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* CallBack: Right before fighting Tenshi, the party finds a collapsed Chen (actually a tanuki disguised as Chen) surrounded by minature craters in the ground, similar to Genius of Sappheiros.

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* CallBack: Right before fighting Tenshi, the party finds a collapsed Chen (actually a tanuki disguised as Chen) surrounded by minature miniature craters in the ground, similar to Genius of Sappheiros.
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** ''Touhou Soujinenji V ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (2016) - An UpdatedRerelease of the game, featuring all content from the original game and expansions, but rebalanced, while also adding some additional content in the form of an extra BonusDungeon and playable character. Was ported to Steam in October 2022, and received an official English translation in March 2023.

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** ''Touhou Soujinenji Soujinengi V ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (2016) - An UpdatedRerelease of the game, featuring all content from the original game and expansions, but rebalanced, while also adding some additional content in the form of an extra BonusDungeon and playable character. Was ported to Steam in October 2022, and received an official English translation in March 2023.



** ''Touhou Gensoumaruoku W ~ The Devil of Decline'' (2019) - An UpdatedRerelease of the game for the Playstation Vita, updating the game with several mechanics and balance changes, similarly to the ''Soujinenji V''.

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** ''Touhou Gensoumaruoku W ~ The Devil of Decline'' (2019) - An UpdatedRerelease of the game for the Playstation Vita, updating the game with several mechanics and balance changes, similarly to the ''Soujinenji ''Soujinengi V''.
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** ''Touhou Gensoumaruoku W ~ The Devil of Decline'' (2019) - An UpdateRerelease of the game for the Playstation Vita, updating the game with several mechanics and balance changes, similarly to the ''Soujinenji V''.

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** ''Touhou Gensoumaruoku W ~ The Devil of Decline'' (2019) - An UpdateRerelease UpdatedRerelease of the game for the Playstation Vita, updating the game with several mechanics and balance changes, similarly to the ''Soujinenji V''.
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** ''Touhou Gensoumaruoku W ~ The Devil of Decline'' (2019) - An UpdateRerelease of the game for the Playstation Vita, updating the game with several mechanics and balance changes, similarly to the ''Soujinenji V''.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** ''Touhou Soujinenji V ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (2016) - An UpdatedReRelease of the game, featuring all content from the original game and expansions, but rebalanced, while also adding some additional content in the form of an extra BonusDungeon and playable character. Was ported to Steam in October 2022, and received an official English translation in March 2023.

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** ''Touhou Soujinenji V ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (2016) - An UpdatedReRelease UpdatedRerelease of the game, featuring all content from the original game and expansions, but rebalanced, while also adding some additional content in the form of an extra BonusDungeon and playable character. Was ported to Steam in October 2022, and received an official English translation in March 2023.

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* Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010) - Gensokyo is covered by a strange mist that weakens youkai all over Gensokyo. Although reluctant to solve this incident at first, Yukari encourages Reimu to find the source of the mist before youkai blame it on humans and worsen the relations between them.

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* Touhou ''Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010) - Gensokyo is covered by a strange mist that weakens youkai all over Gensokyo. Although reluctant to solve this incident at first, Yukari encourages Reimu to find the source of the mist before youkai blame it on humans and worsen the relations between them.


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** ''Touhou Soujinenji V ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (2016) - An UpdatedReRelease of the game, featuring all content from the original game and expansions, but rebalanced, while also adding some additional content in the form of an extra BonusDungeon and playable character. Was ported to Steam in October 2022, and received an official English translation in March 2023.
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''Genius of Sappheiros'' has its own trope page, which can be found [[VideoGame/TheGeniusOfSappheiros here.]]

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''Genius ''The Genius of Sappheiros'' has its own trope page, which can be found [[VideoGame/TheGeniusOfSappheiros here.]]

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Added in the page link to Genius of Sappheiros' own page


* ''Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010) - Gensokyo is covered by a strange mist that weakens youkai all over Gensokyo. Although reluctant to solve this incident at first, Yukari encourages Reimu to find the source of the mist before youkai blame it on humans and worsen the relations between them.

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* ''Touhou Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010) - Gensokyo is covered by a strange mist that weakens youkai all over Gensokyo. Although reluctant to solve this incident at first, Yukari encourages Reimu to find the source of the mist before youkai blame it on humans and worsen the relations between them.



''Genius of Sappheiros'' has its own trope page, which can be found [[VideoGame/TheGeniusOfSappheiros here.]]



[[folder: Tropes associated with ''The Genius of Sappheiros'']]
* BigBad: The Gorgon Sisters turn out to be this.
* GodsNeedPrayerBadly: [[spoiler:One of the main reasons why the Gorgon Sisters carried out the incident. They wanted to reclaim the followers they had lost in the Outside World.]]
* EquipmentSpoiler: Seeing as each character has their own unique weapon type, this trope is in play.
* HatePlague: The driving factor in the expansion's story.
* LeakedExperience: Not experience itself, but characters who aren't in your party (including those you haven't recruited yet) will gain Power at around half the rate of your active party members.
* NewsTravelsFast: Seriously, how does Akyuu find out how you've defeated certain bosses so quickly?
* ScrappyMechanic: Items received from random drops or from treasure chests were unusable until you left the dungeon. All items that are not "saved" by leaving the dungeon will be lost if the party is wiped out. This was removed in Weekend.
* SecretTest: Multiple ones.
** Eirin and Kaguya pretended to be the ones who caused the incident in order to ensure that Reimu and co. were powerful enough to defeat the real villains.
** [[spoiler:The entire incident was staged as one for Gensokyo by the Gorgon Sisters to see whether or not they would fit in. Yukari similarly tested the Gorgon Sisters to see if they belonged in Gensokyo. Both Gensokyo and the Gorgon Sisters passed with flying colors.]]
[[/folder]]
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Dewicked trope


* BareYourMidriff: Angra, full stop.
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TRS cleanup


* AndNowForSomethingCompletelyDifferent: The OriginalCharacter, Saya Kurahinata is the main character in this game. Reimu and Marisa are the last characters you recruit.
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Cut trope. Can't tell if replacement or any others are applicable.


** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:The Embodiment of Hatred in the expansion, although the Gorgons never intended to awaken him.]]



** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:Shinki is this to Mima in the expansion, being the one actually behind revisiting the incident.]]



** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:Nightmare Yukari is the one behind it all in the end, with Muu as her right-hand woman.]]
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Cut trope. Can't tell if replacement or any others are applicable.


* BiggerBad: Each game generally has one, serving as a mid-to-late game bait-and-switch to whoever the supposed BigBad is. The expansion antagonists also are this.
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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of Franchise/TouhouProject fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of Franchise/TouhouProject ''Franchise/TouhouProject'' fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, ''VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth'', which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.
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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of VideoGame/{{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of VideoGame/{{Touhou}} Franchise/TouhouProject fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.
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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} VideoGame/{{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.
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*AndNowForSomethingCompletelyDifferent: The OriginalCharacter, Saya Kurahinata is the main character in this game. Reimu and Marisa are the last characters you recruit.


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*WarmUpBoss: The first few bosses in this game are generally easy and can be beaten in 1-3 turns. Once you obtained all party member though, all bets are off.
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* ScrappyMechanic: If your character die, her Main Doppel dies with her as well, and unlike your character, Doppel don't get revive after a battle.

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* ScrappyMechanic: If your character die, her Main Doppel dies with her as well, and unlike your character, Doppel don't get revive revived after a battle.
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* OhCrap: If your character abruptly summons her Main Doppel when being attacked, that means that attack will kills her.
* ScrappyMechanic: If your character die, her Main Doppel dies with her as well, and unlike your character, Doppel don't get revive after a battle.
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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by RomancingSaGa and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

to:

The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by RomancingSaGa ''VideoGame/RomancingSaGa'' and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.
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Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI first]] [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyII three]] ''VideoGame/{{Final Fantasy|III]]'' games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.

to:

Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI first]] [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyII three]] ''VideoGame/{{Final Fantasy|III]]'' Fantasy|III}}'' games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the first three FinalFantasy games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.

to:

Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the first three FinalFantasy [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI first]] [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyII three]] ''VideoGame/{{Final Fantasy|III]]'' games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by RomancingSaGa and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

to:

The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by EtrianOdyssey, VideoGame/EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by RomancingSaGa and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.
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Adding Bigger Bad example.

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* BiggerBad: Each game generally has one, serving as a mid-to-late game bait-and-switch to whoever the supposed BigBad is. The expansion antagonists also are this.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the first three Final Fantasy games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.

to:

Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the first three Final Fantasy FinalFantasy games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.
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None

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* OriginalCharacter: Loads of them, generally ending up being the antagonists of each game.
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* CallBack: Right before fighting Tenshi, the party finds a collapsed Chen (actually a tanuki disguised as Chen) surrounded by minature craters in the ground, similar to GoS.

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* CallBack: Right before fighting Tenshi, the party finds a collapsed Chen (actually a tanuki disguised as Chen) surrounded by minature craters in the ground, similar to GoS.Genius of Sappheiros.



* GottaCatchEmAll: Getting all of the doppels is this, but just like in DoD there is no reward for doing so.

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* GottaCatchEmAll: Getting all of the doppels is this, but just like in DoD Devil of Decline there is no reward for doing so.
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Adding folder control.

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[[foldercontrol]]
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Adding plot summaries


* ''Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010)
** ''Lingering Summer Heat'' (2010)
** ''Weekend'' (2012)
* ''Touhou Gensoumaroku ~ The Devil of Decline'' (''Eastern Fantasy Demon Record ~ The Devil of Decline'', 2011)
** ''Matsuri'' (2012)
* ''Touhou Genmuyoutan ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'' (''Eastern Dream Rebellion ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'', 2013)

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* ''Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010)
2010) - Gensokyo is covered by a strange mist that weakens youkai all over Gensokyo. Although reluctant to solve this incident at first, Yukari encourages Reimu to find the source of the mist before youkai blame it on humans and worsen the relations between them.
** ''Lingering Summer Heat'' (2010)
(2010) - An expansion to the above, in which Gensokyo has fallen into a state of chaos thanks to a mysterious HatePlague. It is up to Reimu and the one behind the previous incident to work together to find the source of this hatred.
** ''Weekend'' (2012)
(2012) - An expansion that does not add any new plot, but rebalances various game mechanics.
* ''Touhou Gensoumaroku ~ The Devil of Decline'' (''Eastern Fantasy Demon Record ~ The Devil of Decline'', 2011)
2011) - With a mysterious timer counting down and a variety of people and places around Gensokyo suddenly missing, Reimu, Yukari, Byakuren, and Meiling attempt to figure out what is causing these things to disappear. It is not long before they are in a race against time to stop a trio of demons from destroying Gensokyo entirely.
** ''Matsuri'' (2012)
(2012) - Gensokyo is once again placed on the clock to destruction, this time by the acclaimed demon Mima. Reimu, Yukari, Byakuren, and Meiling must team up with the causers of the initial incident in order to save Gensokyo a second time.
* ''Touhou Genmuyoutan ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'' (''Eastern Dream Rebellion ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'', 2013)
2013) - Mysterious doubles of Gensokyo's residents are wandering throughout Gensokyo. Not long after their appearance, Reimu, Marisa, Yukari, and Mamizou are suddenly thrown into what appears to be the Outside World. Meanwhile, the shrine maiden Saya Kurahinata (who looks very similar to Akyuu) is forced to watch as her best friend is kidnapped by youkai. These five come together in order to find out why youkai are running rampant across Saya's hometown and find a way back to Gensokyo.



* ''Touhou Kadomonsutasu ~ Phantasmal Summoners'' (''Eastern Card Monsters ~ Phantasmal Summoners'', 2012)
* ''Touhou Kuesuto ~ Spellcard to Infinite'' (''Eastern Quest ~ Spellcard to Infinite'', 2013)

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* ''Touhou Kadomonsutasu ~ Phantasmal Summoners'' (''Eastern Card Monsters ~ Phantasmal Summoners'', 2012)
2012) - The spell card rules have been abolished, having been replaced by a monster card dueling system by a mysterious figure. Reimu and Marisa, desiring the old days of danmaku, attempt to find the one behind this in order to bring the spell card system back.
* ''Touhou Kuesuto ~ Spellcard to Infinite'' (''Eastern Quest ~ Spellcard to Infinite'', 2013)
2013) - A mysterious portal appears within Akyuu's home, which, if powered by spell cards, leads to mysterious pocket dimensions, some of which contain copies of places and even memories of events from Gensokyo. It is up to Reimu, Marisa, Sanae, Byakuren, Nitori, and Youmu to discover what exactly is beyond this mysterious portal and find its source.
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[[spoiler:Tower of Babel: The final dungeon of the game.]]

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* [[spoiler:Tower of Babel: The final dungeon of the game.]]
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Making the page and throwing in some examples to start off with.

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The ''Touhou Omen Trilogy'' (or simply ''The Omen Trilogy'') is a series of {{Touhou}} fangame RolePlayingGames by doujin circle Strawberry Bose. Unlike VideoGame/TouhouLabyrinth, which is influenced more by EtrianOdyssey, The Omen Trilogy is influenced more by RomancingSaGa and the RolePlayingGames made by doujin circle Hachimitsu Kuma-san, with a variety of shout outs to various series.

Although the games have their differences in terms of gameplay, they all share some common elements. Each game is entirely focused around dungeon crawling and exploration to progress with the plot and story. Enemies are found in PreExistingEncounters and are fought in a turn-based system reminiscent of the first three Final Fantasy games, with each party member possessing a variety of spells and abilities. Each game has a FieldPowerEffect in the form of the Land Meter, which strengthens and weakens the power of the elements and is affected by elemental spells. The challenge in each game is putting together a party suitable for taking on the very challenging dungeons and boss fights.

There are three main games in the trilogy and two side games. The main games and their expansions are as follows:

* ''Touhou Soujinengi ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'' (''Eastern Blue God Omen ~ The Genius of Sappheiros'', 2010)
** ''Lingering Summer Heat'' (2010)
** ''Weekend'' (2012)
* ''Touhou Gensoumaroku ~ The Devil of Decline'' (''Eastern Fantasy Demon Record ~ The Devil of Decline'', 2011)
** ''Matsuri'' (2012)
* ''Touhou Genmuyoutan ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'' (''Eastern Dream Rebellion ~ The Nightmare of Rebellion'', 2013)

The side games are as follows:

* ''Touhou Kadomonsutasu ~ Phantasmal Summoners'' (''Eastern Card Monsters ~ Phantasmal Summoners'', 2012)
* ''Touhou Kuesuto ~ Spellcard to Infinite'' (''Eastern Quest ~ Spellcard to Infinite'', 2013)

[[folder: Tropes associated with the entire series:]]
* AnachronicOrder: According to WordOfGod, Devil of Decline happens before Genius of Sappheiros, with Nightmare of Rebellion taking place after the other two main games.
* ArbitraryHeadcountLimit: Genius of Sappheiros especially has this, considering cutscenes show all of your possible party members travelling together. Devil of Decline still has this, but it implies the rest of your party members are hanging at the Hakurei Shrine. [[AvertedTrope Averted]] in Nightmare of Rebellion, where you only have the five party members you get.
* BackgroundMusicOverride: The final area of Genius of Sappheiros and Nightmare of Rebellion both have this.
* BossInMookClothing: The series is filled with them, particularly the angel and demon enemies.
* DefeatMeansFriendship: Many characters you recruit end up joining after battling them.
* DefendCommand: Does the obvious. In Nightmare of Rebellion, it lets characters regenerate extra MP.
* DiscOneFinalDungeon: Each game has at least one.
** Eientei and the Sea of Clouds/Bhava-agra in Genius of Sappheiros.
** The Clock Towers of the End in Devil of Decline.
** The Dream Castle in Nightmare of Rebellion.
* FieldPowerEffect: The Land Meter in each game serves as this. It affects the power of elemental attacks, causes enemies and party members with regeneration in an element to regenerate HP, and can allow or forbid the use of certain spells.
* FireIceLightning: From Phantasmal Summoners onwards, the elemental system became this.
* InfinityPlusOneSword: Pre-expansion in each game, the Kusanagi is this. It can generally get upgraded to an even more powerful form in each game.
* ItemCrafting: Besides treasures and drops, this is the only way to get any sort of equipment.
* MetalSlime: The Yukkuri line of enemies in each game is this.
* NintendoHard: With the exception of the introductory dungeons in each game, the difficulty is pretty high in general.
* PreexistingEncounters
* StatGrinding: Not so much in Genius of Sappheiros, but the element levels in Devil of Decline and Nightmare of Rebellion involve this.
* TheVeryDefinitelyFinalDungeon: [[spoiler:The Lakebed Temple in Genius of Sappheiros, the Sinister Castle of Chaos in Devil of Decline, and the Tower of Babel in Nightmare of Rebellion.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Tropes associated with ''The Genius of Sappheiros'']]
* BigBad: The Gorgon Sisters turn out to be this.
** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:The Embodiment of Hatred in the expansion, although the Gorgons never intended to awaken him.]]
* GodsNeedPrayerBadly: [[spoiler:One of the main reasons why the Gorgon Sisters carried out the incident. They wanted to reclaim the followers they had lost in the Outside World.]]
* EquipmentSpoiler: Seeing as each character has their own unique weapon type, this trope is in play.
* HatePlague: The driving factor in the expansion's story.
* LeakedExperience: Not experience itself, but characters who aren't in your party (including those you haven't recruited yet) will gain Power at around half the rate of your active party members.
* NewsTravelsFast: Seriously, how does Akyuu find out how you've defeated certain bosses so quickly?
* ScrappyMechanic: Items received from random drops or from treasure chests were unusable until you left the dungeon. All items that are not "saved" by leaving the dungeon will be lost if the party is wiped out. This was removed in Weekend.
* SecretTest: Multiple ones.
** Eirin and Kaguya pretended to be the ones who caused the incident in order to ensure that Reimu and co. were powerful enough to defeat the real villains.
** [[spoiler:The entire incident was staged as one for Gensokyo by the Gorgon Sisters to see whether or not they would fit in. Yukari similarly tested the Gorgon Sisters to see if they belonged in Gensokyo. Both Gensokyo and the Gorgon Sisters passed with flying colors.]]
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Tropes associated with ''The Devil of Decline'']]
* BareYourMidriff: Angra, full stop.
* BigBad: Angra Mainyu in the main game, Mima in the expansion.
** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:Shinki is this to Mima in the expansion, being the one actually behind revisiting the incident.]]
* BiggerOnTheInside: The Clock Towers of the End and the Sinister Castle of Chaos. The Sinister Castle of Chaos manages to somehow fit an entire town inside of it.
* CombinationAttack: After recruiting Akyuu, if every character activates their Last Words all at once, the main character uses a special "Union Last Word."
* EvilTowerOfOminousness: The Clock Towers of the End are this, along with the Sinister Castle of Chaos.
* ForTheEvulz: What the Three Demon Pillars claim as the reason for causing the incident. [[SubvertedTrope Subverted]] when Angra shows up before the final dungeon and spells out her plan. [[spoiler:[[AvertedTrope Averted]] entirely in the ending.]]
* GottaCatchEmAll: Collecting all of the shikigami is optional and there's no reward for getting all of them despite the immense difficulty of getting the rarer ones, but there's always bragging rights.
* InevitableTournament: The Demon Arena boss sequence in the expansion is this.
* ItAmusedMe: [[spoiler:The entire reason Angra and the Three Demon Pillars caused the incident was simply because they were bored in Makai and wanted some entertainment.]]
** [[spoiler:This turns out to also be the reason why Shinki recreated the incident from the main storyline.]]
* RequiredPartyMember: Whoever you choose as the main character (Reimu, Yukari, Byakuren, or Meiling) cannot leave the party at any time.
* SincerestFormOfFlattery: [[spoiler:Shinki]] liked the premise of the incident in the main game so much she decided to repeat it, fully admitting that it's a complete do-over of the original incident.
* WorldOfChaos: What Gensokyo ends up turning into thanks to the Three Demonic Pillars.
[[/folder]]

[[folder: Tropes associated with ''The Nightmare of Rebellion'']]
* AlternateSelf: Saya is this to Akyuu, in a sense. The Doppels are also this. [[spoiler:Nightmare Yukari is this to both the real Yukari and the Dream Yukari who you play as.]]
* AnachronismStew: The game is supposed to be taking place in 1912, yet it has a modern day skyscraper and train station, as well as an old-fashioned Chinese-style castle, Egyptian pyramid, Japanese castle, and [[spoiler:the Tower of Babel.]]
* BigBad: Hakusen Tatsumi appears to be this at first, but then it becomes clear that Muu Monnyan is the one responsible for manipulating dreams.
** BiggerBad: [[spoiler:Nightmare Yukari is the one behind it all in the end, with Muu as her right-hand woman.]]
* CallBack: Right before fighting Tenshi, the party finds a collapsed Chen (actually a tanuki disguised as Chen) surrounded by minature craters in the ground, similar to GoS.
* DreamWeaver: Muu Monnyan, being a tapir, is this.
* GottaCatchEmAll: Getting all of the doppels is this, but just like in DoD there is no reward for doing so.
* GunsAreWorthless: [[AvertedTrope Averted]]. Guns are actually more powerful than swords and almost always carry a slayer against Warriors and Magicians, but have terrible accuracy to compensate.
* LivingDream: [[spoiler:Both Yukaris that appear in the game are this, being dreamt up by the real Yukari.]]
[[spoiler:Tower of Babel: The final dungeon of the game.]]
[[/folder]]

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