The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.
- Gale redirects here. Not to be confused with Gail, a boss from Mystery of the Emblem Book 2 and its DS remake.
This page has been marked as a stub. Please help improve the page by adding information.
|
“
|
Knights of Bern! We strike now! Leave none alive! Don't even leave them time to scream in fear!
|
”
|
— Galle
|
Galle (Japanese: ゲイル ) is one of Murdock's subordinates and a secondary boss of chapter 21 of Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade. Galle is a knight with much talent, and it is hinted that he could have been one of Bern's Wyvern Generals had he not been foreign-born; despite this, Murdock and Zephiel put their trust in Galle to be loyal to them. Upon Murdock making his last stand aganst Roy and his army, Galle serves as the leader of a group of late-stage reinforcements, but is not able to overcome Roy's army.
Galle can be unlocked for usage on the trial maps should the player beat the game from beginning to end twice.
Stats
The Binding Blade
Quotes
Battle quote
Galle does not have a battle quote.
Death quote
“
|
I fought honorably... I accept my death... Zeiss... Milady...
|
”
|
— Galle, in The Binding Blade.
|
Other appearances
Fire Emblem Cipher
Galle is currently featured on two cards in Fire Emblem Cipher.
- One of the below cards' epithets is still in raw, untranslated Japanese; it needs translation.
Trivia
- Galle is the only character unlockable in the Trial Maps to have been fought as a boss in the main story and gain an affinity as a playable character. (The other unlockable Trial Map characters to have affinities--Hector, Eliwood, and Guinivere--were never fought as bosses.)
Etymology and other languages
Names, etymology, and in other regions
|
Language
|
Name
|
Definition, etymology, and notes
|
English (unofficial)
|
Gale
|
Used in the most recent, up-to-date version of the fan translation patch, as well as in older translations and popularized by Serenes Forest. As a masculine name, it is derived from the Middle English "gaile", and was used almost exclusively as a masculine name prior to 1935; by 1940, however, it had become more associated as being a feminine name and a shortening of the biblical name "Abigail". May have been used by the fan translation teams despite its more feminine modern connotations to attempt to avert confusion with a major backstory character from Genealogy of the Holy War.
|
|
Gallery
style="border: 1px solid #b0b0b0; width: 50%; background: #232855; Template:Round" align="center" | Sprite Gallery
|
|
References