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Oh boy, so here’s the wild ride with “Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom” – gamers found this weird thing with Autobuild Sharing. It’s like you can just create random stuff, no limits. Crazy, right? It’s not like glitches are new in gaming, but this one’s got folks buzzing.
Nintendo dropped “Tears of the Kingdom” back in May 2023. I think it was supposed to be this big follow-up to “Breath of the Wild” from way back in 2017. So there’s that drama at the start where Link – our man Link – gets separated from Zelda (honestly, typical) ’cause Ganondorf’s back causing trouble. The dude’s arm even gets messed up but hey, magic save! Rauru gives him a new one with sick powers.
But okay, sidetracked. Fast forward a bit: just about two years later, they roll out a fancy Nintendo Switch 2 version. Now it’s all about the visuals and smoother gameplay, like 60 frames per second jazz. They even tossed in this Zelda Notes app. It does cool stuff, like Autobuild Sharing.
So there I was, scrolling through some forums, and Reddit and Twitter are blowing up. People are summoning whatever in-game. I mean, one player, uh, something like Formal-Code2341? Yeah, they got whole Epona herds and – wait for it – armies of Ganondorf. By using these QR things. (Made me wonder, do I want a dog army or what?)
And just when you thought it couldn’t get weirder – bam! This dude Aster______ explains how it works. Apparently, there’s this Autobuild editing site. Players can fiddle with their save files, and if they have a modded Switch? They can transfer stuff around. Sounded all science-y to me, but hey, it’s happening.
Nintendo hasn’t cracked down on it yet. Which is weird. Makes you think they’re cool with it, or maybe just waiting to zap it later. Friends are passing QR codes around like it’s no biggie. So, keep an eye out if you’re playing on the Switch 2.
Anyway, that’s the scoop. Hope it helps. Or not. Who knows what’s coming next in the world of Zelda?