The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess was made originally for the GameCube. As such, the port to the Wii came with some changes.

He's not really, but if you take the two versions together you can see why. In the GameCube version (and pretty much every Legend of Zelda iteration), Link wields the sword with his left hand. However, when considering the motion controls of the Wii and the fact that the majority of people have a dominant right hand, Link's sword-carrying hand was switched from left to right for the Wii version.

Mirrored Environments

Following on the heels of the dominant hand switch-a-roo, Twilight Princess on the Wii is basically a mirrored version of the original on GameCube. This means that left and right, or east and west, directions are reversed. The Wiki walkthrough was written using the Wii version, so GameCube players must use caution when reading latitudinal directions (i.e. left means right, west means east, and so on). Also, the attached images in the walkthrough also reflect the Wii version.

The Wii-Mote

The Wii took advantage of its motion controls and the controller's built-in speakers. Sounds that came out of the controller's speakers include the classic "chime" sound when you solve a secret and Midna's laugh.

Free-Roam Camera