The world may never know. ...Unless we look at several years of monthly manga magazine covers from just a 3 years earlier, from early 1986 until late 1988. I don't know though, I've never heard of game developers who also like comics... and certainly not ones about the game they made. It's not like Miyamoto was trying to be a manga artist before he joined Nintendo or anything ...and I really doubt any of them would like one of the best comics ever made for the series. And thus it will forever remain a mystery ♡
Edit: Right after I wrote this I found all the pink-haired Link images from this artist. In Shonen Captain and this Wanpakku Guide. The gallery with all 8 starts here. But there is more on it below as well.
Also, I saw this said a lot: "16-bit" is about the processor, it doesn't mean 16 colors. Though, yes! Some of the modes for the SNES topped out at 16 colors per sprite/tile, and LttP is an example of the use of one of those, so I could see how people could get confused. Source 1. Source 2. But, no, it wasn't pink because the bunny was pink and it "needed to be the same color for technical reasons" ...because, even if (?) that were true for some reason, the rabbit's color of pink wasn't even the same as his hair. (Thank you to whomever made this graphic, I couldn't find the source to credit)
I've had that manga online for ages, on the old main site, (the better scans on archive.org are new,) but so many fans and other sites in the early days would blow off manga (and my scanning work and site) as "not real Zelda content." The ones that would try to post about it or my site would often have their posts deleted. Gatekeeping was an incredibly serious problem in the early days of the community. If you were not one of the popular, male, webmasters you were very often shut down and blocked out. I'm serious, there were full page rants about female run sites and problems with content deemed female-oriented. Like this on what was often said to be the most popular site at the time:
Both publishing companies, Wanpakku (the maker of this guide) and Shonen Captain, where she appeared, were owned by the publisher Tokuma Shoten: and Nintendo worked with them a LOT back then.
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