Zelda Tears of the Kingdom Sibajitak Shrine Location and Walkthrough

Guides

Hidden within the skies of Hyrule, the Sibajitak Shrine challenges players with clever puzzles and precise timing. This guide shows where to find it and how to solve every trial inside to claim its Light of Blessing reward.


Sibajitak Shrine location

Sibajitak Shrine is found in the Gerudo Highlands, southwest of Hyrule Ridge. It sits on a rocky plateau near the Rutimala Hill region at coordinates (-2395, -3356, 0048). The closest landmark is the Gerudo Canyon Skyview Tower, making it a convenient travel point for reaching the shrine. Be prepared for cold weather in this area, as warm gear or heat-resistant food will help you explore comfortably.

The SibajitakShrine is found within the Eldin Canyon region at the (2401, 3273, 0402) coordinates.


Sibajitak Shrine walkthrough

Sibajitak Shrine focuses on puzzles that test your ability to manipulate platforms and control momentum. Begin by using Ultrahand to move the floating blocks into positions that let you cross each gap. Some sections require stacking blocks or timing jumps carefully to reach higher platforms. Use Recall on moving objects to create pathways for yourself, then glide across to the shrine’s final area. Activate the exit after collecting the treasure chest, which often holds a useful weapon or resource.

The idea here is to line up key pieces of the structure so you’re able to use Ascend to get to the top. You’re going to do that using Link’s Recall ability to spin certain piece of the structure.

1. Head down the stairs and a steep ramp into the main chamber, where there’s a tall, spinning structure.

2. Let it spin for a bit, then use Recall on the topmost portion of the structure. Watch it while it rotates, taking care to stop the ability when the short platform at the top lines up with the long platform at the bottom. In the photo below, it’s just a few moments away from being lined up:

3. Use Ascend to travel through the platform. Use it again, aiming at the platform above, to get to the top.

4. The chest is under the grated platform piece. Drop down to the grate, then drop down once again to the platform before. The chest will give you a atrong Zonaite longsword.

What rewards do you get from Sibajitak Shrine

From Sibajitak Shrine you get two main rewards:

  • A Strong Zonaite Longsword (sometimes listed as a Mighty Zonaite Longsword, but functionally a high-power Zonaite longsword) from the shrine’s treasure chest inside the rotating pillar.

  • A Light of Blessing for completing the “Alignment” puzzle and interacting with the sigil/statue at the end of the shrine.

What is a Strong Zonaite Longsword stats and upgrades

The Strong Zonaite Longsword is a two-handed Zonai weapon whose key strengths come from its base power plus a big bonus when fused with Zonai devices.

Base stats

  • Weapon type: Two-handed (large sword).

  • Base attack: Usually listed as 10-11 attack power, depending on source/version.

  • Durability: Commonly reported around 16 durability, similar to other Zonaite longswords.โ€‹

  • Passive ability: Zonaite-Powered – gains extra attack when fused with a Zonai device.

Zonaite-Powered effect

  • When you fuse any Zonai device to it, the weapon’s damage increases by about +10 over its base value (before the fuse material’s own attack is added).

  • As a “Strong” Zonaite weapon, it also benefits from a percentage boost (around 50%) to its base power when fused with Zonai material/devices, making high-attack fuses like cannons or rockets especially efficient.โ€‹

Upgrades and buffs

There is no traditional “smithy” upgrade path for this sword in Tears of the Kingdom: you upgrade it by:

  • Fusing stronger materials (e.g., high-attack dragon parts, boss horns) to raise its total attack.

  • Combining Zonai devices to trigger Zonaite-Powered, stacking the passive bonus on top of the fuse item’s attack.

Some external databases also describe generic “Attack Up” levels (for example, Attack Up Lv 1 raising effective attack to the mid-teens and Lv 2 into the high-teens/low-20s), but those refer to having Attack Up as a random bonus modifier on the weapon rather than a fixed, in-game upgrade system you manually perform.

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Arslan Shah

As a junior editor for the blog, he brings over a decade of experience and a lifelong passion for video games. His focus is on role-playing games, and he has a particular appreciation for compelling, story-driven narratives.

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