Luckily our hero isn’t alone, accompanied by his betrothed Frederica Aesfrost and Roland Glenbrook. The former is his betrothed and sibling to the rulers of Aesfrost, making her subject to racial distrust and sudden vitriol thanks to her fluorescent hair and willingness to side with the enemy. Roland is the prince of Glenbrook, and following his father’s death must hatch a plan to save his family and take back everything that was lost.
This is the most readily apparent example of Convictions playing out in your favor; whatever it is that our above example would theoretically pertain to, you’ll stand a far better chance of accomplishing it with a high score in a particular aspect. Grinding that out, even if you can’t see the exact stockpile number until New Game Plus , is still worth the eff
Because players won’t be at risk of losing a character in battle, units in Triangle Strategy are a lot more different than each other. Although characters may die due to story reasons, that’s a controlled factor that allows each unit to have its own mechanical purpose and decreases the need for multiple units that do the same things. But it also means Fire Emblem games tend to have larger playable casts. Fire Emblem Gaiden has the smallest number of playable characters in the series at 32, and its remake, Echoes: Shadows of Valentia , added two more through normal play and four through DLC, similar to the four characters exclusive to Fire Emblem: Three Houses ’ Cindered Shadows DLC . Sacred Stones features the next fewest playable characters in the Fire Emblem series at 34, although its special Creature Campaign adds 10 m
Serenoa and co. reach Wolffort Castle… and receive the bad news. And then some more bad news. And then yet another piece of bad news. It just isn’t going well for our heroes, is it? It’s a bad day to be a father/father figure in Norze
Triangle Strategy was criticized pre-launch for sticking to its bizarre title, but at least it owns it. Everything about the game, thematically, seems to revolve around the form of a Triangle Strategy Gameplay to some extent or another. In the case of the Conviction system, that’s plain as day with Liberty, Morality, and Util
In battles, you’ll earn Morality points through achieving victory without killing every enemy unit (obviously impossible in fights where the goal is to do just that). Buffing your allies also earns Morality points, so a character like Benedict is highly helpful here despite his more Utility-minded personal
In this walkthrough, the best persuasion options that you can pick are presented in tables . When chosen, these options will give you the lowest required amount of Conviction points to succeed in changing a character’s m
First, let’s note that a heightened degree of Conviction in a particular aspect “feeds into itself” in a nifty fashion: selecting a dialogue decision during Conviction-related conversations will boost that decision’s reflected aspect substantial
It seems there’s a bit of an “Unbeliever” problem going on at the Ministry of Medicine. A researcher named Plinius is on the run with stolen secrets, and Serenoa teams up with Exharme to put an end to
Many strategy RPGs divide gameplay into a “player phase” when the player can move all their allies however they please and an “enemy phase” when the enemies can do the same, and Fire Emblem is no exception. Players can build their strategy around moving their units all at once in whatever order they please, and they know the enemies will all move in response to how the player leaves the field. In Triangle Strategy , there are no phases: units instead move one after another based on their speed, similar to how the speed stat works in Pokémon . Players have to instead consider when each unit, enemy and ally alike, is able to next move in order to best approach the situation and keep their units protec
The Mean Twins arrive at the throne room to congratulate their Less Mean But Still Mean Brother, and a sniveling Patriatte makes an appearance. And after that… some Game of Thrones-style flavor events will unf
So, for example, during a Scales of Conviction event you’ll be chatting with, say, Geela. And in order to press Geela into agreeing with you, you’ll want — again, hypothetically here — a high enough Utility score. Picking the Utility-based dialogue option will add another 50 Utility points to your stockpile, thus raising Geela’s likelihood to listen as the conversation contin
It should be noted here that regardless of what you have done in the past three chapters, it is possible to secure the outcome you want based on just one of these conversations. To sway Anna to your side, you will only need to answer one of these prompts with a Morality or Liberty option and then pick the best option from the tables below . Convincing Anna will be enough to get the outcome you des
Some dialogue choices are locked behind having certain pieces of Information . These are acquired in exploration events and voting events by talking to NPCs and finding hidden items.
Before we get on with the vote itself, there are two Conviction choice dialogues that you can partake in by talking to Frani and Patriatte at the northern end of the bri



