Skip to main content

Before Tears of the Kingdom, you need to play Zelda’s most underrated game

With The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom less than one month away, it’s as good a time as any to revisit Breath of the Wild. Maybe you still have a few shrines to clear out, or perhaps you never defeated Calamity Ganon (it’s OK, you can admit it). Now might be your last chance to finish that story before diving headfirst into Hyrule’s next chapter. Breath of the Wild isn’t the only Zelda game you’re going to want to finish before May 12, though; Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity is a must-play that needs to be on your prelaunch checklist.

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity - Announcement Trailer - Nintendo Switch

Age of Calamity is a Dynasty Warriors-style action RPG that acts as a prequel to Breath of the Wild. Set before the Calamity, it tells the story of Link, Zelda, and the four champions trying to thwart Ganon’s plans to conquer Hyrule. It’s Zelda’s version of Rogue One, with its heroes trying to fight off a fate that players know is inevitable.

Well, sort of.

Recommended Videos

Despite gaining positive buzz at launch, Age of Calamity was a bit of a mixed bag for fans. Musou gameplay always tends to be a bit hit-and-miss with mainstream audiences, so it was no surprise that not everyone was on board with its hack-and-slash combat. Even more polarizing, though, was its story. Let’s just say that Age of Calamity takes a few liberties with the Zelda timeline, crafting more of an alternate history story than a true prequel. While that decision has led some to label it a “cop out,” that doesn’t mean you should skip it entirely. Age of Calamity includes some crucial lore and character development that you’ll want to dig into before starting Tears of the Kingdom.

More than a musou

While Age of Calamity’s narrative may not be “canon,” it still expands the world of Breath of the Wild in some crucial ways. History plays a major role in the latter game, with Link trying to piece together what happened before the Calamity. We flash back to some of those moments in unlockable memories, but we only get a few glimpses into the past by the end. Age of Calamity allows players to experience that era firsthand and spend more time with characters who we’d only gotten flashes of previously.

Most valuable here is the way Age of Calamity fleshes out Hyrule’s champions, the four heroes who are dead by the time Link awakens from his long slumber. When Breath of the Wild ended, I was dying to know more about characters like Revali and Daruk. Age of Calamity doesn’t just treat them as faceless hack-and-slash characters, but actually gives some insight into who they were before the Calamity. With full voice acting and high-quality cutscenes, the action RPG explores the real heroes that have been turned into folk legends a century later in the series’ timeline.

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Breath of the Wild’s divine beasts get a similar treatment here. When that game begins, the hulking machines are a bit mysterious. Players are told that they were once important weapons that could be the key to taking down Ganon, but we never really see their power. Even in the finale, they feel more like glowing MacGuffins than war-winning machines.

Age of Calamity is an important missing link in that sense. A handful of missions let players actually pilot the beasts, using them to wipe out thousands upon thousands of enemies in the blink of an eye. They’re wildly fun musou action set pieces, delivering Zelda’s ultimate power fantasy, but they also retroactively add some stakes back into Breath of the Wild. Age of Calamity makes it clear that these aren’t just mobile dungeons to be conquered, but true weapons of mass destruction that shouldn’t be taken lightly.

Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Zelda has her moment

In its best moments, Age of Calamity excels at delivering sequences like that — ones that deepen my understanding of Breath of the Wild despite not perfectly aligning with its story. The best example of that comes from the way it handles the series’ titular character: Zelda herself. For decades, the princess has played second fiddle to Link as he heroically saves the day. Breath of the Wild presents a much richer version of the character, but she’s still largely out of the picture for the duration of the adventure.

In Age of Calamity, though, she’s the main character. The game tells an almost self-reflexive story about Zelda grappling with the fact that she’s always treated as a sidekick. She learns to awaken her true potential here, finally establishing why she’s so important to a series that’s borne her name for decades. That effective character journey completely recolored my view of the series and has me going into Tears of the Kingdom excited to see how she grows from here.

Though its hack-and-slash combat may not be for everyone, you’d be missing out if you decide to outright skip past Hyrule Warriors: Age of Calamity and go straight into Tears of the Kingdom. It may be an optional side story, but it’s a fulfilling spinoff that pays off a lot of Breath of the Wild’s lip service. Plus, what else are you going to do for the next grueling three weeks?

Giovanni Colantonio
As Digital Trends' Senior Gaming Editor, Giovanni Colantonio oversees all things video games at Digital Trends. As a veteran…
Our favorite Switch games of 2023: Tears of the Kingdom, Mario, and much more
Link stands behind text that says Best Switch Games 2023.

If 2023 was our last full year with the Nintendo Switch, what a heck of a sendoff it got.

The rumor mill has been buzzing for months now, claiming that Nintendo plans to reveal and release its Switch successor next year. While that’s a rumor you should take with some skepticism, there’s good reason to believe it may happen. Nintendo reportedly showed off the system to developers behind closed doors at Gamescom this year, and the Switch’s current 2024 lineup feels like the final drop we’d get right before a new system. The Switch could be old news this time next year.

Read more
Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom isn’t our Game of the Year, but it’s the strongest No. 2 ever
Link giving a thumbs-up with a smile.

When we asked our writers to give us a list of their favorite games of 2023, everyone had a different game in the top spot. We saw votes for Super Mario Bros. Wonder, Alan Wake 2, Hi-Fi Rush, and even Sonic Superstars. Baldur's Gate 3 ultimately won out, but what stuck out to me the most following that process was how, on almost everyone's list, the same game was in that No. 2 slot: The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.

Released by Nintendo in May after a long wait, Tears of the Kingdom would have been the industry's unequivocal game of the year in any other year. Although its competition was too stiff in this packed year for that to be the case, that doesn't make Tears of the Kingdom any less of an experience. In fact, I think that earning a spot near the top on almost everyone's personal list at Digital Trends demonstrates how widely appealing Nintendo's latest Zelda game is and that end-of-year gaming conversations should be about uplifting great games, not nitpicking their flaws to determine which one's the best.
Recognizing great games
Tears of the Kingdom is a monumental achievement in open-world game design. It essentially has three worlds stacked on top of each other. From almost any point in Hyrule, it's possible to stop, look around, and find several points of interest around, above, and below yourself. That alone makes it a game that consistently delivers a sense of awe and discovery, even after dozens of hours of playtime.

Read more
The 10 best video games of 2023
Video game characters appear in front of a Game of the Year 2023 logo.

I wish I could say that 2023 was a fantastic year for video games, but that wouldn't tell the full story.

On a surface level, yes, this year was one of the best players have seen since 2017 thanks to a seemingly endless list of top-tier releases. The fact that a game like The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom wasn't a shoo-in for Game of the Year honors speaks volumes to just how many unforgettable experiences developers created this year. From the dystopian abyss of Armored Core VI: Fires of Rubicon to the scenic mountains of A Highland Song, video games transported us to so many incredible worlds that it's been hard to keep track of them all.

Read more