Alright, buckle up, because we’re diving headfirst into the wild and wacky world of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom. So, there’s this genius of an engineer tinkering around in-game who, surprise surprise, cooked up a flying contraption. And the kicker? It needs zero power to keep on floating. Like, imagine a car that never runs out of gas—mind blown, right? Anyway, the trick lies in the design. Yeah, they skipped the battery part altogether.
So, Tears of the Kingdom is this game that just hit its two-year anniversary and—get this—people are still geeking out over it. Players are building all kinds of crazy vehicles, and this flying thingamajig is just the latest. Speaking of updates, Nintendo dropped some fresh content for Tears of the Kingdom and Breath of the Wild. What did they do, you ask? Made it all shiny and new for the Nintendo Switch 2 rollout. Also, there are a bunch of new achievements, which is neat, I guess.
Some clever Redditor called scalhoun03 just rolled out a new flying device in a video. Imagine this: it’s got two massive springs on its back. Don’t ask me how that works, but apparently, it uses these springs to just zoom off, gliding across the land without needing energy. How cool is that?
Not the first time someone thought of using springs for wings, though. It’s like a trend now in Hyrule or something. What’s unique about this piece of wizardry is its simplicity—no weapons cluttering it up, meaning no need for Zonai Batteries. And if you think about it, wouldn’t it be cooler with weapons? Some people think so. A flying fortress, only draining power when fighting—that’d be something to see.
Oh, and there are more gadgets people are coming up with using springs. Like these makeshift catapults to fling Link around. Not sure how practical that is, but hey, some folks dig the chaos.
So, where does this leave us? With a game that’s still buzzing with creativity and fans going nuts with their inventions. It’s this never-ending adventure where the only limit is, well, how wild your imagination can get. And now, somehow, springs are breaking the laws of physics. Who would’ve thought?