Wow u are stupid!
The last level on Zelda twilight princess is hyrule castle where you face the final boss ganondorf.
The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess came out in 2006, almost twenty years after the first game in the Final Fantasy series. Twilight Princess itself was released a few months after Final Fantasy XII.However, Twilight Princess is the thirteenth instalment of the Legend of Zelda series, the first game of which was released before the first Final Fantasy game, in 1986.
by beating the final boss
Its called a Master Sword, Zelda tells you how to get it near the end of the game.
No link was not supposed to. Zelda gets them in the 3rd part of the final battle to help you beat Ganondorf.
In Twilight Princess, like most Zelda games, you are not able to save after defeating the final boss. This allows you to go back and complete any side quests you want and/or beat the boss again if you'd like.
Its a game where you can fight the final boss fight over and over again. This is in every Zelda game, and no one knows why.
He is killing Ganondorf. You only wounded him. By defdeating Zant you saved him and he is supposedly wih the goddesses
the final boss is in the bedroom of the Yeti. Blizzetta is accessable once Yeta finds the actual room key after getting you to run around everywhere.
Following the final boss fight against Ganon in Twilight Princess, Midna transforms into her original form. Zelda, Link, and Midna gather in the Mirror Chamber, where Midna returns to the Twilight Realm. She permanently shatters the mirror as she leaves, making it impossible to travel between realms.
A sky city is a place in Twilight princess (the best game ever.) You go to it after temple of time. You get the final shard of twilight there. After that you go to the twilight zone.
you cant. after you beat gannondorf you can't save, so if you go to that file again, it will be as if you never finished the final temple.The reason it is that way is so that you can still do the side quests, such as the poe souls, and fishing and things.