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[[Category:Items]]
There are numerous problems with the previous version of this article, which is why I cleaned up the article and is why I've rolled back from the last edit (Which was essentially a rollback from my cleanup). Given that the vast majority of the edits to this article have been made by LoZ.com staff members, I suspect a conflict of interest. There are issues with neutrality, unfounded claims and organization, in addition to serious grammatical errors.<br>
 
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{{quote|You got 1 Rupee. It's green! Don't spend it all in one place!|Text in [[The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap|The Minish Cap]]}}
The history section titles are inconsistent - Some are based on events, others on specific dates, and some overlap in places or would flow better as a single section.<br>
 
The external links section has been superseded by the website infobox and is no longer necessary.<br>
 
All shortened references to the site should be LoZ.com, not LoZ.<br>
 
Forum statistics are unnecessary. They would require constant updating and add little to the article.<br>
 
Some excerpts with major problems:<br>
 
:''"...but »-LasT-ChaNcE-« and Xízør™ run most of the day-to-day affairs of the site in Link of Hyrule's life in WoW while on a drinking binge-induced extended hiatus."'' - This sentence doesn't make any sense.<br>
 
:''"LoZ.com culture is based around its forums, second only to the forums at Zelda Universe."'' - Quantitatively LoZ.com's forums are 17th to Zelda Universe; qualitatively this statement needs sources and should not be stated as fact.<br>
 
:''"Humor, freedom of expression, tolerance, and love of fun are the major motifs of LoZ.com culture. However, LoZ's reputation of having strict and sometimes stolid moderators and administrators was well earned, and is not let down in the present day."'' - This reads as straight opinion, not fact, especially without citations.<br>
 
:''"After the relaunch of 2004, LoZ saw a tremendous spike in user activity, including joining, posting, logging in, et cetera."'' - This sentence seems tedious and redundant. Given that we're referring to a forum, user activity must be joining, visiting and posting...<br>
 
:''"The administrator Cartoons rebuilt the site within hours, but was promptly blamed by LoZ's ever pervasive n00b population as the actually perpetrator in the hacking."'' - Who is "LoZ's ever pervasive n00b population" and how is this group defined? This sentence also has problems with grammar and "n00b" is used derisively; not appropriate for this Wiki.<br>
 
:''"Over the course of three days in the month of July, 2005, »-LasT-ChaNcE-« rebuilt the forums, struggling through code and administrative procedures, not just to rebuild the forums, but to make great new forums that would dazzle the members of LoZ.com and hopefully spark more activity."'' - Reads as opinion. If these were »-LasT-ChaNcE-«'s intentions, they should be described as such.<br>
 
:''"(currently renamed "lozmedia.com", where all of the media for LoZ.com is stored)"'' - This should be placed in the section about Xero Gaming and perhaps expanded on.<br>
 
:''"(better known as simply "Chance")"'' - This should be used with the first instance of "»-LasT-ChaNcE-«" in the article, and each instance following it should use the shortened version or none at all.<br>
 
:''"LoZ activity skyrocketed and hasn't slowed down much since."'' - Citation needed.<br>
 
:''"Despite the success of the new layout, LoZ will not undergo another layout change for a good, long while due to amount of exhausting effort required to successfully create and implement such a thing."'' - Where did this information come from? Has LoZ.com stated this?<br>
 
   
Please address these issues in the previous version before using it again. - [[User:Fury Three|Fury Three]] 22:24, 19 March 2008 (EDT)
 
   
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[[Image:Blue_Rupee.jpg|left]][[Image:Uncle Rupee.png|thumb|right|[[Uncle Rupee]] a Rupee "god" from "[[Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland]]"]]'''Rupees''' (ルピー, ''Rupii'') are the unit of currency within most of the ''Zelda'' universe, within circulation in the lands of [[Hyrule]], [[Koholint Island]], [[Termina]], [[Labrynna]], [[Holodrum]] and [[The Great Sea]]. Rupees are acquired primarily by defeating enemies, by cutting tall grasses or bushes, or by opening treasure chests, and used primarily to purchase items in shops, or to gain entrance to some mini-games.
I believe all issues have been addressed. They are valid claims. I apologize. My only concern is this: how do we cite the things you said require citations? All of those things are things I know to be fact based on Statistics I can view in my private Administration Panel, not from publicly accessible information. No other zelda site has to provide "citations" for their own pages; we kind of just take their word for it that as a webmaster designing their own page, they are being honest about solid facts. - [[User:Xizor|Xizor]] 23:52, 20 Mach 2008 (PST)
 
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{{Clear}}
:I'm not too concerned about citations unless the statement is subjective. Finding sources for much of the history and inner workings of websites can be nearly impossible, so the policy I'm taking in this section is "I'll take your word for it." But we'd like to avoid anything that appears opinionated. The examples I singled out above fit this criteria. For example, in the sentence about skyrocketing activity, what is "skyrocketing" defined as? A more quantified statement would be useful here, eg. "Activity doubled," "increased 300%," "has been constantly increasing," or something along those lines. [[User:Fury Three|Fury Three]] 23:39, 21 March 2008 (EDT)
 
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__TOC__
   
== Advertisement ==
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==Values==
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With the exception of ''[[Zelda II: The Adventure of Link|The Adventure of Link]]'' and ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures|Four Swords Adventures]]'', Rupees are included in all ''[[The Legend of Zelda (Series)|The Legend of Zelda]]'' titles. The value of a Rupee is denoted by its color, but the value of each color is inconsistent throughout the games. In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords|Four Swords]]'' and ''[[The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap|The Minish Cap]]'', both size and color denote value. ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening|Link's Awakening]]'', ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages|Oracle of Ages]]'', and ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons|Oracle of Seasons]]'' specify the Rupee value through text rather than color, because the Game Boy palette was limited; however, in the ''[[Oracle series|Oracle]]'' games, Link could find a larger rupee by digging with his shovel. The [[Wallet|Wallet’s]] capacity ultimately determines how many rupees one may receive even when finding Huge Rupees.
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The following lists Rupees by their values by the games they appear in.
   
  +
===''The Legend of Zelda''===
Anyone else think this is just a giant, hulking plug for the website? I don't think it should have an article unless it's official, like zelda.com or nintendo.com. Otherwise, it contributes nothing. [[User:Saibh|Saibh]] 15:26, 21 March 2008 (EDT)
 
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In ''[[The Legend of Zelda (Game)|The Legend of Zelda]]'', along with being used to purchase items, it costs 1 Rupee to fire the bow.
  +
*Yellow Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  +
*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  +
[[Image:Bluerupee.jpg|right|80px|thumb|A Blue Rupee]]
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=== ''A Link to the Past'' ===
  +
*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  +
*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  +
*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
   
  +
===''Link’s Awakening''===
Then let's take out every other fansite website. Otherwise, quit complaining about just LoZ.com's page. We're not the only ones worth "editing" and that "contribute nothing". Whether or not LoZ is a big site or a little site, we're a site, and therefore we are a part of the Zelda Community, and if ZU gets to have a page, if ZD gets to have a page, WE get to have a page. 'Nuff said. And again, I request an explanation as to why LoZ.com is the one site I see getting rap for not having citations. I mean what is there to cite here? - [[User:Xizor|Xizor]] 14:21, 21 Mach 2008 (PST)
 
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In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening|Link's Awakening]]'', all rupees that are found from cutting grass or digging are worth one Rupee, most likely because of the color graphic limitations on the [[Game Boy]]. In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Link's Awakening DX|Link's Awakening DX]]'', all rupees are colored blue, except for some red rupees in the [[Trendy Game]] Shop in [[Mabe Village]], which are worth a little more.
:Just cite yourself then. It's your website. Apparently, this Wiki isn't limited to things in Zelda canon or people who directly influence it, etc. Apparently, you can add just about anything to it. [[User:Saibh|Saibh]] 17:46, 21 March 2008 (EDT)
 
   
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If Link had at least 20 [[Secret Seashell]]s and exchanges them for a [[L-2 Sword]], then any chests that would contain leftover Secret Seashells will be replaced by 20 Rupees inside. If Link doesn't exchange his 20 Secret Seashells, then the chests will still contain Secret Seashells until then.
::Saibh - FYI there has been a Zelda Sites category from the beginning, LoZ.com is not the only article on a website.<br>
 
::Xizor - Most of the parts I've been going after for citations are highly subjective claims. Most of the content in site articles is going to be very hard to find citations for, so my primary concern has been minimizing promotional language so Wiki articles don't become giant plugs. I've been going after these on other site articles, however, there's just not very many sizable site articles at the moment, and most of them are still stubs.<br>
 
::I think I should clarify this one, though: ''"Despite the success of the new layout, LoZ will not undergo another layout change for a good, long while due to amount of exhausting effort required to successfully create and implement such a thing."'' A better phrasing would be: ''"Despite the success of the new layout, LoZ.com's staff has no plans to undergo another layout change in the foreseeable future, due to amount of exhausting effort required to successfully create and implement such a task."'' This reads more like a neutral viewpoint without needing a citation. [[User:Fury Three|Fury Three]] 23:29, 21 March 2008 (EDT)
 
   
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===''Ocarina of Time''===
:::Saibh, I suggest you look around here before hurling criticism against particular articles. A quick glance around [[:Category:Zelda Sites]] would show that Xizor is correct - many Zelda fan sites have an article here. We are an inclusive wiki. The in-game information adheres to canon, but that's not all you'll find here; the secondary purpose of the wiki is and always has been as a community portal (given that it was formed by the webmasters of the very sites described here). Simply put, if this content is not to your liking, stay out of this category. (I'd also recommend you steer clear of [[:Category:Community]], [[:Category:Misc]] & [[:Category:Super Smash Bros.]], to name a few...)
 
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
:::Also, Xizor; I don't think Fury Three was trying to single anyone out, as he added similar requests to a number of sites. I think it just happened that this article was one of the newer and more active at the time. —[[User:Adamcox82|Adam]] <sup>([[User talk:Adamcox82|talk]])</sup> 06:48, 23 March 2008 (EDT)
 
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Huge Orange Rupee, worth 200 Rupees (Obtained by defeating a [[Skull Kid]] as an adult)
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*Silver Rupee, worth 5 Rupees (Part of certain puzzles)
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===''Majora’s Mask''===
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[[Image:MM_BigRupee.jpg|thumb|right|A Huge Rupee in ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask|Majora's Mask]]'']]
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Silver Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Huge Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
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{{clear}}
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===''Oracle of Ages'' & ''Oracle of Seasons''===
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Due to graphical limitations of the [[Game Boy Color]], all Rupees appear to be blue and come in several values, higher values are usually specified by in game text. It should be noted that using the [[shovel]] you can dig up huge Rupees that are worth 100 Rupees. Rupee values double when equipped with the [[Red Joy Ring]] or [[Gold Joy Ring]].
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===''Four Swords''===
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[[Image:RupeeShards.gif|thumb|right|Three Rupee Shards]]
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Big Green Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Big Blue Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
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*Rupee Shards, worthless by themselves, collecting eight Rupee Shards creates a gem worth 500 Rupees
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*Black Rupee, removes a random amount of Rupees from the team’s wallet.
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[[Image:Blackrupee.gif|frame|right|A Black Rupee]]
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===''The Wind Waker''===
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Yellow Rupee, worth 10 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Orange Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Silver Rupee, worth 200 Rupees (Only found from treasure charts)
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===''Four Swords Adventures''===
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There are no Rupees found in ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures|Four Swords Adventures]]'', however there are [[Force Gems]]. These come in similar values, and in some places they can be used as currency.
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===''The Minish Cap''===
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[[Image:BlueLinkRupeeFSA.png|frame|right|Blue [[Link]] clutches a Red Rupee in ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords|Four Swords]]'']]
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Big Green Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Big Blue Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
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===''Twilight Princess''===
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
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*Yellow Rupee, worth 10 Rupees
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  +
*Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
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*Orange Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Silver Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
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  +
===''Phantom Hourglass''===
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[[Image:PH rupee.gif]]
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*Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
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*Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
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*Big Green Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
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*Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
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*Big Gold Rupee, worth 300 Rupees
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*Rupoor, Rupoors come in five values: 5 Rupoor, 10 Rupoor, 30 Rupoor, 50 Rupoor, and 100 Rupoor, each one takes away the specified number of rupees of the number in its name. {{main|Rupoor}}
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=== ''Link’s Crossbow Training'' ===
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By breaking certain pots in ''[[Link’s Crossbow Training]]'' an Orange Rupee will be released. These Rupees are initially worth 1000 points but their point value will decrease the longer it stays on-screen. Shoot at it quickly to gain better points.
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=== ''Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland'' ===
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In ''[[Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland]]'', [[Tingle]] uses Rupees as health. They come in similar values as in normal ''Zelda'' games. However, the colors don’t necessarily have specific values. When Tingle picks up a red, purple, or orange Rupee, he will usually get 20, 50, or 100 Rupees, respectfully. However, it is possible to get a red, purple, or orange Rupee in other values, such as 21, 57, or 109.
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  +
A main part of ''Freshly-Picked Tingle’s Rosy Rupeeland'' is negotiating. When Tingle is either paying for information or items, or receiving a reward or selling certain items, he is asked to negotiate a price. Negotiations are done-using a calculator on the touch screen. The amount of Rupees Tingle can receive can vary depending on his progress in the game.
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====Super Rupees and Master Rupee====
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During Tingle’s quest to reach [[Rupeeland]], Tingle obtained the five Super Rupees and eventually the Master Rupee in the [[Auros Ruins]]. The Super Rupees have no value, but are said to contain mystical powers. The five Super Rupees are the Metal Rupee, the Aqua Rupee, the Leaf Rupee, the Earth Rupee, and the Magma Rupee.
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==Rupee Thieves==
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Rupee thieves appear in several games. When they come in contact with Link the will either cause his Rupees to fly out of his wallet onto the ground (like Thieves and Keatons), or will drain or steal the Rupees straight from his wallet (like Rupee Likes and Takkuri).
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[[image:Likeeat.PNG|frame|A [[Rupee Like]] in "[[The Legend of Zelda: The Minish Cap|The Minish Cap]]"]]
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*Known Rupee thieves:
  +
**[[Rupee Like]]
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**[[Thieves]]/foxes
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**[[Takkuri]]
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**[[Rupee Wraith]]
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**[[Keaton]]
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**[[Rat]]s
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===Rupee Draining Items===
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Most items in the "Legend of Zelda" series can be used either without cost or until a finite supply is exhausted. These few, however will deplete Links rupee supply upon use.
  +
**[[Bow]] in [[Legend of Zelda]], firing an arrow costs one rupee.
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**[[Magic Armor]] in [[The Legend of Zelda:Twilight Princess|Twilight Princess]] rapidly depletes rupees while equipped.
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==Rewards==
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Link will be rewarded simply for collecting high number of Rupees in the following games.
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**''[[The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Ages|Oracle of Ages]]'', and ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Oracle of Seasons|Oracle of Seasons]]''After collecting 10,000 Rupees [[Vasu]] will give Link the [[Rupee Ring]].
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**The [[banker]] in ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask|Majora's Mask]]'' gives Link the Large Wallet after depositing 200 Rupees and a [[Heart Container#Piece of Heart|Piece of Heart]] after 5,000 have been deposited.
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**''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords|Four Swords]]'' rewards the player with the most Rupees with a [[Medal of Courage]].
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==Trivia==
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*In ''[[The Legend of Zelda (Game)|The Legend of Zelda]]'', Rupee was spelt ''"Rupy"''. In the manual, it was ''"Ruby"''. Probably due to the fact that, in the German versions of the ''Zelda'' games, it is called a ''"Rubin"'', which means ''"Ruby"''.
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*The [[Wikipedia:Rupee|Rupee]] is the real-world currency of India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Pakistan, Mauritius, the Seychelles, and Maldives. It used to be currency in Bhutan as well.
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*The Silver Rupee’s low value in ''Ocarina of Time'' is due to the fact that the Silver Rupee's only purpose in the game was as a puzzle element, and not an actual spending Rupee. These Rupee puzzles can be found in [[Ice Cavern]], the [[Shadow Temple]], the [[Spirit Temple]], and inside [[Ganon’s Castle]].
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*In ''Majora's Mask'', there appear to be two differently-colored Huge Rupees: one given to Link by a [[Deku Scrub]], and one earned by killing the [[Takkuri]], although this one is not accompanied by text, so its title as a "Huge Rupee" could be debated.
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*In ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask|Majora's Mask]]'', the probability of finding a '''Red Rupee''' in grass is high if Link has less than twenty rupees in his wallet.
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*When using the [[Salvage Arm]] in ''[[The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass|Phantom Hourglass]]'', there may be a few valuable rupees in bubbles. If the back arrow is pressed before reaching the [[Treasure Chest|treasure chest]] and you choose to salvage the same spot again, all the rupee bubbles will be back. This is an effective way to get infinite rupees.
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*''[[The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures|Four Swords Adventures]]'' is one of two ''Zelda'' games, the other being ''[[Zelda II: The Adventure of Link|The Adventure of Link]]'', that didn't include Rupees. Instead, it brings about a new collectible called [[Force Gem]]s. However, Force Gems cannot be used as currency like Rupees, with a few minor exceptions. They are used to return the power to repel evil to the [[Four Sword]].

Revision as of 00:02, 16 January 2009

Quote1 You got 1 Rupee. It's green! Don't spend it all in one place! Quote2
— Text in The Minish Cap


Uncle Rupee

Uncle Rupee a Rupee "god" from "Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland"

Rupees (ルピー, Rupii) are the unit of currency within most of the Zelda universe, within circulation in the lands of Hyrule, Koholint Island, Termina, Labrynna, Holodrum and The Great Sea. Rupees are acquired primarily by defeating enemies, by cutting tall grasses or bushes, or by opening treasure chests, and used primarily to purchase items in shops, or to gain entrance to some mini-games.

Values

With the exception of The Adventure of Link and Four Swords Adventures, Rupees are included in all The Legend of Zelda titles. The value of a Rupee is denoted by its color, but the value of each color is inconsistent throughout the games. In Four Swords and The Minish Cap, both size and color denote value. Link's Awakening, Oracle of Ages, and Oracle of Seasons specify the Rupee value through text rather than color, because the Game Boy palette was limited; however, in the Oracle games, Link could find a larger rupee by digging with his shovel. The Wallet’s capacity ultimately determines how many rupees one may receive even when finding Huge Rupees. The following lists Rupees by their values by the games they appear in.

The Legend of Zelda

In The Legend of Zelda, along with being used to purchase items, it costs 1 Rupee to fire the bow.

  • Yellow Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
File:Bluerupee.jpg

A Blue Rupee

A Link to the Past

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees

Link’s Awakening

In Link's Awakening, all rupees that are found from cutting grass or digging are worth one Rupee, most likely because of the color graphic limitations on the Game Boy. In Link's Awakening DX, all rupees are colored blue, except for some red rupees in the Trendy Game Shop in Mabe Village, which are worth a little more.

If Link had at least 20 Secret Seashells and exchanges them for a L-2 Sword, then any chests that would contain leftover Secret Seashells will be replaced by 20 Rupees inside. If Link doesn't exchange his 20 Secret Seashells, then the chests will still contain Secret Seashells until then.

Ocarina of Time

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Huge Orange Rupee, worth 200 Rupees (Obtained by defeating a Skull Kid as an adult)
  • Silver Rupee, worth 5 Rupees (Part of certain puzzles)

Majora’s Mask

File:MM BigRupee.jpg

A Huge Rupee in Majora's Mask

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Silver Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Huge Rupee, worth 200 Rupees

Oracle of Ages & Oracle of Seasons

Due to graphical limitations of the Game Boy Color, all Rupees appear to be blue and come in several values, higher values are usually specified by in game text. It should be noted that using the shovel you can dig up huge Rupees that are worth 100 Rupees. Rupee values double when equipped with the Red Joy Ring or Gold Joy Ring.


Four Swords

File:RupeeShards.gif

Three Rupee Shards

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Big Green Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Big Blue Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
  • Rupee Shards, worthless by themselves, collecting eight Rupee Shards creates a gem worth 500 Rupees
  • Black Rupee, removes a random amount of Rupees from the team’s wallet.
File:Blackrupee.gif

A Black Rupee

The Wind Waker

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Yellow Rupee, worth 10 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Orange Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Silver Rupee, worth 200 Rupees (Only found from treasure charts)

Four Swords Adventures

There are no Rupees found in Four Swords Adventures, however there are Force Gems. These come in similar values, and in some places they can be used as currency.

The Minish Cap

BlueLinkRupeeFSA

Blue Link clutches a Red Rupee in Four Swords

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Big Green Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Big Blue Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees

Twilight Princess

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Blue Rupee, worth 5 Rupees
  • Yellow Rupee, worth 10 Rupees
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Purple Rupee, worth 50 Rupees
  • Orange Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Silver Rupee, worth 200 Rupees

Phantom Hourglass

File:PH rupee.gif

  • Green Rupee, worth 1 Rupee
  • Red Rupee, worth 20 Rupees
  • Big Green Rupee, worth 100 Rupees
  • Big Red Rupee, worth 200 Rupees
  • Big Gold Rupee, worth 300 Rupees
  • Rupoor, Rupoors come in five values: 5 Rupoor, 10 Rupoor, 30 Rupoor, 50 Rupoor, and 100 Rupoor, each one takes away the specified number of rupees of the number in its name.
    Main article: Rupoor

Link’s Crossbow Training

By breaking certain pots in Link’s Crossbow Training an Orange Rupee will be released. These Rupees are initially worth 1000 points but their point value will decrease the longer it stays on-screen. Shoot at it quickly to gain better points.

Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland

In Freshly-Picked Tingle's Rosy Rupeeland, Tingle uses Rupees as health. They come in similar values as in normal Zelda games. However, the colors don’t necessarily have specific values. When Tingle picks up a red, purple, or orange Rupee, he will usually get 20, 50, or 100 Rupees, respectfully. However, it is possible to get a red, purple, or orange Rupee in other values, such as 21, 57, or 109.

A main part of Freshly-Picked Tingle’s Rosy Rupeeland is negotiating. When Tingle is either paying for information or items, or receiving a reward or selling certain items, he is asked to negotiate a price. Negotiations are done-using a calculator on the touch screen. The amount of Rupees Tingle can receive can vary depending on his progress in the game.

Super Rupees and Master Rupee

During Tingle’s quest to reach Rupeeland, Tingle obtained the five Super Rupees and eventually the Master Rupee in the Auros Ruins. The Super Rupees have no value, but are said to contain mystical powers. The five Super Rupees are the Metal Rupee, the Aqua Rupee, the Leaf Rupee, the Earth Rupee, and the Magma Rupee.

Rupee Thieves

Rupee thieves appear in several games. When they come in contact with Link the will either cause his Rupees to fly out of his wallet onto the ground (like Thieves and Keatons), or will drain or steal the Rupees straight from his wallet (like Rupee Likes and Takkuri).

File:Likeeat.PNG

A Rupee Like in "The Minish Cap"

Rupee Draining Items

Most items in the "Legend of Zelda" series can be used either without cost or until a finite supply is exhausted. These few, however will deplete Links rupee supply upon use.

Rewards

Link will be rewarded simply for collecting high number of Rupees in the following games.

Trivia

  • In The Legend of Zelda, Rupee was spelt "Rupy". In the manual, it was "Ruby". Probably due to the fact that, in the German versions of the Zelda games, it is called a "Rubin", which means "Ruby".
  • The Rupee is the real-world currency of India, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Pakistan, Mauritius, the Seychelles, and Maldives. It used to be currency in Bhutan as well.
  • The Silver Rupee’s low value in Ocarina of Time is due to the fact that the Silver Rupee's only purpose in the game was as a puzzle element, and not an actual spending Rupee. These Rupee puzzles can be found in Ice Cavern, the Shadow Temple, the Spirit Temple, and inside Ganon’s Castle.
  • In Majora's Mask, there appear to be two differently-colored Huge Rupees: one given to Link by a Deku Scrub, and one earned by killing the Takkuri, although this one is not accompanied by text, so its title as a "Huge Rupee" could be debated.
  • In Majora's Mask, the probability of finding a Red Rupee in grass is high if Link has less than twenty rupees in his wallet.
  • When using the Salvage Arm in Phantom Hourglass, there may be a few valuable rupees in bubbles. If the back arrow is pressed before reaching the treasure chest and you choose to salvage the same spot again, all the rupee bubbles will be back. This is an effective way to get infinite rupees.
  • Four Swords Adventures is one of two Zelda games, the other being The Adventure of Link, that didn't include Rupees. Instead, it brings about a new collectible called Force Gems. However, Force Gems cannot be used as currency like Rupees, with a few minor exceptions. They are used to return the power to repel evil to the Four Sword.