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Objectives

From Fire Emblem Wiki, your source on Fire Emblem information. By fans, for fans.

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The status menu in The Sacred Stones explains a chapter's objective.

In every chapter or skirmish, the player is tasked with achieving a certain objective (Japanese: 目的 objective) or victory condition (Japanese: 勝利条件 victory condition) in order to clear the map.

Common objectives

Seize

The first objective the series offered, and an extremely common one since, is seizing: the aim being to have the player's main character arrive at a certain point on the map and end the chapter by selecting the Seize command once standing on top of it. In the majority of games, seize points are thrones in the heart of a castle/fort in interior maps, or the gates of a castle/fort in exterior maps, although Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance, Radiant Dawn, and the prologue maps of Shadow Dragon vary this by having seize points be a space of otherwise innocuous terrain which happens to be marked by a blue glow (Tellius) or yellow glow (Shadow Dragon). Seize points are almost always occupied by the chapter's boss, requiring that the player's army defeat them before the lord can move in to seize; this task is made more daunting by how seize points give their occupier defensive, resistance, and avoidance boosts and heal the occupier at the beginning of their turn.

In Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance and Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn, there is a similar objective called "Arrive", which is identical to seize except that any character can do so, rather than only the player army's commander. There are a number of minor variations on the arrive objective where a specific character is required to do the arriving; for example, Part I, Chapter 2's arrive point must be arrived at by the playable character Laura, and the Part III, Prologue's goal is to have Skrimir, a NPC character whom the player does not control at all, to arrive at the arrive point.

In Fire Emblem Fates, similar to the earlier "Arrive" objective, any character can seize.

Seize objectives are the only objectives in Mystery of the Emblem and Genealogy of the Holy War; the latter uniquely requires that multiple castles be successively seized in the same chapter, with each castle seized opening the way to seize the next until the player's army reaches the map's final castle. Also, it is the only objective in The Binding Blade, with the exception of the Endgame and the trial maps, and the only one in Shadow Dragon & the Blade of Light and its remake, Shadow Dragon, with the exception of the Endgame, as well as the multiplayer maps in the latter.

Rout the enemy

This objective simply requires that every enemy unit currently on the map be defeated in order to clear the chapter. If reinforcements appear, they must also be defeated.

With the exceptions of the battles against the Brigand Boss, Barth*, Rudolf, Duma, and the Creation, rout objectives are the only objectives in Fire Emblem Gaiden and its remake, Shadows of Valentia. Additionally, all skirmish situations also have a rout objective.

Defeat the boss

Worded as "defeat the enemy commander" in Shadows of Valentia and Three Houses, this objective is effectively a typical seize objective minus one step: the goal is simply to kill the enemy boss, and doing so automatically ends the chapter. This objective does not require that all other enemies be defeated as well.

In Fire Emblem: Three Houses, Chapter 16 of non-Crimson Flower routes and Chapter 17 of the Azure Moon and Verdant Wind routes have multiple enemies that are classed as bosses, and the objective is expanded to "defeat all enemy commanders." These otherwise function the same way as other "defeat the boss" chapters.

Survive/defend

Defensive objectives were introduced to the main series in Fire Emblem: Thracia 776, and were relatively common until games after Radiant Dawn did not continue to include them. The player is tasked with enduring an enemy siege for a set number of turns (often between 7 and 15 turns), and the emphasis is on maintaining the defenses of their location to avoid being overwhelmed and defeated, rather than taking an active offensive against the enemy (though in most cases, doing so is certainly possible). The goal is focused around defending either a throne or gate which the enemy is attempting to claim, or defending weak NPC units who cannot fight back; should the enemy claim the seize point or kill the NPC in question, the map is failed and the player gets a Game Over. Some defense maps can also be won prematurely by defeating the chapter boss; these maps are marked with an asterisk (*) in the list below. In addition, all defense maps in Three Houses and Heroes are automatically won if the player successfully routs the enemy.

The following maps are defensive maps:

Defending as a requirement was first introduced in Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War, where in every chapter, the enemy could seize the player's home castle, causing a Game Over. Survival as the main objective appeared in Fire Emblem: Archanea Saga, where every episode required the player to keep one or two designated units alive for the full broadcast; in the bonus chapters remade for New Mystery of the Emblem, however, the objectives were changed and none remained as defense.

Escape

The escape objective exists only in Fire Emblem: Thracia 776, Path of Radiance, Radiant Dawn, Fates, Echoes: Shadows of Valentia, and Three Houses.

In Thracia 776 only, escape maps have an additional mechanic: any player unit who does not leave from the escape tile before Leif will be considered captured and removed from the player's party. As with all captured units, the player has an opportunity to get these units back in Chapter 21x, or Chapter 11x if they were captured in Chapter 11.

Unusual objectives

Occasionally, individual chapters in a game may have an entirely unique objective that does not appear elsewhere in the series.

  • In Chapter 15 of Fire Emblem: Thracia 776, the goal is simply to have Leif choose one of two alternate routes by arriving at one of two seize points or by visiting a house in the center of the map.
  • Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade has numerous unique objectives:
    • The objective of Chapter 6 is to find a set of switches to open up a passageway into Castle Araphen; this objective type resurfaces in chapter 25 of Hector's tale under the name "score 3 points" involving seizing three fortresses with any character of the player's choice. Chapter 28 of Eliwood's tale and chapter 30 of Hector's tale also require the player to bring a unit to a checkpoint in a similar manner rather than seize it with the main lord.
    • In 16xE/17xH, the goal is to fight through a pirate horde and reach their boss, Fargus, but the player is supposed to talk to him to clear the chapter. Fighting or killing him instead results in a Game Over.
    • 29xE/31xH involves no conflict at all, and instead gives the player several turns to stock up on weapons and items at Ostia's armories and vendors. It is effectively a Survive/Defend chapter with no enemies to survive or defend against, except possibly Karla and the fighters in the arena.
  • In Part III, Chapter 3 of Radiant Dawn, the goal is to navigate the map and set fire to bundles of supplies on the map within a time limit.
  • In Part III, Chapter 6 and Part III, Chapter 12 of Radiant Dawn, the objective is to defeat a set amount of enemies. This type of objective returns in the Part III, Endgame, where the chapter ends after 80 units of any affiliation are defeated (despite the game claiming the objective to be a standard rout). This objective resurfaces again in Chapter 6 of Fates: Conquest, where the player must defeat 4 enemies.

Etymology and other languages

Names, etymology, and in other regions
Language Name Definition, etymology, and notes
English

• Objective
• Victory condition

• Used in the GBA titles.
• Used from Path of Radiance onward.

French

Objectif

Objective

References

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