SoundĪll sounds and music in the game are as they were in the original release with a handful of restorations here and there where the North American release may have been missing a sound or two. Ultimately, Majoras Mask Redux plays just as Majora’s Mask was released and intended but has been dusted off and shined so that some of the more trivial and tedious elements of the game have been either completely removed, significantly altered, or tweaked to make them that much more pleasant for the modern gamer.
Another major change, and one that seemed like such a no brainer, is the ability to use the ocarina underwater. At the top of the list, and easily the most important, is the feature of remapping the three masks and the ocarina to the D-pad this makes it so that the player now has the ability to slot three items of their choice rather than before, essentially, forced to keep those slots occupied by masks and/or the ocarina. Majoras Mask Redux presents an absolute avalanche of QoL changes that will make you wonder how you ever managed without them.