Not... in its entirety, but there are pieces that are familiar. In Hyrule, the Great Fairies will bless those they consider to be worthy with special abilities, one of which being the ability to summon and control magical fire.
[Din's Fire sure would be handy in this frozen over hell hole.
Korra's tone stirs something in her, though between wondering if it's truly her story to tell and cabin fever's creeping paranoia (don't talk about him to them, they'll bring him here and he will only suffer more for your pride), she hesitates before continuing. She tries to remain distant, detached, but she can't quite mask the melancholy undercurrent to her voice as she speaks.]
... There is a place known as the Kokiri Forest in my world. Inside it live a race of children who never age, each protected by their own guardian fairy and their deity, the Great Deku Tree. Few ever enter the magic-rich woods, and it is said that if the Kokiri ever leave, they will die.
One day, a man who sought to conquer the world demanded the Great Deku Tree give him the spiritual treasure it guarded. When the Tree refused, the man cursed it with a plague that would wither it from the inside out. The Deku Tree then called upon the one boy was not accompanied by a fairy, and asked him to defeat the evil festering inside of it. The boy proved his courage and succeeded, but it was too late; the curse had taken its toll on the Deku Tree to the point it would not be able to recover. In its last moments, the Tree gave the boy the Spiritual Stone of the Forest that it had refused to give the man earlier, and told him to seek out the Princess of Destiny, who lived beyond the boundaries of the Kokiri Forest.
The Kokiri believed they would die if they left the forest, but this boy left and survived, and would later go on to save the world from the power-hungry wizard.
[A pause, accompanied by a quiet sigh.]
... Their circumstances are quite different, but there is a certain underlying similarity, at least.
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[Din's Fire sure would be handy in this frozen over hell hole.
Korra's tone stirs something in her, though between wondering if it's truly her story to tell and cabin fever's creeping paranoia (don't talk about him to them, they'll bring him here and he will only suffer more for your pride), she hesitates before continuing. She tries to remain distant, detached, but she can't quite mask the melancholy undercurrent to her voice as she speaks.]
... There is a place known as the Kokiri Forest in my world. Inside it live a race of children who never age, each protected by their own guardian fairy and their deity, the Great Deku Tree. Few ever enter the magic-rich woods, and it is said that if the Kokiri ever leave, they will die.
One day, a man who sought to conquer the world demanded the Great Deku Tree give him the spiritual treasure it guarded. When the Tree refused, the man cursed it with a plague that would wither it from the inside out. The Deku Tree then called upon the one boy was not accompanied by a fairy, and asked him to defeat the evil festering inside of it. The boy proved his courage and succeeded, but it was too late; the curse had taken its toll on the Deku Tree to the point it would not be able to recover. In its last moments, the Tree gave the boy the Spiritual Stone of the Forest that it had refused to give the man earlier, and told him to seek out the Princess of Destiny, who lived beyond the boundaries of the Kokiri Forest.
The Kokiri believed they would die if they left the forest, but this boy left and survived, and would later go on to save the world from the power-hungry wizard.
[A pause, accompanied by a quiet sigh.]
... Their circumstances are quite different, but there is a certain underlying similarity, at least.