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1%%Zero Context examples are not allowed. Please add more details before uncommenting them.
2%%Also, remember to follow proper indentation guidelines by not combining or grouping multiple tropes together.
3
4One thousand years ago, [[{{Gotterdammerung}} the gods and the most powerful demons fought an extremely destructive war called Ragnarok]]. The gods, who otherwise would have lost, broke the taboo that mortal creatures must not have godly powers in order to create the Grim Angels, incomplete yet extremely powerful beings who were able to turn the tide. Afterward, the gods vanished, sealing their powers within the recently liberated land of [[VideoGame/RivieraThePromisedLand Riviera]] and entrusting the rule of Asgard to seven proxies called the Magi. The Grim Angels, too, were sealed away until the time would come that their powers would once again be necessary to protect Asgard from the threat of demons.
5
6Since that time, TheVerse has been locked in something of a status quo: Demon factions are always on the lookout for a chance to attack Asgard or otherwise expand their turf, and the [[HaveYouSeenMyGod now-godless]] Asgard must continually discourage them. Thus, there is a constant battle of OrderVersusChaos being waged on a cosmic scale. Not helping things is that the Magi, originally humanoid beings with all-too-mortal desires, are waging a constant and quiet political war amongst themselves.
7
8And so, in the countless mortal worlds that lie between Asgard and Niflheim, life tends to be rather grim. And to make matters worse, even when their lives ''aren't'' being sidelined by the heavenly cold war, [[HumansAreTheRealMonsters the people of the human realms have usually got their hands full persecuting and killing each other]].
9
10This is the setting of Creator/StingEntertainment's Dept. Heaven series. Each game released thus far has taken place in a different mortal world, depicting the struggles taking place therein (and, often as not, how interference courtesy of Asgard and demons has made it worse). The series as a whole is known for its GenreBusting gameplay, [[DarkFantasy dark storylines]], [[GrayAndGreyMorality morally ambiguous characters]], purposeful ArtStyleDissonance,[[note]]Creator/SatokoKiyuduki, famed for her [[PuniPlush puni-moe]] art style, has been the art director since the second game, 'natch[[/note]] and oblique references to Myth/NorseMythology.
11
12The series is meant to span [[NumerologicalMotif nine core episodes]], not counting spinoffs. It should be kept in mind that episode number has nothing at all to do with series chronology,[[note]]The episode numbers are in fact just the order that the games' original concepts were pitched in[[/note]] and that the games are released out of chronological order as well. Usually, though, series mainstay characters (most often the archangel Marietta) will pop up briefly to give series fans an idea of when the story takes place.
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14Those of the games which have made it into English have always been localized by Atlus,[[note]]and TLC'ed by 505 Games for Europe and Australia[[/note]] and around the time of the announcement of their localization of ''Knights in the Nightmare'', it was announced that Atlus of Japan would be Sting's exclusive publisher. Ideally, this would ensure that this series would continue being localized for the foreseeable future. ''Ideally.''
15
16Now has a [[AwesomeMusic/DeptHeaven Crowning Music Of Awesome page]]; feel free to contribute.
17
18You can find a whole mess of translated side materials [[http://disaresta.livejournal.com/tag/translation here]].
19
20!!The Dept. Heaven series includes:[[index]]
21* '''Episode I:''' ''Yakusoku no Chi Riviera''/''VideoGame/RivieraThePromisedLand'', which tells the story of an angel named Ecthel(/[[DubNameChange Ein]]) and his attempts to save the eponymous island from both Asgard and Niflheim. Originally released for the Platform/WonderSwan Color (2002), ported to the Platform/GameBoyAdvance (2004), and there localized by Creator/{{Atlus}}. Then ported to the Platform/PlayStationPortable, and localized by Atlus yet again (2006).
22* '''Episode II:''' ''VideoGame/YggdraUnion: We'll Never Fight Alone'', wherein Princess Yggdra attempts to rescue her kingdom from the empire that has conquered it. Released for the GBA (2006), localized by Creator/{{Atlus}}, ported to the PSP (2008), and rereleased by Atlus.
23** ''VideoGame/YggdraUnison'', an [[GaidenGame alternate-universe spinoff]] that gives [[DemotedToExtra almost]] everyone a chance to be the main character. Originally released as a cellphone-exclusive [=MMO=] in 2007, but a DS remake was also released in late 2009. NoExportForYou.
24** ''VideoGame/BlazeUnion: Story to Reach the Future'', a PSP-only prequel to ''VideoGame/YggdraUnion''. The game takes place in Bronquia three years prior to ''Yggdra'''s story, and focuses on Gulcasa ([[spoiler:Garlot]]) and the Imperial Army. Released in 2010. NoExportForYou.
25** ''VideoGame/GloriaUnion: Twin Fates in the Blue Ocean'', another PSP game. Is largely unconnected to the other Episode II games, and is a {{pirate}} dramedy. Released in June 2011. Still NoExportForYou.
26* '''Episode III:''' Currently planned as an MMO of some type, although production is on hiatus. Ito mentioned that it is supposed to take place roughly at the same time as ''Knights''. See [[http://disaresta.livejournal.com/68416.html#cutid1 this interview]] for details.
27* '''Episode IV:''' ''VideoGame/KnightsInTheNightmare'', the story of a world overrun by demons and the unlikely pair of a disembodied soul and mysterious valkyrie trying to save it. First released on Platform/NintendoDS in 2008. Published by Atlus. PSP remake released in 2010, which contains the Yggdra route cut during the DS game's production. A Nintendo Switch remake was released in 2022, [[NoExportForYou but only in Japan]].
28* '''Episode V:''' No distinct details known. Part of its working title was revealed on Sting's now-discontinued newsletter.
29* '''Episode VI:''' No distinct details known. Part of its working title was revealed on Sting's now-discontinued newsletter.
30* '''Episode VII:''' No distinct details known. Part of its working title was revealed on Sting's now-discontinued newsletter.
31* '''Episode VIII:''' No distinct details known.
32* '''Episode IX:''' ''VideoGame/{{Gungnir}}: Inferno of the Demon Lance and the War of Heroes,'' the story of a young boy named Julio(/[[DubNameChange Giulio]]) and his comrades, who come upon the eponymous lance while struggling to rise up against the ruling class of their Empire. Spent two solid years of DevelopmentHell. Published by Atlus on the PSP. Released in May 2011. Somehow escaped the NoExportForYou curse, and hit North America in 2012.
33[[/index]]
34----
35!!Common tropes utilized in this series:
36* AerithAndBob: The range of names goes from "normal" (Rose, Marietta, Luciana) to "a little strange, but believable" (Malice, Nordische, Kylier) to "downright bizarre" (Staehelingum, Medoute).
37* AllThereInTheManual: Good luck piecing together the full plot without the World Guidance books and the various interviews with the director.
38* BittersweetEnding: As stated in an official interview, "Sting games don't have happy endings", so even the better outcomes to each game come with uncertain futures, fallen comrades, or both.
39%%* BlueAndOrangeMorality: The gods.
40* CelestialBureaucracy: Which is currently being taken care of by a CouncilOfAngels.
41%%* DarkerAndEdgier: ''Knights'', ''Blaze Union'', and ''Gungnir''.
42%%* DarkIsNotEvil
43%%* DemonLordsAndArchdevils
44* FallenAngel: There's at least one in each game. Most of them are at least somewhat sympathetic.
45* FantasticRacism: In many flavors.
46* FromBadToWorse: Marietta's character arc through the series.
47%%* GenreBusting: Gameplay-wise, this is the whole point of the series.
48* GoodIsNotNice: Oh boy. Asgard is acknowledged everywhere as the force preserving order, but it is filled with [[FantasticRacism racist, elitist fanatics]] and is [[spoiler:run by the BigBad]]. It was no better when the gods were in charge, even--they had a nasty habit of raining down DisproportionateRetribution upon anyone that looked at them funny.
49* GrayAndGreyMorality: All games except ''Riviera''.
50* GreaterScopeVillain: [[spoiler:Hector]] until ''Riviera.''
51%%* HaveYouSeenMyGod
52* HostileShowTakeover: The Episode II games have become as much Gulcasa's story as Yggdra's (they each have main-charactership of two); Yggdra has usurped partial main-charactership of ''VideoGame/KnightsInTheNightmare'', and has been featured in the concept art for Episode IX.
53%%* LazyBackup
54%%* LighterAndSofter: ''Unison'', ''Riviera'', and ''Gloria''.
55%%* LightIsNotGood: In all games but ''Riviera''.
56%%* MindScrew
57* MultipleEndings: And in every game that sorts its endings by letter, the A ending is always canon.
58%%* OrderVersusChaos
59%%* OurAngelsAreDifferent
60* RageAgainstTheHeavens: What a number of the antagonists are trying to do. Perhaps not surprising, given Asgard's preferred management methods.
61* SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism: After Riviera? Firmly cynical.
62* SortingAlgorithmOfMortality: Aside from [[PlotArmor the]] [[WeCannotGoOnWithoutYou hero]], no one is truly safe. Love interests may be able to [[DisneyDeath escape on a technicality]], but especially in the episode II games, no role is more dangerous than that of [[UnluckyChildhoodFriend the hero/sidekick's childhood friend]].
63%%* WhoWantsToLiveForever
64* YouCantFightFate: Every game but ''Riviera,'' which actively promotes ScrewDestiny.

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