warriors Legends. Certain Warriors, such as Young Link and Twili Midna, also received their own set of Materials apart from their counterparts.

List of Materials

Enemy Materials
Enemy Bronze Silver

Miniblin Captain

Monster Horn

Big Blin

Big Blin Hide

Big Blin Club

Stone Blin

Stone Blin Buckler

Stone Blin Helmet
Enemy Materials
Enemy Silver Gold

The Imprisoned (Miniature Version)

The Imprisoned's Scales

The Imprisoned's Pillar
Boss Materials
Boss Silver Gold

Helmaroc King

Helmaroc Plume

Helmaroc King's Mask

Phantom Ganon

Phantom Ganon's Cape

Phantom Ganon's Sword

King Daphnes

King Daphnes's Robe

King Daphnes's Crown

Linkle

Linkle's Boots

Linkle's Compass

Marin

Zelda's Brooch

Zelda's Tiara

Medli

Ruto's Earrings

Ruto's Scale

Skull Kid

Skull Kid's Hat

Majora's Mask

Tetra

Toon Zelda

Tetra's Sandals

Tetra's Bandana

Tingle

Tingle's Map

Tingle's Watch

Toon Link

Pirate's Charm

Island Outfit

Twili Midna

Twili Midna's Hairpin

Twili Midna's Robe

Young Link

Ravio

Young Link's Belt

Keaton Mask

Yuga

Ganondorf's Gauntlet

Ganondorf's Jewel

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity


List of Materials

See more Materials in Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity

Trivia

  • During development of Breath of the Wild, crabs were used to create elixirs; however, Nate Bihldorff, senior director of localization at Nintendo of America, convinced Hidemaro Fujibayashi, the game's director, to use them for cooking recipes instead.[4]

Nomenclature

Names in Other Regions
LanguageNamesMeanings
Japan
Japanese
素材 (Sozai) (BotW) 
The Kingdom of the Netherlands
Dutch
Ingrediënten (BotW)[6]Ingredients
The Italian Republic
Italian
Materiale (BotW) 
Latin America
SpanishLA
Material (TotK)[5]
This table was generated using translation pages.
To request an addition, please contact a staff member with a reference.

Gallery

References

  1. "Materials" — Tutorial (Hyrule Warriors: Definitive Edition)
  2. "Materials" — Inventory (Breath of the Wild)
  3. Kleric, BotW Glitches & Tricks: Hold Smuggling, and Dead Link Inventory. , YouTube.
  4. "Nate had made it out to the beach, where he found some crab and a campfire with a pot at sunset. Feeling very pleased with himself, he threw some crab in the pot with some spicy peppers, only to find out crab wasn’t used for food recipes—it was for elixirs! This happened to fit perfectly with my own personal description of crustaceans as being “the insects of the sea,” but as an east coaster who grew up on crab, Nate wasn’t having it. He contacted Fujibayashi-san that night and began passionately explaining to the development team how much people like to eat crab, begging him to add crab dishes to the menu." — Bill Trinen, Now You’re Cooking with Power , Tumblr, published May 3, 2017, retrieved May 3, 2017.
  5. "Materiales" — Inventory (Tears of the Kingdom)
  6. "Ingrediënten" — Inventory (Breath of the Wild)