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1This page covers tropes found in ''VideoGame/DissidiaFinalFantasy'', tropes N to Z. You can find tropes A to M [[DissidiaFinalFantasy/TropesAToM here]].
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6* NarniaTime: Apparently, in the world where the war takes place, time is "not steady", meaning that the warriors can spend ages fighting for the gods in countless cycles of war, but are still able to return to the time and place from which they were summoned.
7* {{Nerf}}: Almost every aspect of gameplay was nerfed for ''Dissidia 012'', with the net result that characters do less damage, equipment and accessories are less-important, battles last longer and skill is more critical:
8** Equipment pieces had their abilities nerfed. In ''Dissidia'' the Ragnarok gave +25% physical damage and the Zwill Crossblade gave +30% initial EX Force. ''Dissidia 012'', +10% physical damage and +20% initial EX Force. Booster accessories are now one each, and some had their multiplier reduced. Basic accessories had their effects heavily nerfed in addition to mostly being one each. For example, in ''Dissidia'', you could equip a Gaia Ring (+15% damage), two Muscle Belts (+15% physical damage), and a Champion Belt (+25% physical damage). In ''Dissidia 012'' you get one Muscle Belt (+7% physical damage), and the Gaia Ring and Champion Belt no longer exist.
9** EX Cores and EX Force charge the EX Gauge less, and EX Mode lasts less time (especially since the main equipment pieces used to extend EX Mode duration were nerfed with everything else).
10** Stage Bravery is lower and Wall Rush damage is less. In ''Dissidia'', if you inflicted Break that was an instant +4000 Bravery (usually, give or take), and with a Wall Rush HP attack that's 6000 damage plus your Bravery when you got the boost. ''Dissidia 012'', Break will give around +2000 Bravery, and with wall Rush that's 2500 damage. Exact same circumstances, less than half the damage.
11** A nerf that doesn't sound as drastic on paper as it is in practice, dodging no longer "recharges" your jumps - once you exhaust your jumps you can't jump again until you land or use Quickmove on something. Thus, staying in the air for extended periods of time is harder.
12** And that's all in addition to the various buffs and nerfs individual characters got. Terra in particular is widely considered to be one of the most heavily nerfed characters.
13* NiceJobBreakingItHero: [[spoiler:The only reason Chaos is able to kill Cosmos is because the heroes collected the crystals, which hold her power.]]
14** To their defense, [[spoiler:she sent them on their mission knowing fully well that this would happen. Her plan was to let them each get part of her power so that they could remain and defeat Chaos. And know "True Darkness", which would be utter despair at the world apparently being screwed, yet have the willpower to get up and keep going. Given [[KnightInShiningArmor Warrior of Light's]] mentality alone, [[BatmanGambit this was practically guaranteed to work.]]]]
15* NintendoHard: [[BonusLevelOfHell Inward Chaos.]] You essentially fight every character in the game in a row, [[TheComputerIsACheatingBastard with most of them being over level 100 and able to perfectly predict your moves.]] To best simulate the experience, place the most sensitive part of your body in a vice and tighten it.
16** Also, Duel Colosseum's Blackjack Course. Prepare to get thrown around excessively for massive damage by CPU's that range from level 100-[[TheComputerIsACheatingBastard 150 and can button read]]... not to mention [[SNKBoss Chaos]] can pop up anytime at [[OhCrap level 130]] to ruin your day... Have fun with that.
17** Good luck getting Feral Chaos as a playable character. The dungeons leading to his are decent enough, the enemies max out at your level normally. Feral Chaos's level? The STARTING enemies are level 120, with max equipment on them, not to mention how stupidly dodgy and accurate the enemies are. You've got five levels of this before meeting the level 130 Feral Chaos with [[DamageSpongeBoss over 125,000 HP.]]
18* NotCompletelyUseless: Of a sort. In the latter game's Labyrinth mode, the status card "Petrify" will reduce the size of your hand by one. While this seems outwardly to be nothing but a hindrance, and indeed the game treats it as such, there's more to it than that. The rooms at the end of certain areas (specifically the Cloister of Encounters, Pinhole Galleria, and Cloister of Mirages) present you with four cards, each for a Joy/Rage/Sorrow of Conflict component item which is used to get special equipment. Because your hand size in these rooms is two, and when you pick a card any other normal cards in your hand are discarded, you can usually only take two while you must throw the others away. Petrify, however, will still reduce the size of your hand in these rooms, making it 1 and allowing you to run away with all four of them instead. The downside is that because of the "exit Labyrinth" card being placed behind the card that enters a new area, you will be forced to go deeper instead of being able to just leave then and there unless you have a Geomancer active as well. [[note]]While you could leave with the "Exit" card that is always available even without a Geomancer active, you would lose the equipment gained from the Conflict items, thereby defeating the entire point of carrying Petrify into the prize room in the first place.[[/note]]
19* NoOneCouldSurviveThat: Done with Firion and Onion Knight in the first game. Their personal enemies throw terrible attacks at them during certain cutscenes, yet [[SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome they survive and continue fighting.]]
20* NonLinearSequel: Driven home when [[spoiler:the ending effectively brings the entire series back to the beginning, with Warrior of Light [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI walking towards Cornelia Castle with his Crystal in hand]].]]
21* NonStandardCharacterDesign: Seemingly to keep them true to original form (''FFIX'' had SuperDeformed character designs), Zidane and to a lesser extent Kuja are much more cartoony compared to the other characters. Zidane is also the third shortest Cosmos warrior, while Kuja is the shortest for Chaos.
22* NotDrawnToScale and[=/=]or YourSizeMayVary: The ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' series already takes a "more like ''guidelines''" approach to official heights and weights. Thing get even worse/better in ''Dissidia'', as [[http://community.livejournal.com/ffchaoticcosmos/271197.html this rip of the renders shows.]] [[note]]While we don't know if there are any "official DFF" canon heights, we do know that WOL is canonically 189cm, [[NoExportForYou thanks to Ultimania]], so the chart is fairly congruent.[[/note]] Most jarring, likely, of the changes are Cecil, who has become the tallest Cosmos-side character by shooting up over half a foot, to roughly ''194cm[=/=]6'4"'', and Kefka, who's had a growth spurt of roughly the same amount, winding up somewhere around 191cm[=/=]6'2". Some fans theorize the changes made to Cecil were intended to make his many scenes with the roughly 2.5m[=/=]8' giant Golbez somewhat less... awkward, since Golbez is Cecil's brother, but as there are no potential explanations for the other changes, no one really knows why.
23* NotQuiteFlight -- Kuja has the ability to Glide, and Sephiroth, Terra, and Kefka get the ability to Glide in their EX Modes. It's just what it sounds like -- by holding the jump button, they can float around the stage, albeit they lose altitude steadily. Certain characters are also allowed to float while using certain attacks.
24** And then there's the various Air Dash skills, which allow a quick dash in any direction straight to the sides in the air. In ''Dissidia 012'', Omni Air Dash+ allows you to not only dash in any direction in the air, but you can direct your character to turn in the air as well.
25* NotSoHarmlessVillain: The manikins, in their entirety. In the original ''Dissidia'', manikins were your basic {{Mook}}s, existing to be mowed down near-thoughtlessly and with barely a comment from the heroes. Sure, a couple of the manikins were fierce on a gameplay level, but even so, it was clear that the manikins were strictly small-time. Then ''Dissidia 012'' came out, and the manikins were transformed from regular mooks to a ZergRush that terrifies the forces of Cosmos, not only because of their power and numbers, but also their nature, being soulless duplicates of living people. And then, we find out that while DeathIsCheap due to ''Dissidia'''s GroundhogDayLoop, they keep fighting even when you're already down and will push you past the point you can be revived, resulting in you getting KilledOffForReal if you get overwhelmed by them. Clearly these are no longer mooks to be trifled with.
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29* ObviouslyEvil: Pretty much all the villains except for Golbez and Jecht fit this trope. And the only reason Golbez ''doesn't'' fit it is because [[spoiler:he's not actually evil, not because he doesn't ''look'' it]].
30* OddlyNamedSequel2ElectricBoogaloo: ''Dissidia [Dissidia 012] 012: Final Fantasy''.
31* OffscreenMomentOfAwesome: The Official Quests are full of unseen events that amount to this -- [[spoiler:Gilgamesh got to fight Exdeath, Vaan got to fight Gabranth, and Shantotto managed to escape the cycle by ''outright destroying Gateways'' until she de-stabalized their portals enough to get a passage to the Rift to open. Garland warns her that if she enters the Rift she can never escape -- [[ShutUpHannibal Shantotto laughs about the fact that he had said the exact same thing about the cycle itself]].]]
32* OhMyGods: Or rather: "Sweet Cosmos!"
33* OldSaveBonus: Having a save file from the first ''Dissidia'' will allow you to transfer character levels and accessory slots to ''Dissidia 012''.
34* OminousLatinChanting: Left out of the original ''Dissidia'' save for remixes of old tracks with it, but busted out with such force in ''Dissidia 012'' that One-Winged Angel looks underplayed. Behold [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MrbwRuM-6-s Cantata Mortis & God in Fire]].
35** As you get closer to the final gateways in the Confessions of The Creator story, the overworld music permanently changes to a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L4SeUIb_zRI somber, heavy Latin chant.]] Jarring and creepy when compared to the overworld songs that went before, and [[SoundtrackDissonance particularly so when you're in the Elven Snowfields or Cornelia Plains]] (the same music played during the epilogue of Light to All, but considering you were permanently stuck in the Land of Discord, it wasn't as sudden).
36* OmnicidalManiac: The villains on Team Chaos who want to destroy the world are a matter of some concern to the other villains on the team who just want to [[TakeOverTheWorld take it over]].
37* OnceDoneNeverForgotten: Used as {{Mythology Gag}}s -- if a character had a particularly embarrassing moment in their original game, like [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyII Firion's]] near-seduction by the Lamia Queen or [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII Cloud's]] cross-dressing in Wall Market, ''Dissidia'' will reference it for a laugh. In ''Dissidia 012'', Vaan got this worst of all -- his infamous "how old are you" line pops up ''four times''.
38* [[OneSteveLimit One Cloud Limit]]: [[AvertedTrope Averted]]; this game features both [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII the Void]] and [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII Strife]].
39* OneHitPointWonder: Gold Manikins usually come in at low HP but have either a huge amount of Bravery or summonstones to increase it, or to decrease yours. They usually wear the enemy-only accessory "The Rotten" which saps their HP to 1.
40** The player can make their own character this too. The "Strong Against Adversity" booster in fact counts on it, giving you a 3.0x multiplier when you have 1 HP. Combined with the Ensanguined Shield and Back to the Wall accessory so you start the battle this way, toss in a couple more boosters that will trigger for being near death, and add in the Back to the Wall ability. The result is a character with only 1 hit point, but a huge booster multiplier to power up their other accessories, an increased critical hit ratio, and the power to instantly charge their Assist gauge by dodging and countering attacks.
41* OneManArmy: The Warrior of Light. It's possible to write off his [[spoiler:holding off an entire army of manikins as large as the one Lightning, Vaan, Yuna, Laguna, Tifa, and Kain are fighting for as long or longer than they do]] as ConservationOfNinjitsu, until you find out that [[spoiler:among every warrior in the [[MindRape nightmare universe]] Shinryu plunged Cid into, of Chaos and Cosmos alike, the Warrior of Light held out the longest against Feral Chaos.]] So yes, he ''is'' just that good. He also fights far more villains in his story than any other character, taking down Ultimecia, Sephiroth, the Emperor, and Garland (twice), along with of course all the Manikins barring his path in-between.
42* OneWingedAngel: The Emperor (in his [[spoiler:Emperor of Hell form]]), Golbez, Kefka, Kuja, and Jecht (though a more normal human-sized version). Weirdly enough, the trope namer Sephiroth ''doesn't'' go all One Winged Angel on us (except that literally speaking, ''[[VisualPun he does]]''). Because his final boss form would require loading a whole 'nother character model mid-battle, his EX Mode is merely his one black wing from ''Advent Children'' and the ''Kingdom Hearts'' games.
43** Not to mention the fact that his final boss form doesn't even have any legs and one of his arms is an oversized wing, which would mean that either he'd still continue wielding the Masamune that way and look supremely awkward doing it or gain another moveset like Gabranth does, meaning he'd have to either have quick access to his EX mode like Gabranth does and steal his main gimmick while still being a perfectly complete character without needing to use it or only have access to it the normal way, which would make the new moveset far too situational.
44*** Exdeath and Ultimecia both get their penultimate forms rather than their final, "true" OneWingedAngel ones (Exdeath in a more humanoid version of his "magical tree" form, and Ultimecia with Junction Griever), probably for similar reasons to Sephiroth. Exdeath also has a reskin based on the horned "figurehead" of his Neo-Exdeath form in the sequel.
45*** And technically the final boss '''is''' [[spoiler:Garland's One Winged Angel form]].
46*** And with the addition of [[spoiler:Feral Chaos, Chaos has his own One Winged Angel form. So does this mean that he now has every type of one winged angel covered yet?]]
47* TheOnlyOneAllowedToDefeatYou: The sort of relationship the heroes and villains of each game tend to have. Complete with "LeaveHimToMe" included.
48** Subverted by Ultimecia, who seemed to have no problem with letting Garland help her against Squall.
49** In fact, if you specifically use the appropriate character to finally defeat a particular Chaos minion, you get a special cutscene before and after the battle.
50* OneHitKO: Quite often possible if you can get your Bravery high enough. Also, some Mooks in story mode have only 1 HP, but make up for it with huge Bravery boosts, turning the fight into "first attack wins."
51* OrgasmicCombat: Some of the characters sound like they may be doing... something ''other'' than fighting when they get hit. Running through their voice files in the Museum, in rapid succession, can take the effect up a notch -- Terra, Cloud of Darkness, and [[HotBlooded Firion]] are particularly notable in this regard.
52* OurClonesAreDifferent: Manikins are crystalline versions of ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'''s most famous heroes and villains used by the BigGood and the BigBad as ExpendableClone {{Mooks}}. More details on them are revealed in the [[AllThereInTheManual Cosmos and Chaos Reports]] collected throughout the game. The [[VideoGame/Dissidia012FinalFantasy sequel]] reveals the existence of [[spoiler:"Perfect" Manikins, who possess a sense of self and are pretty much indistinguishable from "normal" people. They include TheHero of [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI the original game]], the BigGood, and the BigBad]].
53* OutOfTheInferno: The villains walking out of lava. In ''yet another'' Mythology Gag, Sephiroth poses in front of the fire ''exactly'' the same way he did in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII'' and more specifically, the flashback in ''Advent Children.''
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57* PaletteSwap: The Manikins, the base enemies of the game, are mono-colored clones of the playable cast.
58* PaintingTheMedium: Each character uses the command-window style from their own game when using an HP attack, presumably to distinguish commands from each character in the heat of battle.
59** In addition, when facing off against Chaos, the battle screen says "Shape The Future!" (previously used as ''Dissidia'''s exclusive story mode opening effect) instead of "Battle Start".
60** When an [[LimitBreak EX Burst]] is performed, the "map screen" of the fight breaks away and the characters enter the generic EX Burst screen/dimension/whatever. The screen breaks away in [[MythologyGag a manner reminiscent of]] the [[RandomEncounters Random Encounter]] {{Fight Woosh}}es throughout the original series -- except this time, it's the character performing the [=EX Burst=] that causes the break, each in a different way: Firion shoots a [[HotBlooded burning]] [[ArrowsOnFire arrow]] that "hits" the screen and causes it to shatter, Terra [[BlackMagicianGirl fires a blast of Blizzard]] that shatters it, Cecil simply punches the center of the screen, Cloud and Squall destroy it with their blades... the list goes on.
61*** And then, in ''Dissidia 012'', [[spoiler:Feral Chaos's]] EX Burst compounds the above. First, he charges ''through the screen'', shattering it to reveal the EX Burst screen[=/=]dimension[=/=]whatever, then flings his hapless victim straight up, where they ''hit the EX Burst screen'' and make it break away to reveal the little hell-dimension where [[spoiler:Feral Chaos]], erm... [[NoHoldsBarredBeatdown does his thing]]. At the climax, the screen breaks yet ''again'' to show the silhouette of the victim being ImpaledWithExtremePrejudice, then it switches to a static-y JitterCam depicting [[spoiler:Chaos]] pulling back to finish off the victim, ''from the victim's point of view'', before -- the screen [[NothingIsScarier goes black, cutting out exactly like a deactivated (or destroyed) TV set]]. ''Brrrrr.''
62* PlacidPlaneOfAnkleDeepWater: Order's Sanctuary, the domain of the God of Good Cosmos, is a large plain covered in shallow water as far as the eye can see. There are no buildings, just scattered shell-like structures and beams of light that players can travel on. In the ''Dissidia 012'' intro, it even reflects the cloudy sky.
63* PeninsulaOfPowerLeveling: Certain gateways in ''Dissidia 012'' can be used to grind easily. One notable gateway has 5 battles straight away from a accessories protected spot allowing the player to make full use of accessories that boost Exp and AP gain, but usually break after battle.
64* PointThatSomewhereElse: During Cloud and Sephiroth's second battle, Cloud points the Buster Sword at Sephiroth when he becomes angry at him for something he said. Sephiroth just smirks and calmly moves it aside.
65* ThePollyanna: Bartz, ''so much''. His optimism is downright infectious. Onion Knight and Zidane also count, although they're a bit more realistic and reflective.
66* PostEndGameContent: When you end the game, you'll gain access to a lot of new things to buy in the catalog. And whenever you end a character's storyline you can repeat it again, and this time you'll be able to get some rewards you couldn't get before.
67** AnotherSideAnotherStory: Inward Chaos and Confessions of the Creator are this, as well as BrutalBonusLevel.
68* PosthumousCharacter: [[spoiler:Cid's wife]] who is mentioned in the Cosmos Reports.
69* PowerCreepPowerSeep: As seen in Adaptional Badass above, every villain has been placed on even terms with each other villian despite where they lie on the SlidingScaleOfVillainThreat, and every hero has been upped to face any one of them.
70* PreAssKickingOneLiner: More or less all the pre-battle introductory quotes. ''Dissidia 012'' added in unique two-part encounter quotes for storyline battles where they actually banter.
71-->'''Garland:''' "I will grant you true and utter annihilation!" \
72'''Lightning:''' "Bring it on! I don't need a second chance!"
73
74-->'''Exdeath:''' "Prepare to disappear into the Void!" \
75'''Zidane:''' "Like hell if I take a curtain call here!"
76
77-->'''Emperor:''' "Grovel before my unrivaled power!" \
78'''Bartz:''' "Try saying that after I get through with you!"
79
80-->'''Exdeath:''' "So, you offer your life in exchange for theirs?"\
81'''Kain''': "Of course not. I offer ''[[NoYou yours]]''."
82* {{Pun}}: The Accomplishment titles.
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86* RagtagBunchOfMisfits: They got either unclear goals, [[LonersAreFreaks poor social skills]], or simply [[ItsPersonal personal scores to settle]], and some of them [[ObfuscatingStupidity either look or act immature]] or [[ImprobableAge are too young to even be warriors]]. Nevertheless, the Warriors of Cosmos are still the [[BunnyEarsLawyer best]] [[BadassCrew team]] you're getting for this war!
87* RainbowPimpGear: What everyone logically ''would'' look like if characters' appearance actually changed with their equipment, given some of the very weird stuff you can equip.
88* RandomDrop: they have some conditions, but more often than not you'll fulfill them easily and you'll get items to craft after your battles.
89** RareRandomDrop: Some of them have very low chances to be created. The equipment of the enemy can be obtained too, but it's also very difficult to get.
90* RashomonStyle: Due to SimultaneousArcs.
91** Taken to its most logical extent by each Destiny Odyssey having an epilogue that, more often than not, ''doesn't even concern them''. Thankfully there's a cutscene theatre in the bonus features so that you can absorb the plot in order.
92* RazorWind[=/=]SwordBeam: Cloud gets his Blade Beam as a Brave attack, Sephiroth also has a couple of Brave attacks like this. Warrior of Light has one for a HP attack, as does Squall.
93** Bonus points for the Warrior of Light in that his sword beams are acually '''shaped like swords'''.
94* RecoveryAttack
95* RecycledTitle: Being a ContinuityReboot, the 2015 game is simply called "''Dissidia: Final Fantasy''".
96* RegionalBonus: For once in Squeenix's history, it's also an NTSC-US Bonus. Included in the American and EU versions of the game are tweaked movesets, new cutscenes, and an extra Duel Coliseum mode where every other encounter is an SNKBoss. All this, of course, came back to Japan via the ''[[UpdatedRerelease Universal Tuning]]'' edition. Some fans, though, actually declare the American and EU versions ''better'' than Universal Tuning, as ''UT'' slowed down a lot of the Dash-type abilities, and removed the ability to dodge cancel a lot of moves, thereby giving several characters a lot less combo potential.
97* RememberTheNewGuy: ''Dissidia 012'' focuses heavily upon the new characters that were added, who of course were never mentioned in the original game. {{Justified|Trope}} with the explanation that the characters of the first game lost their memories of the twelfth cycle upon being revived for the thirteenth.
98** In addition, [[spoiler:the old story's remake in 012 has been updated with new lines that allude to the events of the previous cycle, including Tidus, Terra, Cloud, Squall, and Cecil all remarking on the Manikins based on people they met before or during the previous conflict, often making ironic comments due to their lack of memories.]]
99* {{Retcon}}: ''Dissidia 012'' expanded on the momentary opposition Exdeath showed to Golbez and Cecil by making him Kain's ArchEnemy and by proxy to Golbez and Cecil, while the Emperor's role in Jecht's defection is expanded into him being Yuna's ArchEnemy and the mastermind behind a scheme with Tidus and Jecht. As a result, their rivalries with Bartz and Firion are actually footnotes to their ''real'' conflicts with the mentioned characters, and looking at their confrontations with this new backstory in mind, there's no real rivalry between Bartz and Exdeath as much as Exdeath just happened to be the one Bartz fought at the end of the story. As for the Emperor and Firion, [[spoiler:for the purposes of his plan, the Emperor plays himself up as Firion's designated nemesis to him on purpose, since Firion needs to have his views challenged in order to assert them fully and get the CharacterDevelopment needed to manifest the Crystal]].
100* RewardingVandalism: Not only do you often get new trade accessories for destroying large pieces of the scenery, it's often the only way to get those particular items.
101* RiddleForTheAges: Addressed and lampshaded. In a report, Garland muses on the time loop of the original ''Final Fantasy'', where he will be drawn into the past by Chaos, then transform into Chaos and call himself through time to him. He's aware that this is a TemporalParadox and that is impossible, ''some'' force or another must have drawn him back in time originally to begin the cycle, but he has no idea who or what it may have been and doubts he will ever learn.
102* TheRival: In the original ''Dissidia'', all of the Warriors of Chaos are rivals to the heroes from their respective games (Bartz vs. Exdeath, Cloud vs. Sephiroth, etc.). In ''012'', the new warriors make rivals of villains from previous game: Garland for Lightning, Ultemecia for Tifa, Cloud of Darkness for Laguna, Kefka for Vaan, the Emperor for Yuna, and Exdeath for Kain.
103* {{Roboteching}}: Some of the "homing" projectiles; Terra[=/=]Bartz's Holy and Warrior of Light's Radiant Sword being the clearest examples. In fact, Kefka's entire moveset practically revolves around this trope.
104* RoyalsWhoActuallyDoSomething: Cecil [[spoiler:The King of Baron]] FTW!
105* RPGElements: What else did you expect from a ''Final Fantasy'' title?
106* RubberBandAI: In ''Dissidia 012'', the higher one character's Bravery, the higher the critical hit multiplier for the other character is. When near death, if you successfully dodge and counterattack, your trigger Assist Charge to instantly fill up your gauge.
107* RuleOfCool: A hero and a villain from almost every ''Final Fantasy'' get together and beat the crap out of each other. Come on. Also, a phrase commonly used to describe the gameplay is that it's like playing ''[[Anime/FinalFantasyVIIAdventChildren Advent Children]]''.
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111* SailorEarth: The two games cover the 12th and 13th cycles. There's still Cycles One-Through-Eleven, and the events that occur in them are left very, very ambiguous. Pick a cycle number, pick your new additions to the roster, and have fun. ''Dissidia 012'' even conveniently provides canon explanations on why no one will remember your additions in the later cycles and what could happen to them that they aren't around in such. The two games also provide ThemeNaming for their titles if you're unsure what to call your story.
112* SchmuckBait: Shade Impulse map 3-5. Hmm. Well, let's see; the map screen for this level is big, open, and totally empty, save for the boss square containing Garland and a single treasure chest. Let's open the treasure! [[spoiler:OhCrap! Simultaneous ambush by two ridiculously high-leveled enemy pieces (out of four placed ''just so'')! ''[[SarcasmMode GEE, WHO COULD HAVE GUESSED!]]'']]
113** Speaking of, if you don't learn quickly to check the stats on enemies before attacking them in story mode, your first encounter with a High Level Enemy piece will go like this: "Wow, made it to level 3! Hey, high level treasure chest, and it's only one piece in front of it, Let's fight it! ''[twelve tries later]'' FINE! Have my fucking destiny points, ya cheap bastard!" It's even more likely if you pick the wrong starting level because one level has the High Level piece be a fucking ambush -- meaning, if you even walk up to it, prepare to lose your points -- and other levels have the pieces hidden until you attack them -- meaning you won't know it's a High Level Piece until you die. Mind you, that's less SchmuckBait and more like TrialAndErrorGameplay.
114** In ''Dissidia 012'', at the end of the tutorial, a Moogle asks if you've mastered the game. Answering yes pits you against [[spoiler:a max-level Feral Chaos with 9999 Brave and 125,698 HP.]] And you're still at Level 1. Have fun.
115*** And if you beat it (hard as that is to do so without hacking), the game doesn't believe you beat it, and you get exactly the same dialogue.
116* SensibleHeroesSkimpyVillains: The majority of the Cosmos-side characters are fully covered -- Terra has a minidress and tights in her default (no tights in the alt), and Tidus has his trademark teeny shirt, but that's the extent of bared skin. Chaos-side has Ultimecia, who wears a dress with a front slit up to the crotch and a neckline so low one can make a good guess as to her, erm, grooming habits, Kuja the Thonged Wonder, Sephiroth whose alt wears [[WalkingShirtlessScene only pants and boots]], Jecht whose ''normal getup'' is shirtless, and the Cloud of Darkness, who is wearing, essentially, body paint. Chaos himself is only wearing a loincloth, but as he's not precisely human, he doesn't really qualify.
117** Not as apt in ''Dissidia 012'' with the addition of Tifa's MagicSkirt, Vaan in his shirtless-vest getup, and Prishe in her third outfit (read:practically a bikini). Tidus' third outfit leaves him shirtless, while Terra and Squall get third outfits that are more revealing than their previous outfits. Terra and Tidus's third alts are their outfits while fighting for Chaos, but they're never really villains.
118* SequelHook: A rather odd example of a Prequel Hook, ''Dissidia: Final Fantasy'' is set in the 13th cycle of the war, [[spoiler:that ends up breaking the cycle of conflict]]. ''Dissidia 012'', its "[[{{prequel}} sequel]]", shows what happened in the ''12th'' cycle of the war, which had a few more characters [[spoiler:that didn't make it to the 13th cycle]].
119* SetBonus: Various equipment pieces have combination abilities attached to them that only activate when three or four pieces with the same ability are worn. The bonus combination effects range from extra EX Mode time, to getting more gil or AP from battle, to doing extra damage with certain types of attacks.
120* SetSwordsToStun: Everyone's beating the crap out of each other with giant swords and explode-y magic, the same ones that can reduce monsters into a pile of ashes in the original games, yet nobody seems worse for wear because of it.
121** On the issue of that explodey magic, many spells that were shown to have world-devastating effects in their original games -- like Kefka's Light of Judgement, Sephiroth's Black Materia/Meteor, and Kuja's Ultima -- are just [[LimitBreak EX Bursts]] or powerful HP attacks in ''Dissidia''. And depending on everyone's BRV levels and equipment, it can be quite possible for the target to survive them, shrug it off, and keep fighting.
122*** Heck, it's possible not to take any damage from them at all. If the enemy has 0 Brave, then Meteor (you know, [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII the thing that was a threat to the entire planet]]?) will do nothing to you. At all.
123* ShipTease: A couple of scenes in ''Dissidia 012'' hint at a pairing between Lightning and Firion. He actually [[SomethingAboutARose just wants his rose back]] and talks to her about it when he finally asks for it, but the subtext is very thin -- Cecil even appoints himself Firion's wingman and quite obviously believes his interest in her is romantic.
124** The relationship between the Warrior of Light and Cosmos creeps up on BodyguardCrush territory when ''Dissidia 012'' revealed [[spoiler:the Warrior is a Manikin made in Cid's image and infused with his memories, while Cosmos is a Manikin infused with the memories of Cid's wife who also looks exactly like her.]] Even without that hint, the two are very close.
125** TheSmurfettePrinciple results in Terra getting ShipTease with Onion Knight, Cloud, and Vaan. Onion Knight and Vaan protect her and encourage her to follow her heart, while she and Cloud reflect on their hopes for the future. Cecil, again acting as a ShipperOnDeck, takes the Knight's vow to protect her as a sign of affection.
126-->'''Cecil:''' "Say, why did you desire to protect Terra?"\
127'''OK:''' "Huh? It's because -- She's been uneasy since we met, so I thought I needed to protect her."\
128'''Cecil:''' "So you've fallen for her, I see."\
129'''OK:''' "Tha-that's not the reason!
130** And of all pairings, ''Firion x [[CuteMonsterGirl Shiva]]''. In both games she entices him, giggling at his embarrassment, and the trade accessory "Shiva Veil" has a description that again implies Firion's embarrassment.
131* ShopFodder: ''012'' brings the Silver and Gold Angels, which sell for 50,000 and 100,000 gold. The Gold Angels appear all over the world map in Confessions of the Creator, and with the prices of high-level equipment being what they are, you will need the cash to prepare your characters for the northern regions.
132* ShoutOut: Practically everything in ''Dissidia'' is a ShoutOut of some kind.
133** Some things are shout outs to things that aren't ''Final Fantasy'', or even Square Enix. For example: The Accomplishment titled "Battle[[UsefulNotes/SegaGenesis genesis Does]]". Hell, you get to meet Miss Clio of FFV fame, the shoutout to ''Miss Cleo'', she of the fake-Jamaican-accented psychic hotline, in the theater's tutorial menu.
134*** And speaking of Sega, how about equipping those [[Franchise/SonicTheHedgehog Sonic Knuckles]]?
135*** In Feral Chaos' Nexus Ultimus, the swords impaling his opponent seem to array in a shape suspiciously similar to [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbol_of_Chaos this]].
136*** Aeri/s/th's third costume is a Vestal Garb from ''VideoGame/BravelyDefault''.
137** In the first Squall/Ultimecia battle cutscene, and in Ultimecia's EX Burst: Ultimecia [[Manga/JoJosBizarreAdventure stops time with a word, sends out blades that freeze just in front of her opponent, then restarts time to send them flying at him.]] [[DoesThisRemindYouOfAnything Hmmm...]]
138*** Taken to the logical extreme [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MdOsqk6tMVo here]].
139*** Even so is Gabranth's EX Burst, on some other parts. It's also explained [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HQwuZD87D8E here.]]
140** Auron's Jecht Ghost holds an [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyX Al Bhed Primer]], which, when translated, says, [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyX2 Give my regards to Y, R, and P]]. Even though they don't appear in the game at all.
141** Kefka, at one point in Destiny Odyssey, says to Terra "[[Film/TheWizardOfOz Hello, my pretty!]]"
142** The ''Dissidia 012'' version of Mognet has, among its letters, one from a Moogle named Sablè titled "This Is Big, Kupo". The very first line says: [[VideoGame/TheLegendOfZeldaOcarinaOfTime "Hey, [player name]! Listen, kupo!"]].[[note]][[AnnoyingVideoGameHelper Whether players have fond memories of this is debatable.]][[/note]]
143** In ''Dissidia 012'', one of the cutscenes is named "Those Who Converge Upon [[Franchise/KingdomHearts Castle Oblivion]]".
144** Sephiroth's Oblivion attack is the opener he used during [[VideoGame/KingdomHeartsII his second fight with Sora]].
145* ShownTheirWork: There are so many nods and in-jokes to the original games it could fill a page all its own listing them. See [[MythologyGag/DissidiaFinalFantasy the Mythology Gag page]] for some of them.
146** With the exception of Cloud's Ultima Weapon, every character's weapon(s) look just how they did in their original game and/or the character's original artwork. This is particularly impressive with Vaan, who wields a total of eighteen different equipment pieces from ''Final Fantasy XII'', and every single one of them looks just like it did in that game.
147** For alternate outfits, consider the developers had to go looking for artwork, sprites, renders, etc, for inspiration on what outfits to base them on. Some of the artwork they used for these things were also very obscure before ''Dissidia'' brought it to attention, such as Terra in a blue and white dress or Jecht wearing Zanarkand Abe shorts. Said shorts are seen so briefly in ''Final Fantasy X'' they might as well be a FreezeFrameBonus, but guess what, Jecht captures their look perfectly. Additionally, official renders released of the characters for promotional purposes are usually posed in a manner reflecting a render or artwork piece of that character.
148** More subtle are the ways characters ''move''. Characters strike iconic poses from their original games all the time and often move in a similar manner too. For instance, when Squall uses Rough Divide, he lands in a crouching position with his Gunblade held out behind him; the same pose he takes in ''Final Fantasy VIII'' when he leaps down to rescue Zell at the D-Prison. Run animations for characters from the Sony-era games also tend to be identical to how they ran forward when attacking in their home games.
149** The World map in ''Dissidia 012'' isn't just based on the map of ''Final Fantasy'', but numerous gateways and teleport stones are actually named after towns and dungeons in the original game and lie in the same approximate locations. Furthermore, the world map is based on the ''Final Fantasy'' world map to amazing detail, right down to numerous land formations and shapes being the same. Several areas differ, but it's usually for gameplay reasons (the continents being connected for example), as a whole the two are identical.
150* SidelinedProtagonistCrossover: In the original ''Videogame/DissidiaFinalFantasy'', ''Videogame/FinalFantasyXII'' is represented by the villain Garabanth, with TheHero Vaan appearing in the sequel.
151* SinglePlayerGauntlet: ''Dissidia'' and ''012'' have an Arcade Mode with a series of matches where all characters are preconfigured, as opposed to the rest of the game where they can be customized.
152* SingleStrokeBattle: Some enemies use an equipment setup that greatly boosts their stats, but sets their HP to one. Therefore, the best way to win is quickly rushing them and hitting with a HP attack.
153* SmugSnake: The Emperor ''could'' have made MagnificentBastard status due to his planning, but his insufferable arrogance and underestimation of the "insects" who oppose him leads to his downfall.
154** Kuja, even moreso than TheEmperor, as he fancies himself the smartest, strongest, [[DudeLooksLikeALady prettiest]] villain, even when his plans go haywire. When that happens, he either blames other people for it or calls sour grapes.
155* TheSmurfettePrinciple: Terra is the only female hero, though Shantotto is technically on Cosmos's side as well even if she's a secret character. And just like everything else, it's referenced in the game. Technically, it's the same deal with Ultimecia on Chaos's side, since, apparently, Cloud of Darkness is supposed to be [[NoBiologicalSex sexless]]...
156** [[LampshadeHanging Lampshaded]] by Zidane in ''Dissidia 012'', who asks the player's character if he/she thinks that "there aren't enough females in this world".
157** ''012'' seems to be mitigating this a little bit, since it's added {{Action Girl}}s Tifa, Prishe, and Lightning, WhiteMagicianGirl Yuna, and Shantotto is now officially on Team Cosmos. The boys will still outnumber the girls, but it's certainly better than nothing.
158* SNKBoss: [[spoiler:Chaos.]] And [[spoiler:Feral Chaos]] in ''Dissidia 012''.
159* SomethingAboutARose:
160** In ''Dissidia'', [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyII Firion]] carries with him a "wild rose" which symbolizes the Wild Rose Rebellion from his game and his dream. Later on, it turns out that the rose was [[spoiler:created by [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyIV Golbez]] to inspire him]]. Funnily enough, the rose changes hands quite a bit. Halfway through [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII Cloud]] and [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyI Warrior Of Light]]'s stories, [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVII Sephiroth]] steals it, Cloud takes it back, and it eventually gets back to Firion.
161*** In the prequel, ''Dissidia 012'', Firion and [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIII Lightning]] share the connection they both feel with roses (as Odin's summon crystal, which is possessed by Lightning in her game, is shaped like a rose), which causes sexual tension between them.
162*** In the original as well, Cloud shows the rose to [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI Terra]], who is, at the time, heavily unsure of herself, and explains Firion's dream to her. This causes a powerful inspiration to ignite within Terra, who basically replies, "hey, that sounds awesome, let's not just fill the world with roses, but with lots of other flowers as well!" This helps give her the courage to beat the crap out of [[MonsterClown Kefka]] and save [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyIII Onion Knight]].
163* SortingAlgorithmOfWeaponEffectiveness: Theoretically you can buy any weapon you want at any time, but stronger weapons need rare trade accessories to trade in to get them, and these accessories aren't likely to be acquired until much later in the storylines. You're also hampered by each equipment piece having a level requirement, and if you're at a lower level you can't use it.
164** As characters level up, their starting moves will probably be phased out in favor of new attacks. Perhaps the best examples are Terra's Holy and Holy Combo, the latter doing everything Holy does and tacking on the Ultima chainable attack to the end, and Exdeath's block attacks, with each outclassing the last, though High Block still has some uses compared to Omni Block (the main advantage being Omni Block requires precision timing).
165*** The move examples are subverted somewhat in ''012''. Holy has significantly greater speed and tracking over Holy Combo and doesn't disperse if you dodge after using it, though the Ultima chain still makes Holy Combo superior. Exdeath's blocks, meanwhile, are entirely reworked -- his first two blocks only block magical or physical attacks, while his level three block blocks both but can't block certain high-priority attacks they can. His level four Omni Block still blocks everything, but also still requires precise timing.
166*** Subverted with Cloud's Fire spells. Firaga is a medium-range low-powered damaging spell with limited uses since if you can land a Firaga you can just as easily land Climhazzard or Sonic Break, while Fire is a long-range low-power damaging spell, but has strong homing and stays out a long time and so is an effective distraction, letting you punish your opponent's attempts to dodge or block it with another attack.
167* SoundtrackDissonance: if you pick one of the three bonus eight-bit tracks. A PSP fighter with NES chiptune music. Although to the longtime fans this is RuleOfCool for the sake of pure and unadulterated fanservice.
168** Then in ''Dissidia 012'', many of the new tracks included are simply ''not battle tracks'', like Theme of Love, Fleeting Dream, and various mixes of the Chocobo theme, all of which can be used during fights.
169** An example that overlaps with MusicalSpoiler is found in ''Dissidia 012'': [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jNCPt-jGWBA Jecht has kept his Chaos fanfare]] while [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nXk-Snnl4mE Cloud kept the Cosmos fanfare,]] despite having switched sides.
170* SpaceWhaleAesop: The entire point of the Destiny Odyssey/Light to All storylines where the ten heroes get their Crystals is that the Crystals manifest when they prove their determination and will to fight, and this is done by having them undergo some form of CharacterDevelopment. This is usually done by the character finding a proper reason to fight, or acknowledging the truth of why they fight for that cause. However, sometimes the aesop they're supposed to learn isn't conveyed very well, resulting in this trope.
171* StarCrossedLovers: [[spoiler:Cid and his wife would definitely qualify for this trope. Cosmos and The Warrior of Light may also count as well.]]
172* StatusQuoIsGod: For the heroes at least, since it's greatly suggested that most, if not all of them, cannot remember the past cycles, so everytime they are summoned to fight, it's again a whole new thing for them.
173* StealthMentor: Golbez and The Emperor, though for different reasons. On a whole most of the villains act more like they're interested in taunting the heroes and getting them to confront their personal doubts than actually killing them. [[FridgeBrilliance Turns out this is completely justified]] because a good portion of the villains were [[spoiler:in on the plan to kill Cosmos by letting the heroes earn the Crystals]]. It isn't until Shade Impulse that they start "[following] the naked desires of [their] hearts", rather than acting like emotional obstacles.
174* SuicideMission: The six Warriors of Cosmos in ''Dissidia 012'' who didn't appear in the 13th cycle of the conflict give themselves to cut off the source of Chaos' Manikins that had been overwhelming their side, so that the remaining ten would stand a fighting chance in the next cycle. Whether they actually ''died'' or were simply freed from the cycle of conflict isn't totally clear, but they all acknowledge that, in doing this, they wouldn't be part of the next cycle, for better or worse.
175** Though the XIII sequels hadn't happened yet. So unless Square intended this series to take place after who knows how many XIII sequels and spin-offs they make, chances are she was sent back home to experience them. As well as Laguna lived to be much older in VIII.
176* SummonMagic: All the traditional faces plus {{Shout Out}}s, though they function differently from typical entries in the series.
177* SuperMode: The heroes' EX Modes. Terra's and Zidane's are the most traditional ones, Warrior of Light and Onion Knight [[ClassAndlevelSystem change class, Bartz masters own his job class]], and the rest just get out their respective {{Infinity Plus One Sword}}s). For the villains' EX Modes, see OneWingedAngel.
178* SwordLines: The second type.
179[[/folder]]
180
181[[folder:T]]
182* TakeThat: [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII Penelo]] gives this to several characters in the in-game manuals. She declares Cloud not interesting, Sephiroth not attractive, tells Squall to "go talk to a wall," hates Kefka for dancing and annoying people while he fights, finds Zidane too flirtatious, dislikes Kuja because "boys shouldn't be prettier than I am," she ''hates'' the fact that Gabranth is in the game and not Vaan, and so forth. In fact, with a few exceptions, it seems the more popular characters are the ones she doesn't like.
183** The below-mentioned (under TheUnreveal) quip about the opera subplot in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI'' is a TakeThat -- the entire scene is famous, and considered by many fans to be a SugarWiki/MomentOfAwesome accompanied with SugarWiki/AwesomeMusic. The moogle calls it "pretty forgettable."
184*** Strictly speaking, the moogle is calling the ''original opera'' forgettable. Remember, [[CombatTentacles Ultros]] tried to drop a 4-ton weight, ended up ''dropping himself'' along with Locke and whichever team members he has on him, and initiated a Boss Battle. Then Setzer dropped in and kidnapped Celes. None of that was part of the opera itself.
185* TeamSwitzerland: In [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyV his original game]], Gilgamesh was working for Exdeath as his [[TheDragon right-hand man]], albeit not being [[MinionWithAnFInEvil very evil]] -- or [[IneffectualSympatheticVillain very successful]]; this is acknowledged by his artwork facing to the right (as all villains do) and him using the Chaos victory theme. In the story, however, he's done with all that. Gilgamesh wasn't summoned into the cycle by either Chaos ''or'' Cosmos, showing up through random chance, and doesn't give a jot about the conflict one way or the other. He just wants a good fight with Bartz.
186* ThereIsNoKillLikeOverkill: Most notable instance of this would be using an EX Burst on an enemy after depleting their HP, and yes, you can do that. With the patience to set such a thing up, you can do 9999 damage, + 9999 damage for Wall Rush, then initiate an EX Burst to do 9999 damage again. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ce9tp9RBhVk Take a look]]. There's also nothing stopping you from spamming Brave attacks on the opponent as long as you like, even if you already have 9999 Brave.
187** Special mention goes to the EX Burst of [[spoiler:Feral Chaos]], who impales the [[strike:opponent]] victim on his claw, adds eight enormous swords, and then finishes them off with a punch that breaks the screen, FROM THEIR PERSPECTIVE!
188* ThroughTheEyesOfMadness: Done to ''fantastic'' effect in Scenario 000: Confessions of the Creator in ''Dissidia 012''.
189* TinTyrant: Garland, Golbez, Exdeath and Gabranth.
190* TitleDrop: All over the place, indirectly. [[spoiler:The strongest attack of the end boss, Chaos, is called "Final Fantasy". Though sadly, it was [[{{Woolseyism}} changed to]] "Brink of Delusion" in the US release, meaning you'll have to wait for the Secret Ending Cutscene for the proper ''FF'' Title Drop.]]
191** "Edge of Madness" itself qualifies as well, and at one point Chaos references "the end of the dream". Plus, all the manikins have names that reference 'fantasy' in some way.
192** There's also the Emperor's line, "You should have disposed of your fantasy and accepted me as master."
193* TooAwesomeToUse: The Summonstones [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI Ultima Weapon]] and [[VideoGame/FinalFantasyV Omega]]. The first auto breaks the enemy after a set period of time, no matter what, and the latter reduces the enemy's Brave by half every 3/4 of a second or so while it's active, making guys like Leviathan obsolete. The problem? They only have one charge each, and they take the most battles to recharge out of ''any'' of the summons. Use them wisely.
194** The breakable accessories are in a similar boat -- sure, you can make more of them, but it requires an investment of time and effort...so many players are prudent with their use of Resins.
195* TheUnreveal: In the mognet sidegame, one of your moogle correspondents talks about [[ShowWithinAShow the opera]] in ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyVI''. The letter teases the reader about how we've never seen the end of the story:
196-->''After dancing with Draco, Celes had her solo, and I can't tell you how well it went! ...Seriously, I can't; it was pretty forgettable, kupo. I'd wanted to watch that opera to the end, too...''
197** One of the Reports in ''Dissidia 012'' written from Garland's perspective alludes to his becoming Chaos, noting that he is summoned into the past to become Chaos, who then summons his human self from the future, much as it was in ''Final Fantasy''. In a subtle lampshading of the TimeyWimeyBall at work in this, Garland notes that this infinite loop had to start ''somewhere'', and thus originally another entity other than Chaos must have called him into the past for the cycle to begin. However, he has no idea who, and the game offers very few solid clues otherwise.
198* TooLongDidntDub: The French subtitles are half Engrish half French.
199* TurnsRed: Characters literally glow red when low on health. In an actual invoking of the trope, many of the best booster accessories activate when you're about to die, and in ''Dissidia 012'' your Assist gauge fully charges if you manage to dodge an attack and land one of your own when you're at critical health. This allows for GlassCannon builds with a low-HP character that'll die in one hit, but has a huge booster multiplier and can keep their Assist gauge charged up for combo attacks.
200* TrueCompanions: It's totally obvious where they got "comrade" from.
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:U]]
204* UndergroundMonkey: In the same storyline, enemy types will often share the same moveset, equipment list, and accessories between them (ie, all the Ephemeral Phantoms are the same, etc). In "Confessions of the Creator" in ''Dissidia 012'', there's only a dozen or so set-ups for equipment and accessories that all the enemies use. This can also sometimes apply throughout the game, only excusing enemies that are low-power and so deliberately have weaker equipment than others. Largely justified since for many characters the moves not being used aren't worth using -- Garland's manikins, for example, always seem to have the same six Bravery attacks, but when you look at his other ones, you can understand why they prefer that build.
205* TheUnfavorite: In a meta sense. There were plenty of characters available from ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXIV'' by the time ''Duodecim'' came out, and a number of people were even calling for Gaius Van Baelsar to make it in as at least the game's overall representative, if not the villain rep. ''XIV'' isn't even ''mentioned'' during ''Duodecim'' - despite having been out for half a year by the time ''012'' came out, on either side of the Pacific.
206** ''Arcade Dissidia'' is set to finally have Y'shtola repping Team XIV. Once the game comes out, though, this will have been two years or so after the ''relaunch'' of ''XIV'', and around about ''five'' years after XIV first came out.
207* UnreliableNarrator: [[spoiler: While Duodecim's storyline appears to have a BolivianArmyEnding , other events in Duodecim make it very apparent that the characters, and thus the players, are working with flawed information (see ThroughTheEyesOfMadness). To that end, it's extremely likely that the six new hero characters in Duodecim [[EverybodyLives actually survive]] their LastStand.]]
208* UnusableEnemyEquipment: Almost entirely averted, which is very impressive when you consider that this is a ''Franchise/FinalFantasy'' game, moreover one with over ''1000'' pieces of equipment and accessories. Only a handful of these of these aren't available to the player: The three "broken" pieces of armor used by [[{{Mook}} Mooks]] in the story modes (and quickbattle, if the CPU strength is set low enough) that actually reduce stats, Chaos' equipment set, and a dozen or so (out of over 500) accessories exclusive to enemies, one half being [[MyRulesAreNotYourRules the same as those available to the player, but more so]], a quarter being gimmicky, stat-reducing equips, and the remainder being [[GameBreaker utterly godly]] -- Initial Bravery +2000%, anyone? Or, if that isn't enticing enough, ''Dissidia 012'' comes with the GameBreaker variant in [[spoiler:a single accessory that adds FIFTY THOUSAND hit points to the new resident SNKBoss. Or his x90 booster accessory that kicks in after one minute.]]. Taking the absolute cake, though, is [[spoiler:the true Feral Chaos's accessory that gives him "+???" HP - really 115,000 HP - for a total of 125,698. Good luck, you'll need it.]]
209* UnusuallyUninterestingSight: In the original game, none of the characters remarked on the fact that the Manikins look exactly like the playable cast, and quite often a character would be stuck fighting a Manikin that looked, sounded, and fought just like them. Rectified in ''Dissidia 012'', where the origins of the Manikins are explained and several characters are shocked and confused by their physical appearances. In the remake of the original story, Bartz even reveals that he's able to mimic the attacks of people that are not in their group, like Laguna and Lightning, which confuses the hell out of Zidane, but Bartz, being Bartz, just thinks it's kind of cool.
210* UpdatedRerelease: ''Universal Tuning''. However, ''Dissidia 012'' won't have one due to how close the international version will be released to the Japanese one.
211** ''Dissidia 012'' itself could be seen as one for the original ''Dissidia'', as besides its own story it includes basically every feature of the original game, adjusted slightly, including the original's story adapted to the new gameplay mechanics and a scenario called ''Confessions of the Creator'' that replaces ''Inward Chaos'' and ''Distant Glory''.
212* UselessUsefulSpell: The Ultima Weapon summon, which charges energy to instantly inflict Break on the opponent. However, this charge time is a ''full minute'', so you're better off trying a summon that may not work as well but won't take sixty seconds to take effect -- Lich drains the opponent's Bravery to 0, which is almost as good as inflicting Break, and it only takes 20/15 seconds to work. Also, Ultima Weapon has only one charge, so once you summon it you need to fight more than a half-dozen battles to power it back up for another summoning.
213** The Zalera summon instantly inflicts Break on the opponent if their Bravery is 9999. You will ''never'' see this occuring in any serious fight until your opponent is using a very unorthodox build.
214** In a subversion, Calcabrina ''cancels'' Break, which seems like a somewhat strange option, but it allows you to inflict Break (and get the stage bonus) again.
215[[/folder]]
216
217[[folder:V]]
218* VFormationTeamShot: Done by the ''villains''!
219* VictorGainsLosersPowers: As a RareRandomDrop, you can get the equipment the enemy was wearing. It's especially notable with the Genji Equipment, as it's very hard to craft by yourself.
220* VictoryQuote: Each character has four generic ones, two for enemies the same level as them, two for enemies of a lower level, two for enemies who are stronger, and two for when they finish a fight in low health.
221* VideoGameCrueltyPotential: You can attack your allies on the world map, and they recoil when struck. You can also corner them against cliffs and shorelines and wail on them mercilessly.
222** Some characters (those with upward attacks) can do the same to those darn stingy floating Moogle shopkeepers. [[NoHeroDiscount And you'll want to do that.]]
223* VillainsBlendInBetter: All the villains are a lot more on the ball about what's going on than the heroes are.
224** Slightly inverted as well, in that the villains have no clue what some of the other villains are up to, but their good counterpart usually knows them well enough to guess. The biggest example is definitely Golbez and Cecil. All the villains assume Golbez is just playing along with the heroes, and only Cecil suspects that Golbez has different goals.
225* VillainousBreakdown: After the 13th cycle, [[spoiler:Shinryu traps Cid in a MindRape dream, wherein Chaos ends up losing each subsequent war until he goes insane thanks to the [[WithGreatPowerComesGreatInsanity power given to him by Shinryu]], becoming [[OneWingedAngel Feral Chaos]] and killing both sides' warriors.]]
226* VillainSong: Chaos Last Battle.
227* VillainTakesAnInterest: Kefka towards Terra.
228* VocalEvolution: While fans are split between which ones are good or appropriate for their characters or not, it is generally agreed that the less-than-standout vocal performances in ''Dissidia'' were improved upon for ''Dissidia 012''.
229[[/folder]]
230
231[[folder:W]]
232* WallJump: EVERYBODY can run up walls using Quickmove, and then leap into the air from it. An ''actual'' Wall Jump ability is introduced in ''Dissidia 012'', which allows a very high jump up if the character jumps while using Quickmove.
233* WalkingShirtlessScene: Jecht, naturally. His son Tidus takes after him in ''012''. One of Sephiroth's alternate outfits is his topless appearance at the end of ''FFVII''. Vaan wears only his little vest.
234* WarriorPoet: Because of their wise advices to one another, their strong beliefs, their discussions about dreams and their views of life, practically ''all'' the heroes come off as Warrior Poets.
235* WeCannotGoOnWithoutYou: No matter how many people are ostensibly in your party, you will have access to only one Warrior of Cosmos during each character's story. The other characters are apparently supposed to be fighting other Manikins while you fight yours; but it's still jarring when all ten heroes gather to fight Chaos, and it's ''still'' all over if the one you're controlling fails to beat him single-handed. (Granted, due to the end sequence having no Destiny Points to earn/lose on each map, DeathIsASlapOnTheWrist as long as you keep retrying, but still...)
236** ''Dissidia 012'' plays this straight sometimes (the Assist characters will never take your place if you fall in battle), but in some storylines you form a party of five, and when the leader falls the next person in line takes their place, all the way down to the fifth person if the enemy is ''that'' tough. [[NintendoHard And they will be]].
237* WhenAllYouHaveIsAHammer: Cloud of Darkness; who has about a dozen variations on her classic Particle Beam to make up her HP Attacks, and Kuja; who uses ''absolutely'' nothing but variants of Flare(star), Holy, and Ultima.
238* WhereItAllBegan: In ''Dissidia 012'', the final battle with Chaos and the end of the cycles occurs at the Edge of Madness in the Edge of Discord gateway. [[spoiler:Report 12 implies it was the Edge of Discord where Cosmos, Chaos, and Cid first entered World B.]]
239* WhiteAndGreyMorality: Has shades, largely in the underlying concept that dark and light, and harmony and discord, are just arbitrary concepts used to draw distinctions where otherwise there are none, and as such you can't define someone solely by which side they serve. It's somewhat easy to overlook this theme since many of the Chaos warriors are {{Card Carrying Villain}}s, but several of them are also {{Anti Villain}}s who don't want to serve Chaos, or are fighting for personal reasons and don't care which side wins as long as they get what they want. Even Chaos himself is [[spoiler:a literal DesignatedVillain who isn't really evil at all, he just happens to oppose Cosmos for the sake of the pact made between them, Cid, and Shinryu. His ''minions'' are certainly evil, but Chaos himself is not.]]
240** Could ''vaguely'' be considered GreyAndGrayMorality, considering the heroes on Team Cosmos includes [[AntiHero Anti-Heroes]] such as [[SociopathicHero Shantotto]], [[KnightInSourArmor Lightning]], [[IDidWhatIHadToDo Kain]], and [[PunchClockHero Cloud]]. And of course [[spoiler:Cosmos is just as much responsible for the cycles of war as Chaos is]]. Still a very light shade of Grey though.
241* WideOpenSandbox: Quick Battle Mode. Oh man, where to begin? Not only can you choose your opponent and stage, you can also adjust the level of the opponent, so if you wanted, you could set it to match your level and have an epic battle, set it to a lower level so you can [[CurbstompBattle beat your opponent down]], or you can test your skills against a higher-level opponent (or face off against a crazy-high level opponent if you're a masochist). You can even change the AI's strength and behavior. The possibilities are endless!
242** More than just that, the sequel has a Quest Creation mode, where you can set up to five different battles and put dialogue between each one to make it seem like a short story. You can also use the player icons you own to represent the characters talking, so you can create crazy crossovers, even between multiple incarnations of the same character, such as [=FF7=] Sephiroth (as in his character portrait when he's a GuestStarPartyMember in the original game) and Dissidia Sephiroth talking to each other. And then you can upload it on the internet for people to download it back on their PSP and play it! And besides all that, you can use it as an advanced Quick Battle: you have full control over the outfit, moveset, and equipment the characters use, so you can create your ideal opponent for whatever type of battle you want, then Test your quest and fight them.
243** "Confessions of the Creator" comes close to this: various gateways with a variety of level limits, many shops all over the world, you have objectives but are free to travel anywhere you like any way you like, and can use any characters to form your party.
244* WoobieDestroyerOfWorlds: [[spoiler:As revealed in ''Dissidia 012'', Chaos didn't want to war with Cosmos initially, because he retained memories from when he was young and Cosmos looks like his mother. But over time, Garland managed to convince him to do it so they could go home, and eventually the power he gained from the cycles eroded his mind and he couldn't remember his past with Cosmos, and it's implied he also forgets why he started the war at all.]] No wonder Chaos is an OrcusOnHisThrone -- he just doesn't care much about the war one way or the other.
245* WordSaladTitle: The sequel, ''Dissidia 012 [Dissidia 012]: Final Fantasy.''
246* TheWorfEffect: The intro to ''Dissidia'' spares no time in showing just how outmatched the Warriors of Cosmos are, with the heroes only being able to match their opponents blow for blow ''at best''. [[spoiler:This is later subverted as the heroes come back from the brink of total defeat, triumphing over the Warriors of Chaos and Chaos himself, helping to bring the conflict to a hopeful climax.]]
247* WorldOfHam: While the villains like to get [[EvilIsHammy hammy]] and [[BraggartBoss boisterous]], the heroes get tend to get {{Narm}}y and [[{{Melodrama}} melodramatic]].
248** In ''Dissidia 012'', this is taken to hilarious extremes when Gilgamesh and Bartz have their second duel, with Bartz even using a fake, overly dramatic voice to match Gilga's.
249-->'''Bartz:''' How long, I have waited, for this chance!\
250'''Gilgamesh:''' AT LAST, let battle be joined!
251** The funny part comes later when you realize that the scenario's title [[spoiler:The Duel of Dreams!]] is actually more literal than you think, and [[spoiler:that the whole event was a dream of Gilgamesh's as he fantasizes defeating Bartz, who then begins to hammishly praise him as an ultimate warrior. Then it fades, and you see Gilgamesh floating in the Rift, muttering to himself. Then, Gilgamesh actually appears to Bartz and challenges him, and Bartz's response is one word: "Weird."]]
252** If you don't feel like reading the whole spoiler, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EhCiKEnCoy8 here it is without the fight.]]
253[[/folder]]
254
255[[folder:Y]]
256* YouHaveResearchedBreathing: Your characters can't even block or dodge attacks without the ability to do so equipped; fortunately, all characters begin with those abilities. No such luck with the various Dash abilities, you learn those as you level up. Yes, you need to learn the ability to dash in a particular direction at a particular speed.
257** You also need to buy the ability to use different types of equipment. Sometimes that makes sense -- you wouldn't expect little guys like Onion Knight or Zidane to know how to use a Greatsword innately. On the other hand, they also need to learn how to wear hairpins and carry a shield. To compensate somewhat for the above, mastering the abilities that allow you to wear more types of equipment also teaches them another skill that gives them an additional stat boost when wearing that kind of equipment.

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