The item descriptions in From Software's titles have always been a major source of understanding the lore and ongoing narratives within the otherwise minimalist storylines. However, one piece of armor found later on in Elden Ring might be hinting at something outside of the in-game story, as it appears to reference the song «Let it Go» from Disney's Frozen.
This reference comes from the armor set of a character named Blaidd, whose motif in Elden Ring revolves mostly around wolves and the moon, making him a bit of an in-house reference for From Software already. Obtaining the armor actually requires either killing the NPC early and ruining some ongoing quests, or making it all the way to the end of his quest-line in order to receive it as a final reward.
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The reference itself is rather small, with a line in the armor description calling out that the pelt on the back of the chest piece protects him from the cold, while in the next line it claims, «but the cold bothered him anyway.» Fans quickly recognized this as a reference to the line in «Let it Go» where Elsa sings, «the cold never bothered me anyway.» It's a small little easter egg that is hidden behind the long quest-line for Blaidd in Elden Ring, making it the kind of thing that most players probably won't find until going through dozens of hours of item descriptions that detail the game's bleak world.
An interesting thing about this reference is that Blaidd is also referred to as a half-wolf man who worships the dark moon, or at least a demigod who is closely associated with the moon. So, given that Frozen has a touch of Norse mythology as a part of its backbone, with wolves often playing a large part in those myths, Blaidd feels like the
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