EG Map

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The EG Map
The EG Map, sometimes also called the Underworld map, is a map displaying the true arrangement of all the game's indoor rooms. In normal gameplay, the game hides the fact that all the rooms are on the same map. However, through using glitches, the organization and mechanics of the overall map become important to understand.

Fully Annotated Map

A fully annotated version of the EG Map can be found here: File:EG map fully annotated.png

This map has a wealth of information regarding the mechanics of the EG Map. Here is a key:

  • Red Borders: Supertile Boundaries
  • Cyan Borders: Quadrant Boundaries
  • Hex Number in top left corner of Supertiles: Room ID
  • Hex Number next to Falling Link: Pit Destination
  • Supertiles with Green Borders: Supertiles that set Strong EG
  • Supertiles with Orange Borders: Supertiles that set Weak EG
  • Supertiles with Yellow Borders: Supertiles that kick Link in-bounds
  • Numbers on doors and chests: Reveal the organization of this data within a Supertile. This is relevant for Transition Corruption glitches, especially Data spoofing.
  • Red Doors: Shutter Doors that are inaccessible to Link -- in other words, a one-way door.
  • Orange Doors: Auto Doors. These are shutter doors and bombable doors that Link can access and use.
  • Blue Doors: Locked Doors
  • Yellow Doors: Normal Doors

Terminology

Supertiles & Subtiles

Two adjacent Supertiles on the EG Map. The right Supertile is a single large room, but the left one is divided into 4 Subtiles
The underworld is made up of a grid of 256 "Supertiles." Supertiles can be organized in a few different ways. They can be an entire room to itself, or it can be divided into smaller rooms called "Subtiles." There can be up to 4 Subtiles within a Supertile.

In normal gameplay, the difference between these divisions rarely matters, however with glitches, it's important to know that the routines for transitioning between Supertiles and transitioning between Subtiles are different. Transition Corruption glitches will behave differently depending on which type of transition the player is using. Additionally, the player can interact with Supertile transitions while in EG or through clipping.

Quadrants

Two adjacent Supertiles on the EG Map. The right Supertile is a single large room. Every Supertile-sized room is made up of 4 quadrants. The left Supertile has 3 Subtiles -- two small rooms and a long room. The long room is divided into two quadrants.
Quadrants are invisible boundaries that divide Supertiles. The game tracks which quadrant Link is in within a Supertile and uses this data when Link transitions. Through Transition Corruption glitches, the game may regard Link as being in a different quadrant than he actually is, which can make transitions behave in unusual ways, or may even make quadrant boundaries behave like transitions.

Wrapping

If the player crosses a Supertile boundary at the edge of the map, they will "wrap" to the other side. For north/south wrapping, Link will be placed at the opposite end of the map on the same column as the Supertile he transitioned from. For east/west wrapping, he will be placed on the opposite side one row above (for west transitions) or one row below (for east transitions). Transitioning east in Supertile FF will place Link in Supertile 00. Vice versa for transitioning west in Supertile 00. Transitioning north in Supertile 00 leads to the Triforce cutscene rather than wrapping the player down to F0 like normal.

Wrapping the map has a major consequence of despawning all sprites in the underworld. This can work to the player's advantage (removing obstacles that allow for timesaves) or disadvantage (removing enemies the player wishes to defeat or removing the crystal switches that allow the player to change the state of blue/orange pegs).

EG Strength

Pit Destinations

Death Room

EG2

EG2 Map
Looking at the map above, you may have noticed that it's missing quite a few rooms in the game. This is because that's the primary underworld map, which houses every room in every dungeon as well as every cave/house with multiple exits to the overworld. But what of the caves and houses with single exits to the overworld? These are on a separate map that we call the EG2 Map. This map is smaller and has a few mechanical differences compared to the primary EG map.
  • The routine for entering and exiting the EG2 Map from/to the Overworld is different from the primary map. When you enter an EG2 room from the overworld, the game stores Link's coordinates and reuses them when he exits to determine where to place him. This means if I enter Room A from the Overworld, glitch to Room B, and then leave Room B's exit to the overworld, I will be placed at the entrance to Room A out on the Overworld. This is very different from how the primary map functions, where when you use an exit, you will be placed directly at the Overworld entrance corresponding to that exit. This mechanic has its advantages and disadvantages. We can't use the EG2 Map to travel around to different parts of the Overworld, but we can glitch around a few rooms and get back to where we were without having to get back to the room we entered in.
  • Related to the point above: when you're on the Overworld with a broken camera/transitions, you can fix it by entering & exiting the primary EG map because this will reset the state of the screen you entered on. The same doesn't hold true for EG2 though. The overworld screen you exit to will be in the same state you left it.
  • None of the EG2 Rooms set Strong EG. The rooms that seemingly have layers (ie. Mire Shed, King's Tomb, Aginah's Cave, etc.) will set Weak EG. Every other room leaves this variable alone.