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:''This article is about the gameplay mechanic. For the spell, see [[Death (spell)]].  For the ''Heroes'' chapter, see [[Death (chapter)]].''
:''This article is about the gameplay mechanic. For the spell, see [[Death (spell)]].  For the ''Heroes'' chapter, see [[Death (chapter)]].''


[[File:Ss fe06 sue defeated.png|thumb|right|[[Sue]] is killed in battle.]]
[[File:Ss fe10 laura defeated.png|thumb|300px|[[Laura]] is killed in battle.]]
{{Quote|I don't want any of you dying on me! Remember--you only have one life!|[[Ike]]}}
{{Quote|I don't want any of you dying on me! Remember{{nwh}}you only have one life!|[[Ike]]}}


'''Permanent death''' (Japanese: {{hl|ロスト|Rosuto}} ''loss'') is a unique aspect of gameplay in the {{FES}}. While other role-playing games may allow the player to revive or otherwise heal fallen party members, ''Fire Emblem'' is unique in that any time a [[unit]]'s [[Hit point|HP]] is reduced to zero, the character completely dies and can no longer fight in-game, requiring the player to restart the chapter if they do not wish to lose the unit. A few games have offered rare and limited ways to revive a deceased unit, and modern ''Fire Emblem'' games from {{title|New Mystery of the Emblem}} onward have allowed the conditions of permanent death to be changed as part of selecting the game's difficulty.
'''Permanent death''' (Japanese: {{hl|ロスト|Rosuto}} ''loss'') is a unique aspect of gameplay in the {{FES}}. While other role-playing games may allow the player to revive or otherwise heal fallen party members, ''Fire Emblem'' is unique in that any time a [[unit]]'s [[Hit point|HP]] is reduced to zero, the character completely dies and can no longer fight in-game, requiring the player to restart the chapter if they do not wish to lose the unit. A few games have offered rare and limited ways to revive a deceased unit, and modern ''Fire Emblem'' games from {{title|New Mystery of the Emblem}} onward have allowed the conditions of permanent death to be changed as part of selecting the game's difficulty.


==Overview==
==Overview==
The presence of permanent death acts as a way of giving clear consequences to the player's actions, giving a clearer reason to make careful tactical decisions to avoid losing units. Despite being regarded as permanent death, some characters that are either essential to the plot (such as [[L'Arachel]] and [[Innes]] in {{title|The Sacred Stones}}) or otherwise important to the main character (such as [[Marcus]] and [[Oswin]] in {{FE7}}) may stay alive in the game's story and continue to appear in dialogue cutscenes, but for gameplay purposes they are counted as "dead" and can no longer be used in-battle.
The presence of permanent death acts as a way of giving clear consequences to the player's actions, giving a clearer reason to make careful tactical decisions to avoid losing units. Despite being regarded as permanent death, some characters that are either essential to the plot (such as [[L'Arachel]] and [[Innes]] in {{title|The Sacred Stones}}) or otherwise important to the main character (such as [[Marcus]] and [[Oswin]] in {{title|The Blazing Blade}}) may stay alive in the game's story and continue to appear in dialogue cutscenes, but for gameplay purposes they are counted as "dead" and can no longer be used in-battle.


The player's units are not the only units affected by permanent death; the same rules apply to enemy armies, which have no way of reviving their lost units, and to the NPC armies who occasionally support the player's forces. Howver, the deaths of enemies can sometimes also affect the player negatively. Potentially [[Recruitment|recruitable]] enemies, such as [[Ilyana]] and [[Tauroneo]] in {{title|Path of Radiance}}, are affected by permanent death, and having any of these units killed prevents the player from adding them to their army unless they restart the chapter. On rare occasions, the deaths of enemy units even can even impede the player's progress in the rest of the game; for instance, in {{title|The Binding Blade}}, killing [[Douglas]] when he appears as an enemy in [[Storming the Capital|Chapter 16]] not only prevents the player from recruiting him later, but also results in the player being prevented from accessing a [[sidequest]] to obtain the [[Aureola]] tome, which ultimately prevents the player from accessing the game's true ending.
The player's units are not the only units affected by permanent death; the same rules apply to enemy armies, which have no way of reviving their lost units, and to the NPC armies who occasionally support the player's forces. However, the deaths of enemies can sometimes also affect the player negatively. Potentially [[Recruitment|recruitable]] enemies, such as [[Ilyana]] and [[Tauroneo]] in {{title|Path of Radiance}}, are affected by permanent death, and having any of these units killed prevents the player from adding them to their army unless they restart the chapter. On rare occasions, the deaths of enemy units even can even impede the player's progress in the rest of the game; for instance, in {{title|The Binding Blade}}, killing [[Douglas]] when he appears as an enemy in [[Storming the Capital|Chapter 16]] not only prevents the player from recruiting him later, but also results in the player being prevented from accessing a [[side quest]] to obtain the [[Aureola]] tome, which ultimately prevents the player from accessing the game's true ending.


In all games from {{title|Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light}} to {{title|Radiant Dawn}}, when a unit dies, their inventory goes with them. Starting with {{title|Shadow Dragon}}, when a unit dies, their inventory is put into the convoy the chapter after.
In all games from {{title|Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light}} to {{title|Radiant Dawn}}, when a unit dies, their inventory goes with them to their death and is lost forever, and in {{title|Genealogy of the Holy War}}, their personal item storage in the supply convoy becomes inaccessible. Starting with {{title|Shadow Dragon}}, when a unit dies, their inventory is put into the convoy the chapter after.


[[Merlinus]] is uniquely "immortal": instead of being undeployable for the rest of the game, Merlinus will return in the next chapter's beginning just as deployable as ever. [[Deirdre]] and [[Julia]] also have this psuedo-immortality until they leave the army for storyline related reasons.
[[Merlinus]] is uniquely "immortal": instead of being undeployable for the rest of the game, Merlinus will return in the next chapter's beginning just as deployable as ever. [[Deirdre]] and [[Julia]] also have this pseudo-immortality until they leave the army for storyline related reasons.


==Game Over==
==Game Over==
[[File:Ss fe11 game over.png|thumb|right|A Game Over in {{title|Shadow Dragon}}.]]
[[File:Ss fe11 game over.png|thumb|right|A Game Over in {{title|Shadow Dragon}}.]]
While the game normally continues if a character is felled in battle, the primary exception is if a player's [[Lord]] or [[Avatar]] character is killed. If this happens, it is an automatic failure of a chapter and causes a '''Game Over''', as the player is unable to continue without either character.  
While the game normally continues if a character is felled in battle, the primary exception is if a protagonist character is killed. If this happens, it is an automatic failure of a chapter and causes a '''Game Over''', as the player is unable to continue without such a character.  


The deaths of certain other characters, playable or otherwise, occasionally also trigger a Game Over state. In particular, defensive chapters where the [[Objectives|objective]] is to protect a certain helpless NPC will result in a Game Over if the NPC is attacked and killed; examples include [[Zephiel]] in [[Battle before Dawn|Chapter 26E/28H]], [[Natalie]] in [[In Occupation's Shadow|Chapter 4]], and [[Merlinus]] in [[The Peddler Merlinus|Chapter 13x]] in {{FE7}}, and [[Mansel]] in [[Last Hope|Chapter 19]] of {{title|The Sacred Stones}}. Other defensive chapters involve protecting a [[Terrain|throne, gate or other key point]] and preventing enemies from seizing it; should an enemy seize it, this will also cause a Game Over.  
The deaths of certain other characters occasionally also trigger a Game Over state. In particular, chapters where the [[objective]] is to protect a certain NPC will result in a Game Over if the NPC is killed; examples include [[Natalie]] in [[In Occupation's Shadow|Chapter 4]] of {{title|The Blazing Blade}} and [[Mansel]] in [[Last Hope|Chapter 19]] of {{title|The Sacred Stones}}. Other defend chapters require protecting a key point—typically a [[Terrain|throne or gate]]—and preventing enemies from seizing it; should an enemy seize it, this will also cause a Game Over.  


In a particularly unusual case, if the player attacks the boss [[Fargus]] in [[The Port of Badon|Chapter 15xE/16xH]] of {{FE7}}, this will result in a Game Over, as the chapter's goal was to talk to Fargus to secure passage to continue the lords' quest. Even if Fargus survives the battle, the attack will anger him into withdrawing his offer of aid, ending the game anyway.
In a particularly unusual case, if the player attacks the boss [[Fargus]] in [[The Port of Badon|Chapter 15xE/16xH]] of ''The Blazing Blade'', this will result in a Game Over, as the chapter's goal was to talk to Fargus to secure passage to continue the lords' quest. Even if Fargus survives the battle, the attack will anger him into withdrawing his offer of aid, ending the game anyway.
 
During the game over sequence, some games will usually have another character lament a protagonist's death. A few games will also have differing playable characters do this depending on factors such as who is alive, who is deployed, or story progress. For example, in {{title|The Binding Blade}}, [[Lilina]] will mourn [[Roy]]'s death if she is alive and deployed in battle; if Lilina is not deployed or alive, [[Guinivere]] will appear instead in certain chapters, and [[Marcus]] will in others if he is alive; if all of other characters are not present, [[Merlinus]] will speak.


==Exceptions==
==Exceptions==
===Revival staves===
===Revival===
Even though permanent death has been present in the series from the beginning, ways to avert it have also been present from the beginning. {{FE1}} introduced the [[Regalia|rare]] [[Aum]] staff, which allows a suitably [[Weapon level|talented]] user of [[Staff|staves]] to revive a single deceased unit. Later games introduced similar staves, with {{FE4}} featuring [[Valkyrie (staff)|Valkyrie]] and {{title|Fates}} introducing [[Bifröst]].
Even though permanent death has been present in the series from the beginning, ways to avert it have also been present from the beginning. {{FE1}} introduced the [[Aum]] staff, which can be used to revive a single deceased unit. Later games introduced similar staves, with {{FE4}} featuring [[Valkyrie (staff)|Valkyrie]] and {{title|Fates}} introducing [[Bifröst]].


There are numerous restrictions placed on the use of these staves to counteract their appealing power. Both Aum and Valkyrie have a very limited set of users; Aum is only usable by [[Elice]] in the original games (with [[Maria]], [[Yuliya]], [[Caeda]], [[Minerva]], and [[Sheena]] being added in the remakes), and Valkyrie is only usable by [[Claud]] and his [[Inheritance|staff-wielding son]]. In ''Shadow Dragon'', Aum cannot be used to revive the character who was sacrificed as a [[decoy]] in the game's prologue. Bifröst will only revive units who died on the same map it is being used in, and will not revive anybody who died before then. All three of these staves can only be used once before they [[Durability|break]], and although Valkyrie can be repaired through the [[Castle|weapon repair shops]] present in ''Genealogy'', doing so is extremely expensive.
There are numerous restrictions placed on the use of these staves to counteract their appealing power. Both Aum and Valkyrie have a very limited set of users; Aum is only usable by [[Elice]] and [[Yuliya]] in the original games (with [[Maria]], [[Caeda]], [[Minerva]], and [[Sheena]] being added in the remakes), and Valkyrie is only usable by [[Claud]] and his [[Inheritance|staff-wielding son]]. In ''Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light'' and ''Mystery of the Emblem'' Book I, Aum can only be used at the altar in [[The Dragonkin Realm|Chapter 24]], and in ''Shadow Dragon'', it cannot be used to revive the character who was sacrificed as a [[decoy]] in the game's prologue. Bifröst can only revive the most recent unit who died on the map it is used in, and cannot revive anybody who died before then. All three of these staves can only be used once before they [[Durability|break]], and although Valkyrie can be repaired through the [[Castle|weapon repair shops]] present in ''Genealogy of the Holy War'', doing so is extremely expensive.


{{FE2}} and {{FE15}} have a similar mechanic with the lion-head statues found in the game's [[Mila Shrine]]s. Three of the game's shrines have their lion heads allow the player to revive characters, with each being able to revive just three characters. Owing to the split paths of [[Alm]] and [[Celica]], the player cannot combine the use of these statues. In ''Gaiden'', the lion heads technically allow the player a way to transfer units between the two parties; for instance, if a unit dies in Alm's party, Celica can revive them at one of her lion heads and they will join her party instead. (This is no longer possible in ''Echoes: Shadows of Valentia''.)
{{FE2}} and {{FE15}} have a similar mechanic with the lion-head statues found in the game's [[Mila Shrine]]s. The lion heads at three of the game's shrines allow the player to revive characters, with each being able to revive just three characters. Owing to the split paths of [[Alm]] and [[Celica]], the player cannot combine the use of these statues. In ''Gaiden'', the lion heads technically allow the player a way to transfer units between the two parties, as a unit that dies in one party can be revived by the other—this is not possible in ''Shadows of Valentia''.


===Story requirements===
===Story requirements===
Occasionally, due to plot importance or the structure of the game's story modes, characters may not permanently die if they are killed.
Occasionally, due to plot importance or the structure of the game's story modes, characters may not permanently die if they are defeated.


In ''Genealogy of the Holy War'', [[Deirdre]] and [[Julia]] will be captured by the enemy if their HP is reduced to zero, rather than being killed, and [[Sigurd]] or [[Seliph]] will find them at the final castle at the end of the chapter. However, this won't apply to Julia anymore when she is recruited again in the [[The Final Holy War|endgame]], and her death under these circumstances will be permanent.
In ''Genealogy of the Holy War'', [[Deirdre]] and [[Julia]] will be captured by the enemy if their HP is reduced to zero, rather than being killed, and [[Sigurd]] or [[Seliph]] will find them at the final castle at the end of the chapter. However, this does not apply to Julia when she is recruited again in the [[The Final Holy War|endgame]], and her death under these circumstances will be permanent.


{{FE7}} introduced a different way to circumvent permanent death. In [[Lyn]]'s story, any characters who have their HP reduced to zero can still return in either [[Eliwood]]'s or [[Hector]]'s stories, albeit with reset stats. Despite this, characters will again be completely unusuable if they are at all felled in these stories, and there exist no ways to revive them. {{FE8}} features a case similar to this, where in the mandatory sidequest [[Unbroken Heart|Chapter 5x]], the [[Cavalier]]s [[Forde]] and [[Kyle]] can be defeated but will still be playable when they return [[It's a Trap!|three chapters later]]. The [[Paladin]] [[Orson]] also will still appear as the boss of [[Ruled by Madness|Chapter 16]], regardless of what happens to him in Chapter 5x.
''Genealogy'' has a third character who circumvents permanent death: [[Finn]] will always reappear in [[Beyond the Desert|Chapter 7]], even if he was defeated during the first generation; he will also retain his inventory (unless he was [[Inheritance|married]]), [[promotion]], and stats when he returns. However, should he run out of health in the second generation, he will die permanently. {{title|The Blazing Blade}}, {{title|The Sacred Stones}}, and {{title|New Mystery of the Emblem}} feature similar cases to Finn. In [[Lyn]]'s story of ''The Blazing Blade'', any characters who have their HP reduced to zero can still return in [[Eliwood]]'s or [[Hector]]'s stories, though they will not retain their stats, and will be unusable if they are felled in these stories. In the mandatory side quest [[Unbroken Heart|Chapter 5x]] of ''The Sacred Stones'', [[Forde]] and [[Kyle]] can be defeated but will still be playable when they return in [[It's a Trap!|Chapter 8]]; [[Orson]] also will still appear as the boss of [[Ruled by Madness|Chapter 16]], regardless of what happens to him in Chapter 5x. In ''New Mystery of the Emblem'', any characters that were defeated in the prologue chapters will return in [[The Grustian Expedition|Chapter 1]] if they do not leave, or as normal in the chapter they would normally rejoin in if they do; they retain any stat changes in both cases, and retain their inventories in the former.


The four-part structure of {{FE10}} results in a case similar to the above two games. Due to the fact that the game takes place over four parts, some characters, both playable and NPC, can be defeated in combat, but still return in later chapters.
The four-part structure of {{FE10}} results in a case similar to the above games. Due to the fact that the game takes place over four parts, some characters, both playable and NPC, can be defeated in combat, but still return in later chapters. Playable characters who are defeated in combat while outside the player's control (for example, [[Ike]] as the boss of [[Blood Contract|Part III, Chapter 13]]) will never suffer permanent death.
 
In {{FE16}}, three battles in the main story "disable" death upon defeat: the [[Rivalry of the Houses|Chapter 1 mission]], the [[Practice Battle|Chapter 2 auxiliary battle]], and the [[Battle of the Eagle and Lion (disambiguation)|Chapter 7 mission]]; each of these battles is a mock battle or exercise between the students and staff of [[Garreg Mach Monastery]]. Additionally, battles related to the quests [[The Best of the Best]], [[Something to Prove]], and [[The Cream of the Crop]] similarly disable permanent death.


===Gameplay modes===
===Gameplay modes===
{{Main|Gameplay modes#Classic and Casual Mode}}
{{Main|Gameplay modes#Classic and Casual Mode}}


Main series games from {{FE12}} onward feature '''Casual Mode''' as an optional part of the difficulty settings of the games. If the game is being played in Casual Mode, units will be removed from the chapter when their HP is reduced to zero, but they will return as playable units in the next with no penalties; the opposite of this is Classic Mode, where traditional ''Fire Emblem'' death rules apply as normal. All of the respective games' difficulties can be played in Casual Mode or Classic Mode with no restrictions. In all games except ''Fates'' and ''Three Houses'', the defeat of the Lord character still causes a game over in Casual Mode.
Main series games from {{FE12}} onward feature '''Casual Mode''' as an optional part of the difficulty settings of the games. If the game is being played in Casual Mode, units will be removed from the chapter when their HP is reduced to zero, but they will return as playable units in the next with no penalties; the opposite of this is Classic Mode, where traditional ''Fire Emblem'' death rules apply as normal. All of the respective games' difficulties can be played in Casual Mode or Classic Mode with no restrictions. In all games except ''Fates'' and ''Three Houses'', the defeat of a main character still causes a game over in Casual Mode.
 
Exclusive to ''Fates'' is [[Phoenix Mode]] as an alternative to Casual or Classic Modes; in Phoenix mode, units reduced to 0 HP return to the map on the following turn. Unlike Casual or Classic Modes, Phoenix Mode can be played only on the lowest difficulty.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
Line 49: Line 55:
Ss fe05 lifis defeated.png|[[Lifis]] dying in {{title|Thracia 776}}.
Ss fe05 lifis defeated.png|[[Lifis]] dying in {{title|Thracia 776}}.
Ss fe06 sue defeated.png|[[Sue]] dying in {{title|The Binding Blade}}.
Ss fe06 sue defeated.png|[[Sue]] dying in {{title|The Binding Blade}}.
Ss fe10 laura defeated.png|[[Laura]] dying in {{title|Radiant Dawn}}.
Ss fe16 lorenz defeated.jpg|[[Lorenz (Three Houses)|Lorenz]] dying in {{title|Three Houses}}.
Ss fe16 lorenz defeated.jpg|[[Lorenz (Three Houses)|Lorenz]] dying in {{title|Three Houses}}.
Ss fe05 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Thracia 776}}.
Ss fe17 kagetsu defeated.jpg|[[Kagetsu]] dying in {{title|Engage}}.
Ss fewa2 felix defeated.jpeg|[[Felix]] dying in {{title|Three Hopes}}.
Ss fe04 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Genealogy of the Holy War}}.
Ss fe05 game over.png|A game over in ''Thracia 776''.
Ss fe07 game over.png|A game over in ''The Binding Blade'', {{title|The Blazing Blade}}, and {{title|The Sacred Stones}}.
Ss fe09 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Path of Radiance}}.
Ss fe10 game over.png|A game over in ''Radiant Dawn''.
Ss fe11 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Shadow Dragon}}.
Ss fe11 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Shadow Dragon}}.
Ss fe13 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Awakening}}.
Ss fe13 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Awakening}}.
Ss fe14 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Fates}}.
Ss fe14 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Fates}}.
Ss fe15 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Shadows of Valentia}}.
Ss fe15 game over.png|A game over in {{title|Shadows of Valentia}}.
Ss fe16 game over.jpg|A game over in {{title|Three Houses}}.
Ss fe16 game over.jpg|A game over in ''Three Houses''.
Ss fe17 game over.jpg|A game over in ''Engage''.
Ss fewa2 game over.jpeg|A game over in ''Three Hopes''.
</gallery>
</gallery>



Latest revision as of 16:37, 18 December 2023

This article is about the gameplay mechanic. For the spell, see Death (spell). For the Heroes chapter, see Death (chapter).
Laura is killed in battle.
I don't want any of you dying on me! Remember--you only have one life!
— Ike

Permanent death (Japanese: ロスト loss) is a unique aspect of gameplay in the Fire Emblem series. While other role-playing games may allow the player to revive or otherwise heal fallen party members, Fire Emblem is unique in that any time a unit's HP is reduced to zero, the character completely dies and can no longer fight in-game, requiring the player to restart the chapter if they do not wish to lose the unit. A few games have offered rare and limited ways to revive a deceased unit, and modern Fire Emblem games from New Mystery of the Emblem onward have allowed the conditions of permanent death to be changed as part of selecting the game's difficulty.

Overview

The presence of permanent death acts as a way of giving clear consequences to the player's actions, giving a clearer reason to make careful tactical decisions to avoid losing units. Despite being regarded as permanent death, some characters that are either essential to the plot (such as L'Arachel and Innes in The Sacred Stones) or otherwise important to the main character (such as Marcus and Oswin in The Blazing Blade) may stay alive in the game's story and continue to appear in dialogue cutscenes, but for gameplay purposes they are counted as "dead" and can no longer be used in-battle.

The player's units are not the only units affected by permanent death; the same rules apply to enemy armies, which have no way of reviving their lost units, and to the NPC armies who occasionally support the player's forces. However, the deaths of enemies can sometimes also affect the player negatively. Potentially recruitable enemies, such as Ilyana and Tauroneo in Path of Radiance, are affected by permanent death, and having any of these units killed prevents the player from adding them to their army unless they restart the chapter. On rare occasions, the deaths of enemy units even can even impede the player's progress in the rest of the game; for instance, in The Binding Blade, killing Douglas when he appears as an enemy in Chapter 16 not only prevents the player from recruiting him later, but also results in the player being prevented from accessing a side quest to obtain the Aureola tome, which ultimately prevents the player from accessing the game's true ending.

In all games from Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light to Radiant Dawn, when a unit dies, their inventory goes with them to their death and is lost forever, and in Genealogy of the Holy War, their personal item storage in the supply convoy becomes inaccessible. Starting with Shadow Dragon, when a unit dies, their inventory is put into the convoy the chapter after.

Merlinus is uniquely "immortal": instead of being undeployable for the rest of the game, Merlinus will return in the next chapter's beginning just as deployable as ever. Deirdre and Julia also have this pseudo-immortality until they leave the army for storyline related reasons.

Game Over

A Game Over in Shadow Dragon.

While the game normally continues if a character is felled in battle, the primary exception is if a protagonist character is killed. If this happens, it is an automatic failure of a chapter and causes a Game Over, as the player is unable to continue without such a character.

The deaths of certain other characters occasionally also trigger a Game Over state. In particular, chapters where the objective is to protect a certain NPC will result in a Game Over if the NPC is killed; examples include Natalie in Chapter 4 of The Blazing Blade and Mansel in Chapter 19 of The Sacred Stones. Other defend chapters require protecting a key point—typically a throne or gate—and preventing enemies from seizing it; should an enemy seize it, this will also cause a Game Over.

In a particularly unusual case, if the player attacks the boss Fargus in Chapter 15xE/16xH of The Blazing Blade, this will result in a Game Over, as the chapter's goal was to talk to Fargus to secure passage to continue the lords' quest. Even if Fargus survives the battle, the attack will anger him into withdrawing his offer of aid, ending the game anyway.

During the game over sequence, some games will usually have another character lament a protagonist's death. A few games will also have differing playable characters do this depending on factors such as who is alive, who is deployed, or story progress. For example, in The Binding Blade, Lilina will mourn Roy's death if she is alive and deployed in battle; if Lilina is not deployed or alive, Guinivere will appear instead in certain chapters, and Marcus will in others if he is alive; if all of other characters are not present, Merlinus will speak.

Exceptions

Revival

Even though permanent death has been present in the series from the beginning, ways to avert it have also been present from the beginning. Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light introduced the Aum staff, which can be used to revive a single deceased unit. Later games introduced similar staves, with Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War featuring Valkyrie and Fates introducing Bifröst.

There are numerous restrictions placed on the use of these staves to counteract their appealing power. Both Aum and Valkyrie have a very limited set of users; Aum is only usable by Elice and Yuliya in the original games (with Maria, Caeda, Minerva, and Sheena being added in the remakes), and Valkyrie is only usable by Claud and his staff-wielding son. In Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light and Mystery of the Emblem Book I, Aum can only be used at the altar in Chapter 24, and in Shadow Dragon, it cannot be used to revive the character who was sacrificed as a decoy in the game's prologue. Bifröst can only revive the most recent unit who died on the map it is used in, and cannot revive anybody who died before then. All three of these staves can only be used once before they break, and although Valkyrie can be repaired through the weapon repair shops present in Genealogy of the Holy War, doing so is extremely expensive.

Fire Emblem Gaiden and Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia have a similar mechanic with the lion-head statues found in the game's Mila Shrines. The lion heads at three of the game's shrines allow the player to revive characters, with each being able to revive just three characters. Owing to the split paths of Alm and Celica, the player cannot combine the use of these statues. In Gaiden, the lion heads technically allow the player a way to transfer units between the two parties, as a unit that dies in one party can be revived by the other—this is not possible in Shadows of Valentia.

Story requirements

Occasionally, due to plot importance or the structure of the game's story modes, characters may not permanently die if they are defeated.

In Genealogy of the Holy War, Deirdre and Julia will be captured by the enemy if their HP is reduced to zero, rather than being killed, and Sigurd or Seliph will find them at the final castle at the end of the chapter. However, this does not apply to Julia when she is recruited again in the endgame, and her death under these circumstances will be permanent.

Genealogy has a third character who circumvents permanent death: Finn will always reappear in Chapter 7, even if he was defeated during the first generation; he will also retain his inventory (unless he was married), promotion, and stats when he returns. However, should he run out of health in the second generation, he will die permanently. The Blazing Blade, The Sacred Stones, and New Mystery of the Emblem feature similar cases to Finn. In Lyn's story of The Blazing Blade, any characters who have their HP reduced to zero can still return in Eliwood's or Hector's stories, though they will not retain their stats, and will be unusable if they are felled in these stories. In the mandatory side quest Chapter 5x of The Sacred Stones, Forde and Kyle can be defeated but will still be playable when they return in Chapter 8; Orson also will still appear as the boss of Chapter 16, regardless of what happens to him in Chapter 5x. In New Mystery of the Emblem, any characters that were defeated in the prologue chapters will return in Chapter 1 if they do not leave, or as normal in the chapter they would normally rejoin in if they do; they retain any stat changes in both cases, and retain their inventories in the former.

The four-part structure of Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn results in a case similar to the above games. Due to the fact that the game takes place over four parts, some characters, both playable and NPC, can be defeated in combat, but still return in later chapters. Playable characters who are defeated in combat while outside the player's control (for example, Ike as the boss of Part III, Chapter 13) will never suffer permanent death.

In Fire Emblem: Three Houses, three battles in the main story "disable" death upon defeat: the Chapter 1 mission, the Chapter 2 auxiliary battle, and the Chapter 7 mission; each of these battles is a mock battle or exercise between the students and staff of Garreg Mach Monastery. Additionally, battles related to the quests The Best of the Best, Something to Prove, and The Cream of the Crop similarly disable permanent death.

Gameplay modes

Main article: Gameplay modes § Classic and Casual Mode

Main series games from Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem onward feature Casual Mode as an optional part of the difficulty settings of the games. If the game is being played in Casual Mode, units will be removed from the chapter when their HP is reduced to zero, but they will return as playable units in the next with no penalties; the opposite of this is Classic Mode, where traditional Fire Emblem death rules apply as normal. All of the respective games' difficulties can be played in Casual Mode or Classic Mode with no restrictions. In all games except Fates and Three Houses, the defeat of a main character still causes a game over in Casual Mode.

Exclusive to Fates is Phoenix Mode as an alternative to Casual or Classic Modes; in Phoenix mode, units reduced to 0 HP return to the map on the following turn. Unlike Casual or Classic Modes, Phoenix Mode can be played only on the lowest difficulty.

Gallery

References

Game mechanics
Out-of-battle management Base (BarracksBase CampBase conversationEveryone's ConditionsExpeditionGarreg Mach Monastery (Abyss) • My CastleSomniel) • Bonus experienceDungeonsGameplay modes (DifficultyCreature CampaignNew Game +) • GoldLessonsMila ShrinesPeddlerPreparationsRenownShopping (ArmoryBargainsForgeItem shopMerchantOnline shopSecret shop) • Supply convoyWorld map
Battles and chapters ArenaBattle saveBossCastleChapter (Alternate routeParalogueSide quest) • ChestCombat forecastEvent tilesHidden treasureObjectivesReinforcementSkirmishTerrain (Hazards) • Turn (Turn rewind) • Weather (Fog of war) • Village
Stats Units ActionAffinityAuthorityBiorhythmCharmClass (Class masteryClass relative powerUnit type) • Constitution (Aid) • DefenseExperienceFollow-up critical multiplierGrowth rateHit pointHoly BloodInventoryLevelLuckMagicMovementProficiencyResistanceSkillSpeedStrengthWeapon levelWeight
Weapons Brave weaponCritical rateDurabilityHitKill bonusMightPersonal weaponsRangeWeapon experienceWeapon levelWeightWorth
Unit mechanics and commands AdjutantAttack (Counterattack) • Auto-BattleBattalion (Gambit) • CantoChain attackChain GuardClass change (Reclass) • Combat artCrestsDance (GaldrarPlaySing) • Death (Decoy) • DismountDragon VeinEmblem RingsFatigueInventoryLaguz transformationLove (JealousyInheritance) • Pair UpRallyRecruitmentRescue (Capture) • Skills (Offensive skill) • SmashStaggering BlowStatus effectsSupportTalkTradeUnit (AvatarBond unitsBonus unitEinherjarLoan unitPrisonerReplacement unitSubstitute character) • Visit
Calculations AttackAttack speedAvoidBonus damageCritical hit (Combination bonusDodgeTriangle Attack) • Hit rate (True hit) • Random number generatorWeapon triangle (Trinity of magic)
Connectivity amiiboData transferDouble DuelDownloadable contentLink ArenaMultiplayer battleOnline shopSpotPassStreetPass
Other BarrierBirthdayClass rollGlitchesMultiple endingsRankingsSound RoomTactician bonus