Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance

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Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance

Developer(s) Intelligent Systems
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Series Fire Emblem
Platform(s) Nintendo GameCube
Release date JP 2005-04-20
NA 2005-10-17
EU 2005-11-15
AUS 2005-12-01
Genre(s) Tactical RPG
Mode(s) Campaign (Single Player)
Rating(s) CERO: All Ages
ESRB: Teen (13+) (Fantasy Violence)
PEGI: 7+
OFLC: M (15+)
Media 1 × GameCube Optical Disc

Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance (ファイアーエムブレム 蒼炎の軌跡 Faiā Emuburemu: Sōen no Kiseki?, lit. "Trail of the Blue Flame"[1]) is a Japanese tactical role-playing game developed by Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo GameCube video game console. The game was released on April 20, 2005 in Japan, October 17, 2005 in North America, November 15, 2005 in Europe and December 1, 2005 in Australia.[2] It is the ninth Fire Emblem series title, and the third Fire Emblem series title to be released in North America.[3] It was the first Fire Emblem series title to feature voice acting as well as being the first title to be rendered in a three-dimensional, cel-shaded manner.[4] It is also the first Fire Emblem game to be released for a home console in North America, Australia and Europe.

The story is set on the fictional continent of Tellius and is totally unrelated to any of the previous Fire Emblem installments. It introduces a new system for battle preparation as well as a new set of races named laguz (humanoid shapeshifters).[5] A sequel to Path of Radiance, Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn, was released in Japan for the Wii on February 22, 2007,[6] and in North America on November 5, 2007.

Path of Radiance averaged 86% on Game Rankings, which makes it the second highest rated Fire Emblem game.[7] In Super Smash Bros. Brawl, the game's main character, Ike, appears as a playable character.[8]

Contents

[edit] Plot

Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance is set on a fictional continent called Tellius. The storyline is original and completely unrelated to any of the previous Fire Emblem titles in the series.[5] The protagonist, Ike, the son of Greil, begins the game as the newest member of his father's mercenary company, the Greil Mercenaries.[9] The company operates within the borders of Crimea, a nation of humans (referred to as "beorc") that shares its southern border with Gallia, a nation of beast laguz, or humanoids capable of transforming into animals. A few chapters into the game, a neighboring beorc nation, Daein, invades Crimea.[4] Soon after, Ike comes across an unconscious woman in a forest that turns out to be the Crimean princess, Elincia Ridell Crimea.[9] Faced with the ruthless Daein assault, Greil leads the mercenaries out of Crimea and towards Gallia, but is mortally wounded by a Daein general known only as the Black Knight. These events mark the beginning of a long journey that will take Ike, Elincia, and the mercenaries across the continent and back in an effort to defeat Daein and restore Crimea's royalty to the throne.

Over the course of the game, Ike and his companions must overcome long-held racial tensions between the beorc and laguz in order to form an alliance against their true enemy, Ashnard, king of Daein. In particular, Ike manages to reestablish relations between the beorc nation of Begnion and the few remaining members of the heron laguz clan, which was annihilated in an act of genocide known as the Serenes Massacre. With this accomplishment, Ike is given command of a patchwork army that he leads into Daein and finally back to Crimea, where he confronts the Black Knight and ultimately King Ashnard himself.[10]

[edit] Setting

A map of Tellius. The highlighted nations are Gallia (green), Crimea (gold), and Daein (red).
A map of Tellius. The highlighted nations are Gallia (green), Crimea (gold), and Daein (red).

Path of Radiance is set on the fictional continent of Tellius. Tellius is divided into nations that are either governed by beorc or laguz. There are seven nations:[11]

Crimea: A beorc kingdom that is home to the Greil Mercenaries. At the start of the game, it is invaded by Daein.
Daein: A beorc kingdom that had become antagonistic ever since King Ashnard ascended the throne.
Begnion: A beorc theocracy worshiping the goddess Ashera. The figurehead and empress is Apostle Sanaki.
Gallia: Home to the beast laguz; it had recently improved relations with Crimea. Ruled by King Caineghis.
Phoenicis: Home to the hawk laguz; its leader is Tibarn.
Kilvas: Home to the raven laguz, they are considered more cunning and dishonorable than the hawks. Their king is Naesala.
Goldoa: Home of the dragons; it isolates itself from the rest of Tellius. Ruled by the legendary Black Dragon King Deghinsea.

[edit] The Fire Emblem

In the fictional world of Tellius, the Fire Emblem takes the form of a simple bronze medallion also known as Lehran's Medallion. It allegedly holds the soul of an evil god whose energies disrupt the level of chaotic energy in a person. For example, when Greil touched the medallion, it caused him to go berserk and kill everyone in sight, including his wife, Elena. It was only when she took the medallion from his hand in her final moments that Greil regained his sanity. Only a person with a high level of balance is capable of holding the medallion without losing his or her mind.[12] Ike's mother, Elena, and his younger sister, Mist, are two such people.

The medallion once belonged to the Heron clans that dwelt in the Serenes Forest within Begnion. They were charged with protecting the medallion so that the evil god would not be released. However, the Serenes Massacre forced Lillia, a member of the Heron royal family, to flee with the medallion, only to be captured by Ashnard (or his subordinates). Lillia was ordered to free the dark god, but she could not. She befriended Elena and gave the medallion to her. Mist eventually inherited it from her mother. In the final chapter of the "Difficult" difficulty (and "Maniac" in the Japanese version), Ashnard uses the medallion after his initial defeat to gain godlike power. Despite this strength growth, he is still defeated by Ike and the party.

[edit] Gameplay mechanics

The game retains the fundamental gameplay mechanics of the Fire Emblem series, such as the weapon triangle and grid-based battlefields. However, there are some changes to the gameplay, such as the way in which the group prepares and units support each other, as well as a change to the magic system.

[edit] New race

Path of Radiance introduces the laguz changelings—humanoid creatures that transform into powerful animals when their transformation gauge is full.[5] The bar within the transformation gauge increases each turn; the laguz spend roughly an equal amount of time in each form, though the humanoid form can be completely bypassed if the laguz is equipped with either a demi band or a laguz band—the former of which decreases the user's battle statistics.[13] When in animal form, laguz use the natural weapons of their species—claws for beasts, beaks for birds, and breath attacks for dragons. The natural weapons of a laguz will never break with use, unlike normal beorc weaponry, but laguz do not use manmade weapons and are thus unable to attack when not in animal form.[14] There are three species of laguz—beasts, birds, and dragons.[15] These species are further divided into three classes each, although not all of them are playable. Beast laguz are divided into cats, tigers, and lions; birds into ravens, hawks, and herons; and dragons are divided into red, white, and black dragons. Each laguz species has an elemental weakness: fire for beasts, wind for birds, and thunder for dragons. Birds can fly in either form, but also have the weakness to bows associated with flying units.

[edit] Unit classes

This installment of the Fire Emblem series—like the previous two released in the West—allows the player to change a unit's class once he or she reaches a certain level. However, unlike in the Game Boy Advance games (which used specially designated items for promotion) a unit automatically promotes upon reaching level twenty-one. Players can also use the Master Seal item to immediately promote any unit at any point between levels ten to twenty.[4] The laguz can not promote. Path of Radiance introduces some new classes while omitting some that were present in earlier Fire Emblem installments.[5] There have also been changes to which weapons some classes can wield.

[edit] Battle preparation

Path of Radiance is the first Fire Emblem game to feature a "Base screen" along with the "Battle Preparations" screen.[16] Before the Base screen appears, Soren provides information on the previous battle, including the weapons and the distribution of bonus experience and skills. Furthermore, players can engage in support conversations and the new "Info" conversations, chapter-specific conversations rated on a scale of one to three stars. One star denotes conversations that provide story background; two stars mark conversations that provide hints on how to proceed in the coming battle, and three stars indicate that the conversation may yield a special ability or new playable character.

[edit] Skill system

The skill system, which was introduced in Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu,[17] has different mechanics in this game. Each character has a capacity gauge that allows for mastery of skills. By using a skill scroll, the character learns the corresponding skill and a certain amount of slots are taken up in the capacity gauge, usually determined by how useful the skill is. The space of the capacity gauge varies between classes and characters.[5] Any unit can learn any skill, although there are exceptions. Skills vary in how useful they are and what they do. Most give the unit an advantage in battle; Ike's Aether, for example, allows him to deal extra damage while recovering some health points in battle when it is triggered.

Screenshot of the base screen, using the Bonus Experience to level up Nephenee.
Screenshot of the base screen, using the Bonus Experience to level up Nephenee.

[edit] Experience

Bonus Experience was introduced in this game. At the end of every chapter, Bonus Experience is awarded based on certain factors such as number of enemies remaining and turns taken to complete the chapter. It can be distributed to units at the Base Screen.[4] Just as in the previous Fire Emblem installments, one hundred experience points are required to level up.

Another unique feature to Path of Radiance is Fixed mode, which is an alternative method for unit growth that is available after completing the game once.[18] Random mode—the method used in all other titles in the series, as well as in the first playthrough of Path of Radiance—gives units a set percentage chance to increase a given stat upon level up. This chance is termed a "growth rate." Due to the "chance nature" of this system, a unit that levels up may gain many stat increases or none at all. In Fixed mode, units instead earn experience towards a stat increase as they earn standard experience. This "stat experience" is kept per stat, and if enough has been accumulated, that stat will increase the next time the unit gains a level and "stat experience" will return to zero; otherwise, it will carry over to the next level. Units earn stat experience based on their individual growth rates, which can be modified by what items a unit has equipped and the class of the enemy that it is attacking.

[edit] Weapons

The weapon forging system, introduced in this game, allows players to create improved versions of some of the weapons available in shops. Players can forge one weapon during every visit to the Base screen. To forge a weapon, the player first chooses a base weapon to modify. Choices of base weapon are initially limited, but more options become available as the player progresses through the game. The player can then increase or decrease several statistics of the weapon, such as strength and weight. The further away from the statistics of the base weapon, the higher the cost; making no changes to the base statistics results in the same price as the base weapon. After statistics are adjusted, the player can choose a new color for the weapon and give it a unique name.[5] These features have no effect on price.

[edit] Support system

The support system remains the same in how the support conversations affect each unit and how statistical boosts are determined. However, instead of the support level being determined by the number of turns units are adjacent in a battle, it is now determined by the number of battles two units have been in together.[19] Furthermore, the support conversations take place at the base instead of in the battlefield.[20] An option to re-read the support conversations as an extra feature is not available in this game as it was in previous Fire Emblem games. However, there is a section on the unit information screen that shows the specific statistical gains from support conversations; this wasn't available in the previous Fire Emblem games.

[edit] Changes from Japanese version

3D graphics in Path of Radiance.
3D graphics in Path of Radiance.

Releases outside of Japan omit the extremely hard "Maniac" mode, replacing it with an "Easy" mode that is of lower difficulty than "Normal" mode. In the localized versions, the Swordmaster, Berserker, and Sniper unit classes receive a 15 percent boost to their critical rate (the chance to triple the damage of an attack), similar to those present in Fire Emblem and Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones.[21] Path of Radiance was the first Fire Emblem game to feature voice acting. In the Japanese version, there was voiced narration for all of the overworld map scenes and the ending cinema scenes. However, the narration was mostly omitted in the English version, leaving only the ending cinema narration and the cutscenes.

[edit] Graphics engine and musical score

Path of Radiance is the first Fire Emblem title to feature three-dimensional graphics on the battlefield, replacing two-dimensional sprite animations and landscapes with fully rendered 3-D models. It is also the first game in the series to make use of full motion video to present cinematic sequences at key points in the game. The FMV sequences were animated by Production I.G.[19]

The Fire Emblem series' veteran music composer Yuka Tsujiyoko was actively involved in providing the musical score.[22] Path of Radiance is the first Fire Emblem game to feature a theme song with vocals, "Life Returns," which is sung in the fictional language of the heron tribe.

[edit] Reception

Media ratings
Publication Score
EGM
8.17 out of 10[23]
Game Informer
9 out of 10[23]
GameSpot
8.6 of 10[24]
IGN
8.7 of 10[25]
Eurogamer
8 out of 10[26]
Nintendo Power
9.5 out of 10[23]

Path of Radiance received mostly positive reviews after its release. Game Rankings, a website that provides video games with percentile scores based on the score average collected from a variety of review sources, rated the game with an 86 per cent, giving it a higher average ranking than Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones.[7][27]

The game was praised for its deep story, excellent cinema cut-scenes, and orchestrated music. IGN's Peer Schneider described the CG sequences as "gorgeously animated", and the game's music as "great".[25] However, it was criticized for outdated in-game graphics and extended periods of dialog.[26] Gamespot's Greg Kasavin commented that the graphics "sacrifice some of the series' old charm."[24] The lack of innovation in gameplay and presentation was bemoaned, as well as the opinion that the game wouldn't appeal to new fans.[20]

Eurogamer cited the gameplay as "single-minded", stating that some gameplay elements lack complexity compared to games of a similar genre such as Final Fantasy Tactics.[26] Furthermore, they proceed to mention the occasional burden of ensuring unit's safety as a result of permanent death, and the frustation when losing a unit. Despite this, the game was praised for retaining the charm that made the previous installments popular.[25] Willian Jepson from Ninty rated Fire Emblem as a series as an "outstanding series that only gets better with each installment."[15] Since its release, Path of Radiance sold over 156.000 units in Japan as of 31 December 2006.[28]

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Fire Emblem GCN Gets a Date. IGN.com (2004-04-22). Retrieved on 2008-01-29.
  2. ^ "'Nintendo Database — Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'", Nintendo Database. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  3. ^ "'Fire Emblem Database list'", Nintendo Database. Retrieved on 2007-07-09. 
  4. ^ a b c d Mark P. Tjan. "'RPG fan reviews — Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'", RPG Fan, 2006-02-01. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  5. ^ a b c d e f Zosha Arusan. "'Nintendo World Review — Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'", NintendoWorldReport, 2005-08-28. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  6. ^ "'YesAsia.com: Fire Emblem: Akatsuki no Megami'", YesAsia.com. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  7. ^ a b "'Gamerankings — Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance '", Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-08-02. 
  8. ^ "'Ike in Super Smash Bros. Brawl'", Smash Bros. Dojo. Retrieved on 2007-08-01. 
  9. ^ a b Matt Litten. "'Ace Gamez — Path of Radiance review '", Ace Gamez. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  10. ^ "'Final Boss — Ashnard'", N-Philes. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  11. ^ "'Nations'", of Tellius. Retrieved on 2007-08-31. 
  12. ^ "'The Fire Emblem'", Serenes Forest. Retrieved on 2007-08-03. 
  13. ^ "'Laguz and Demi bands'", FEPlanet. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  14. ^ "'Laguz weapons'", FEPlanet. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  15. ^ a b William Jepson. "'Ninty — Fire Emblem: PoR review'", Ninty, 2005-12-05. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  16. ^ Joshua Johnston. "'CCGR — Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'", CCGR, 2006-02-19. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  17. ^ "'Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu — skills'", Hardcore Gaming 101 — Fire Emblem. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  18. ^ "'Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance cheats and unlockables'", Softpedia, 2006-02-01. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  19. ^ a b "'Gaming Evolution — Path of Radiance review'", GamingEvoltion. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  20. ^ a b Matt Crowl. "'Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance review'", N-Philes, 2005-12-01. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  21. ^ "'Localisation changes 2'", Serenes Forest, 2007-07-25. Retrieved on 2007-07-25. 
  22. ^ "'Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance info'", GameFAQs. Retrieved on 2007-08-05. 
  23. ^ a b c "'Gamerankings — Fire Emblem '", Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-08-02. 
  24. ^ a b Greg Kasavin. "'Fire Emblem for GameCube Review'", Gamespot, 2005-10-25. Retrieved on 2007-07-22. 
  25. ^ a b c Peer Schneider. "'Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance — IGN'", IGN, 2005-10-14. Retrieved on 2007-08-02. 
  26. ^ a b c Tom Bramwell. "'Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance Review — Eurogamer'", Eurogamer, 2005-11-09. Retrieved on 2007-08-02. 
  27. ^ "'Gamerankings — Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones '", Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2007-08-02. 
  28. ^ Japan GameCube charts. Japan Game Charts. Retrieved on 2007-11-09.

[edit] External links