A new Zelda game is reminding everyone to finish the last one

A new Zelda game is reminding everyone to finish the last one

Nintendo will be releasing Echoes of Wisdom for Nintendo Switch on Sept. 26. While some features of the game — like the fact you can play as Zelda — have fans buzzing with excitement, some players aren’t quite ready to move on to the next Zelda game. That’s because some want to make sure they beat the main storyline of Tears of the Kingdom.

The TikTok user just_jaynie shared a video on TikTok that joked about the upcoming release. The video, which as more than 15,400 views, shows sped-up footage of just_jaynie playing Tears of the Kingdom and rushing through the fields and map to complete the game. You can view the video below.

People flooded the comment section of the video with replies about how they haven’t beaten the game yet either. The top comment on the video said, “the amount of time I spent playing that game while diligently refusing to finish is staggering.” Another person chimed in, “So we all didn’t complete Tears of the kingdom yet,” with a blushing emoji. Others talked about how they’ve played as much as 90 hours of the game, but just couldn’t work up the courage to go challenge Ganondorf.

And TikTok commenters aren’t the only people who haven’t beaten the game. Some of my favorite Reddit posts in Zelda communities are the ones that talk about what people got distracted by on their way to beat Ganondorf. In this post from two months ago, the poster talked about how they played Tears of the Kingdom and became obsessed with it, but then just dropped the game one day. Another person in the same thread chimed in and said that they were just spending time running around collecting knickknacks to max out their armor stats.

It makes sense — sometimes you might not want to beat a game because you don’t want to feel like it’s done. But while a new game coming along might be the push needed to finally tie up loose ends, Tears of the Kingdom won’t disappear from the Switch’s library on Sept. 26.