Fire Temple (Spirit Tracks)
From Zelda Wiki, the Zelda encyclopedia
- For the dungeon in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time, see Fire Temple (Ocarina of Time).
| The entrance to the temple in Spirit Tracks | |
| Location(s) | Fire Realm |
| Game(s) | Spirit Tracks |
| Main Item | Bow |
| Mini-boss(es) | Heatoise |
| Boss(es) | Cragma |
| Quest Reward(s) | Force Gem restored |
| Element(s) | |
The Fire Temple (also known as the Mountain Temple) is a dungeon in Spirit Tracks. The dungeon’s main item is the Bow and its boss is Cragma.
Contents |
Entrance to the Temple
The Fire Temple is located at the summit of the mountain in the Fire Realm. Link has to meet with Embrose to play the Song of Fire Restoration and open the way to the dungeon. The area where the temple lies is guarded by three Snurglars, all of which hold three keys that will open the entrance to the temple once retrieved by Link.
Many of the puzzles in the temple involve platforms that can be used to stand atop small volcanoes, and Arrow Orbs that redirect the trajectory of an arrow. In a similar way to the Cave of Flames in The Minish Cap, the Fire Temple houses minecarts that help Link move from a point to another quickly. The dungeon item is a Bow, which is obtained after defeating the mini-boss of the dungeon, Heatoise. Cragma is the boss of the Fire Temple. After he is defeated, the Spirit Tracks connecting the Fire Realm to the Tower of Spirits are restored.
In both this temple and the following one, the background music is different from the usual dungeon theme heard in the first three temples.
Enemies
| Image | Name |
|---|---|
| Blade Trap | |
| Fire Keese | |
| Heatoise | |
| Moldola | |
| Stalfos |
Trivia
- The name in the UK version of Spirit Tracks, "Mountain Temple", may provide an explanation for why the rabbits in the fire realm are called mountain rabbits and not "fire" rabbits.
- While both this temple and the temple from Ocarina of Time share the same name in English (US) and other languages, their Japanese names are slightly different (火の神殿 Hi no Shinden and 炎の神殿 Honō no Shinden, respectively). 火 hi literally translates as 'fire', while 炎 honō usually means 'flame' or 'blaze'. It was likely translated as Fire for sake of clarity.
Gallery
The true height of the Fire Temple in Spirit Tracks, shown with black space to represent the spacing of the two Nintendo DS screens.
See Also
| | ||
|---|---|---|
| Language | Name | |
| English | |
Mountain Temple |
| Japanese | |
火の神殿 (Hi no Shinden) |
| Spanish | |
Templo del Fuego |
| French | |
Temple du Feu |
| German | |
Feuertempel |
| Italian | |
Tempio delle Fiamme |
| Stations in Spirit Tracks | |
|---|---|
![]() Click on a station | |
Dungeons in The Legend of Zelda Series
