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1[[quoteright:300:https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/DragonQuarter_7786.jpg]]
2
3''Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter'' is the fifth entry in the ''Franchise/BreathOfFire'' series, released for the Playstation 2 in 2003 to generally positive reviews. It's a considerable departure from the previous entries, which were much more traditional eastern [=RPGs=].
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5Sometime [[{{Cyberpunk}} in the future]], humanity lives deep BeneathTheEarth centuries after an apocalyptic disaster rendered the surface [[AfterTheEnd a barren and inhospitable wasteland]]. However, the world below is [[CrapsackWorld just as miserable]], with [[UrbanSegregation the poor toiling away in the polluted lower levels while the rich enjoy the relative cleanliness and luxury of the higher levels]]. Every citizen is [[YouAreNumberSix assigned a number]] called a "D-Ratio" at birth that determines one's lifelong place in society, with the highest (1/4) being the titular "[[TitleDrop Dragon Quarter]]".
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7Ryu is a lower-level citizen who happens across a [[CuteMute young mute girl]] named Nina with a pair of artificial wings grafted to her back. Discovering that the polluted air of the lower levels is slowly killing her, he resolves to rebel against the government and take her to the surface where there is hopefully clean air. But Ryu's quest takes an unexpected twist when he accidentally fuses with a mysterious dragon, gaining the power to transform into [[OneWingedAngel an obscenely-powerful draconic hybrid]] but at the [[DangerousForbiddenTechnique cost of his own lifespan]].
8
9Joining Ryu and Nina is [[CoolBigSis Lin]], a member of LaResistance who wishes to topple the D-Ratio system and expose the secrets held by the [[TheOmniscientCouncilOfVagueness six shadowy rulers of the underground world]]. But chasing them down is Bosch, a high-ranked aristocrat and [[TheRival Ryu's former team-mate]], whose pursuit of the trio [[RivalTurnedEvil quickly becomes very personal]].
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11Dragon Quarter's most interesting gameplay mechanic is the SOL (Scenario Overlay) system. Among other things, this allows you to perform a "SOL Restart" whenever you get overwhelmed. This is a kind of NewGamePlus which doesn't require beating the game to take advantage of. This mechanic actually ''encourages'' you to start over; rather than starting from scratch, giving up and SOL Restarting allows you to retain all your equipment, combat skills, and any experience that hasn't already been allocated (the game features "Party XP" in addition to regular experience points, which you can allot as you like). There's also a "SOL Restore" option that takes you to your last hard save instead of the beginning of the game. You can do either at any time or if you die, but you lose half your Party Xp and Zenny if you die.
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13The relatively short length of the game (about 10 hours, give or take, for a complete run) further facilitates this. Depending on how far you went on your last run, you'll see new cutscenes that reveal previously hidden details. Though the plot makes perfect sense without them, they are important for a deeper and more nuanced understanding of the story. In addition, beating the game increases your D-ratio for subsequent attempts, with the D-ratio rising each time you clear the game, though for story purposes, you are always considered a "low-D". This allows you to open previously inaccessible new areas, and even gain access to better equipment that might be found in them.
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15Making this more relevant is the D-counter, a timer that starts when Ryu bonds with his dragon, and which is constantly counting down to his eventual death, speeding up dramatically if he uses any of his [[GameBreaker utterly broken draconic powers]]. While you are allowed to suspend your game through quicksaves, permanent save files could only be created [[FakeDifficulty through the use of rare save tokens]], giving the game an extra layer of NintendoHard difficulty.
16----
17
18!! This series provides examples of:
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20* AfterTheEnd: The story takes place 1000 years AfterTheEnd, when humanity is driven underground by a HopelessWar that renders the surface uninhabitable.
21* AlternateUniverse: From the rest of the series.
22* BeginWithAFinisher: After unlocking Ryu's D-Dive, it's possible to go dragon mode on the first turn and annihilate any enemy with his [[KameHameHadoken D-Breath]]... but doing so isn't recommended since if Ryu's D-Counter reaches 100% it's game-over.
23* BeneathTheEarth: Pretty much the entire plot and background of ''Dragon Quarter''.
24* BilingualBonus: In addition to the [[YouAreNumberSix dragon names]], the entire game intro is recited in Russian. In a second variant of this, only in German and obscured via the use of [[CypherLanguage Cypher Font]] in the game's opening animation. [[labelnote:*]] Specifically, it appears to be a bad German translation of the Bible verse Matthew 19:30: "(Many of) the first shall be last, and the last shall be first". Quite appropriate, considering the extensive use of Judeo-Christian imagery in ''DQ'' and its theme that an AudienceSurrogate is who ultimately opens the path to the sky.[[/labelnote]]
25* BloodFromTheMouth: Happens to Bosch when [[spoiler: he is defeated by Ryu for the last time (with both sides fighting as {{Half Human Hybrid}}s); Bosch asks Ryu to perform a MercyKill on him, and spews blood when Ryu runs him through with his own claw.]]
26** Also happens to Ryu when [[spoiler: Bosch stabs him in the throat with his rapier, full with blanked eyes.]]
27* BodyHorror: In ''Dragon Quarter'', Nina is not a princess, but some poor girl genetically engineered into an air purification device; her "wings" are in fact ''extensions of her lungs'', meaning that every moment she's underground she's filtering pollutants out of the air -- as one would expect, this will kill her within a few ''days'' -- which drives Ryu to guide her on a mad dash to the (supposedly) clean surface. Oh and she had her tongue cut out because machines don't need to talk.
28** There is also a room full of the failed results of previous attempts (in various stages of development), kept preserved in formaldehyde-filled tubes. This is no doubt intended to make them easier to study by the scientists who are working on this project, and ''not at all'' to freak out anyone passing through.
29** Also, the entire process of how Bosch got his own DeadlyUpgrade.
30** In the NonStandardGameover, which you get from pushing the D-Counter to 100%, we see [[spoiler: a silhouette of Ryu twitching violently, before a dragon erupts from his body, rending it to shreds]]. You don't see much, but it's still scary as hell.
31* BonusDungeon: Kokon Horay. In order to reach it, the fairy colony must be at maximum level.
32* BraggingRightsReward: Reaching a D-Ratio of 1/4th (which can only be done after beating the game at least once anyway, on a playthrough where you saw and grabbed almost everything.) It has no story impact (everyone still acts as if Ryu is at his original D-Ratio); the last locked area that requires a specific D-Ratio unlocks at 1/256; and the Dragon Blade, the only other thing affected by it, caps out at 1/8th. All you get is 1/4th displayed on your stat screen.
33* CrapsackWorld: ''Dragon Quarter's'' setting was all below ground, where humanity (and everyone else) was driven when a massive war ripped apart the surface. This leads to a series of abandoned tunnels and cramping issues which make Tokyo Underground look spacious, as well as severe pollution issues.
34* CriticalStatusBuff: The "Soul" class of shields boost the wearer's Defense as their HP decreases.
35* CooldownHug: Nina gives Ryu one when he's about to [[HulkOut go dragon on]] the scientist who [[spoiler: engineered Nina as a pollution-cleanup device.]]
36* CurbStompBattle: It LOOKS like Bosch has just issued you a NonstandardGameOver -- and then [[DeadlyUpgrade D-Dive]] activates. Cue extremely justified OhCrap from Bosch.
37* CypherLanguage: ''Dragon Quarter'' invented an entire pseudo-Cyrillic script. It turns out the writers hid many an Easter Egg and even some downright spoileriffic material in the artwork and even in-game, even though the script was never used in the game mechanics.
38** At least one Japanese fan made an unofficial Truetype font based on the documented character set in the artbook. You can now find it [[http://www.mediafire.com/?rh727ribav4u04u here]] (The original source is since defunct).
39* DarkerAndEdgier: The Franchise/BreathOfFire games tended to be, overall, lighthearted, even if they had occasional dark spots. This one, not so much.
40* DeadlyUpgrade: The entire process of linking with D-Constructs.
41* DeathAsGameMechanic: Getting a game over allows you to use "SOL Restart" or "SOL Restore", which carries over any Party XP earned to either a new game or your last SaveToken save. It can also unlock new story scenes.
42* DoWellButNotPerfect: This game is very hard for many players, especially if they're attempting to clear it without restarting as many of the bosses will tempt you to want to use the D-Drive. But if the games gets too difficult for any players, they can restart the game, keeping all of the skills they earned in their playthrough while also keeping any items left in storage, any items currently equipped to them and all of the party XP gained will remain too. Depending on how far they managed to make it, they will also be treated to a number of new cutscenes. Another good way of looking at it is if you raised the D-Counter too high, you can restart and it will be reset when you receive it again.
43* DynamicEntry: Chetyre.
44-->'''''Can it hate?'''''
45* EarnYourHappyEnding: [[spoiler: Ryu manages to deliver Lin and Nina to the gate of the sky, however he has a [[BeyondTheImpossible 200% dragon ratio.]] As the party separates, Odjn releases Ryu from his bond, preventing him from being consumed, and he rejoins the party in the surface with a clear blue sky.]]
46* FormulaBreakingEpisode: While the other games in the series are more of a traditional EasternRPG, this is a game with Survival Horror Elements.
47* GameplayAndStoryIntegration:
48** The entire game teaches you that overuse of the various Dragon abilities can net you a NonStandardGameOver, so that you're more hesitant to use any of them without good reason. [[spoiler: To overcome the final fight against a transformed Bosch, both Ryu and the player have to throw hesitation and caution to the wind and ''overextend'' the D-Counter to '''200%''' to overpower the BeamOfWar.]]
49** The penultimate final battle is scene as this: [[spoiler:Bosch is using dragon abilities the same as Ryu's. Bosch, like Ryu, is invulnerable to harm in this form until using D-Dive to eliminate the ability, which previous enemies had no access to. Once this battle is finished, Bosch collapses and Chetyre emerges from his body in the way the NonStandardGameOver does for Ryu, meaning Bosch's D-Counter reached 100%.]]
50* GameplayAndStorySegregation: In successive playthroughs of the game, it's possible to raise Ryu's D-ratio to 1/4, but in-story he's still treated as a low-D grunt.
51* GeneticEngineeringIsTheNewNuke: A major theme of the backstory of ''Dragon Quarter''. [[spoiler: Genetic Engineering is such an effective WeaponOfMassDestruction, in fact, that scientists in the past managed to create ''[[OurDragonsAreDifferent dragons]]'' as weapons which proceeded to cause TheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt. What's left of humanity is still living underground ''over a millennium later''.]]
52* TheIlluminati: The Regents are essentially this.
53* JourneyToTheSky: Centuries after humanity was driven underground by rampaging dragons, a teenaged Ranger named Ryu must take a "winged" girl named Nina from the polluted slums at the bottom of the rebuilt civilization to reach the pristine skies of the surface.[[note]]Nina's wings are actually gills, and prolonged exposure to the pollution is slowly killing her.[[/note]]
54* LaResistance: Trinity, led by Mebeth, a former Regent. [[spoiler: It is implied through SOL scenes that Mebeth still serves the Regents and Trinity is actually a false resistance, created to allow citizens of Sheldar to rebel without actually threatening Elyon's plans.]]
55* MoneyForNothing: Once you have access to the money exchange room in the fairy side-game, you can make a killing off the currency that fluctuates more because it actually has a fairly predictable pattern.
56* MyGreatestFailure:
57** Elyon: [[spoiler: Refusing to open the door to the sky when he was a Chosen of Odjn. He feared that it wasn't his own decision, and this resulted in Odjn breaking his link with Elyon.]]
58** Bosch: [[spoiler: Being defeated by Ryu. Much of this is because Bosch is a WellDoneSonGuy who was pressured to excel and he just can't handle being defeated by a low-D; this leads to a descent from being TheRival to a full-blown VillainousBreakdown.]]
59* MythologyGag: Lin and Bosch's names are references to two ''Videogame/BreathOfFireII'' party members (who were renamed "Katt" and "Bow" in the localization).
60* NewGamePlus: One of the few (if only) games that makes this an active part of the game mechanics. You're encouraged, or even forced, to constantly restart the game. The only things that are kept over though is currently equipped items, skills, anything in storage, and unused party experience points.
61* NintendoHard: You're able to restart the game multiple times for a good reason; the game is pretty challenging, especially for those not used to turn-based action RPG games. Invoked, as according to the creators, they made the game this because they felt that other similar role playing games were too easy and they wanted to give players more of a challenge.
62* NonStandardGameOver: There are three ways for the game to end that don't include losing all of your health:
63** The most common way is to reach 100% on the D-Counter by using D-Dive too often or using D-Dash too much.
64** In the Trinity Pit, after one cutscene, Nina is attacked by members of Trinity. If she is defeated in that battle, the game automatically ends, even if the other party members are alive.
65** During the second last boss of the game, if he's not defeated in 20 turns, the elevator everyone is one will reach Geofront and the game ends.
66* OurDragonsAreDifferent: In this game, dragons -- or rather, D-Constructs -- are powerful genetically-engineered weapons of mass destruction that can bond with a human and bestow them power, at the risk of said human being taken over by that power and transforming into the D-Construct they're linked to. Ryu is bonded to a D-Construct called Odjn, [[spoiler:and it is eventually revealed that Elyon was bonded to Odjn as well but severed their link and left Odjn as a rotting corpse pinned to a wall. Bosch bonds with and is ultimately taken over by a malicious D-Construct called Chetyre, who uses him to reconstitute her body.]]
67* PaperFanOfDoom: One of the weapons that Nina can obtain is called Chopper, which looks just like a paper fan and the only ability that it has allows her to physically hit opponents with it, unlike her other abilities which are regular spells. Fittingly, the weapon will increase her physical attack much higher than her other weapons that mainly increase her magic so that her spells do more damage.
68* PowerLevels: D-Ratios in ''Dragon Quarter'' determine a person's potential in life and are therefore used as criteria for determining social status and prospects. 1/8192 means you're stuck as a grunt for life, 1/64 makes you a super-elite, while 1/4 more or less marks you as a PhysicalGod. [[spoiler: The more accurate description of the D-Ratios is the likelihood of a successful linkup with a D-Construct, but exactly what they base this on is never elaborated on, and while you can raise your Ratio up to 1/4 in a NewGamePlus by playing through the game quickly, opening as many treasure chests as possible, killing a lot of enemies and getting first strikes on the majority of them, finishing the BonusDungeon, saving as little as possible and having your characters leveled up as high as possible, it doesn't effect the storyline and only allows you to explore a few bonus areas and allows you to get a better version of the game's InfinityPlusOneSword.]]
69** Note that [[spoiler: Ryu being rated as 1/8192 means that he has a 0.0001% chance of successfully linking with a D-Construct. The fact that he does, and with the most powerful one to boot, shows that the D-Ratio system is actually not terribly effective at determining someone's overall ability. Ryu is a grunt that has the ability to become essentially a god (and that kills a bunch of other gods in his quest). At least part of the reason he's opposed by the ruling council is because they simply refuse to believe that someone so pathetic could do what he did.]]
70* PuzzleBoss: Hortensia is one, she uses her ability to turn the floor colors, and one of her spells will either hurt or heal the person standing on it depending on the color (she floats, and is immune to either effect).
71* ResetButton: The SOL: Restart function. You restart the game carrying over your D-Ratio, stored items, unspent XP, money, and skills. SOL: Restore does something similar, but it only takes you back to your last hard save (i.e., one made with a Save Token) rather than back to the start.
72* RewatchBonus: A variant. Since certain cutscenes only trigger if your D-Ratio is high enough, you will only be able to view them all by using the ResetButton.
73* SaveToken: That were extremely rare, to boot, although there was fortunately {{Suspend Save}}s available if you really needed to quit. The PAL versions lacks the quicksave feature but is much more plentiful with the Save Tokens.
74* ShieldedCoreBoss: The final bosses and some end-game enemies have what is known as "Absolute Defense", where you have to deal a minimum amount of damage (in the form of a negative damage number) in a single turn before you actually hurt them.
75* SlobsVersusSnobs: The CentralTheme.
76-->'''[[https://medium.com/mammon-machine-zeal/dragon-quarter-the-powerless-fantasy-e69002dcf2d0 AustinCHowe]]:''' The primary idea that Dragon Quarter engages through its play is, quite simply, being poor, and the stress that comes with being poor. Born poor, into a political system that ensures that you live poor, and without a miracle, die poor.
77** It even shows the other side of the coin with Bosch's nightmarish childhood; to Ryu, Bosch is the snob who bosses him around and bullies him every time he misses a step, so it's hard for him to realize that the guy making him miserable was forced to kill a freaking minotaur at the age of nine - or die trying.
78* {{Superboss}}: The final challenge the BonusDungeon Kokon Horay has is [[spoiler:Dva, another D-Construct. Unlike Odjin and Chetyre, Dva is very much alive. That Dva is the most powerful foe in the game even though he still bears the wounds from the battle that left him imprisoned -- he even has swords still impaled in him -- shows just how powerful the D-Constructs truly are.]]
79* SuspendSave: Except in the PAL version, for some reason. To compensate, you start the game with 9 Save Tokens, although whether that's a fair tradeoff is up for debate, especially considering the 50-floor BonusDungeon with no savepoints whatsoever.
80* TasteOfPower: After Ryu bonds with Odjn, the player is given free access to the D-Dash to tear through subsequent content for a bit, and when forced to transform, you get the only [[spoiler: (truly playable)]] required D-Dive fight in the game as Ryu delivers a CurbstompBattle to Bosch and his goons. Of course, it turns out Ryu's got a DeadlyUpgrade, his attacks in this state give an inevitable jolt to your D-Counter to give the player an OhCrap moment, and now you have to properly ration the powers for the rest of the game.
81* TheLastDance: Paired with a RaceAgainstTheClock; Nina will die within a few days unless she escapes the polluted environment of Sheldar, but Ryu's got a dragon parasitically bound to him which will kill him in roughly the same amount of time -- ''faster'' if he actually calls on the dragon's unstoppable power. The only question is whether or not he succeeds in getting Nina to the surface before the dragon rips its way out of his body... [[spoiler:though if he ''does'' succeed, the dragon acknowledges his achievement, and re-merges with him to give him a full life on the surface with Nina]].
82* ThemeNaming: Mostly ties into YouAreNumberSix, but there are some additional examples; the Regents mostly have names that are theological references:
83** Elyon is traditionally a Hebrew epithet for God. [[note]] And a bit of a shout-out to Fou-Lu, whom Elyon is an explicit {{Expy}} of.[[/note]]
84** Jezuit is a reference to the Jesuit religious order.
85** Deamoned is ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin.
86** Tantra is a reference to a specific estatic Buddhist religious school, and Cupid is the Greek god of love.
87** The Regents and major characters not named after theological references, Russian numbers, or direct shout-outs to the earlier games in the series are named after Greco-Roman philosophers and orators. Zeno shares a name with a famous Greek philosopher who (per the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zeno%27s_paradoxes Other Wiki]]) wrote extensively about paradoxes and the nature of reality, and Hortensia shares a name with an orator who (again, per the [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hortensia_%28orator%29 Other Wiki]]) led the Roman Senate to partially repeal taxes on female nobles.
88* TimedMission: Once Ryu's D-Counter appears after a TasteOfPower, the entire rest of the game has the counter hounding your steps, as hitting 100% nets you the NonStandardGameOver. Walking around gradually raises .01% every several seconds as does each of Ryu's turns in battle, D-Dash can rack up the counter if you're not cautious, D-Dive and any of its attacks take jumps on the counter, and even ''standing idle without pausing'' will slowly but surely tick it up ever so slightly.
89* TookAShortcut: Jaju, Arma and Leo, better known as the storage, armory and item shop kids, do this shamelessly and have no trouble reminding you of the fact that there is no conceivable reason for why they could possibly show up where they do.
90* TooAwesomeToUse: Using Ryu's D-Dive to take out the tougher enemies or bosses is very useful, but using it too often is a bad idea since the game will end if the D-Counter reaches 100%. Since using D-dive attacks can increase it by 3% with one attack, one should only use it if the D-Counter is pretty low or if you're in a tight situation.
91* TrailersAlwaysLie: One CM for the game, which uses a lot of beta footage, centers around climactic-looking footage of Ryu facing off with Dva in a large, well-lit room that looks something like the area Odjn is in. Needless to say, this is pretty inaccurate in various ways.
92** There's also the intro movie to the game with lengthy segment where Ryu slowly walks forward in heavy rainfall while dragging his sword along the ground: While the last part does offer an explanation where the hell the rain is coming from, it doesn't really match up to his surroundings in the earlier parts.
93* TraumaCongaLine: Bosch's early childhood trauma provides the fuel for Bosch's eventual VillainousBreakdown.
94* TurnUndead: One of the weapons Nina can use, Holy Heart, has a unique spell that can't be obtained via chests or stealing from opponents called Kyrie, which is a level three spell that will kill all undead enemies within her vicinity in one hit.
95* WeaponOfMassDestruction: Why everyone is underground in the first place.
96** Also, [[PersonOfMassDestruction Ryu]]. He lets absolutely nothing stand in his way. Not his manipulative friends, not his respected superiors, not the long-established order of the world, and certainly not something as meaningless as tradition.
97* WordSequel: Averted in Asia, where the game is referred to as ''Breath of Fire V: Dragon Quarter'', showcasing that it's indeed a numbered entry and unlike past games, adds a {{Subtitle}}. However, since it was marketed as a GaidenGame of sorts for North America and Europe, [[StoppedNumberingSequels its number was dropped from the title]] to "separate" it from the three previous entries ''Breath of Fire II'', ''[[VideoGame/BreathOfFireIII III]]'', and ''[[VideoGame/BreathOfFireIV IV]]''.
98* YouAreNumberSix: The D-Ratio is a part of someone's actual name.
99** These numbers are written as a fraction with a denominator as a power of two. The highest a person can have is 1/4, which Mebeth has. Those with smaller numbers are considered the highest of society and live in the upper-class areas, whereas those with a lower number live in the lower levels. The only people who do not give their D-ratios are criminals such as Trinity (who deliberately hide them) and people like Nina, whose D-ratios are so low they're barely considered human and [[spoiler:experimenting on them is considered perfectly fine]]. Ryu's D-Ratio of 1/8192 is considered average and no one expects him to be able to make it higher than a grunt soldier.
100** [[spoiler:Dragons, the creatures that devastated the surface, are considered to have a D-Ratio of 1/1. The D-Constructs such as Odjn and Chetyre have D-Ratios of 1/2.]]
101** Elyon has a number-nickname of Origin, a mathematical term for 1.
102** Every single dragon in the game has literal numbers (in Russian) as names, also based on powers of two: Odjn means "one"; Dva, mistranslated as Dover, means "two"; and Chetyre means "four".

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