Follow TV Tropes

Following

History YMMV / FinalFantasyBraveExvius

Go To

OR

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Whimsical Winter Tiana. She's intended to be a brave shift unit where she's a healer and support in one form and a damage dealer in another form but she lacks the capability of doing those roles effectively, only being useful on the Clash of Wills that featured her banner during 2021 Christmas event and sees virtually no use elsewhere. Her healing and support kit is acceptable, but many others can do what she can do better. She loses to Cressnik in terms of healing and morale fill, her element amp is too weak despite having 5 different elements you're better off with bringing a dedicated element buffer, and her damage takes way too much time to reach full potential in a game where burst damage is more valued. Her upgraded normal attack is a menace in arena due to being a party revive and reraise, but Sylvie's is a better upgrade to hers, making her lose out on the only niche she has. The final nail in the coffin is her Intrinsic Ability adds so little to what she has, failing to bring her into the spotlight. Some players often refer to her whenever someone asks which GLEX unit is bad.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Bonus Boss is a disambiguation


** Zargabaath, in the ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'' event, was introduced to promote ''The Zodiac Age''. In his source game, he has a bit role as the reasonable judge and a BonusBoss fight with the rest of the judges. He was originally meant to help bridge the gap between the current support units and Ramza's enhancements (which were delayed due to being far past the power curve). In contrast to his bit part, he is a 5-star base in Brave Exvius. Despite displacing a popular playable character in Balthier, he was received positively by the player base long after release. He was revealed to be a useful support unit who had a longer lifespan than Ramza himself did, and became one of the game's most fondly remembered units

to:

** Zargabaath, in the ''VideoGame/FinalFantasyXII'' event, was introduced to promote ''The Zodiac Age''. In his source game, he has a bit role as the reasonable judge and a BonusBoss {{Superboss}} fight with the rest of the judges. He was originally meant to help bridge the gap between the current support units and Ramza's enhancements (which were delayed due to being far past the power curve). In contrast to his bit part, he is a 5-star base in Brave Exvius. Despite displacing a popular playable character in Balthier, he was received positively by the player base long after release. He was revealed to be a useful support unit who had a longer lifespan than Ramza himself did, and became one of the game's most fondly remembered units
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** Taivas took some time but he won people over. He is Season 4's idea of a Darkhorse: He's a KnightInSourArmor with a rather tragic backstory that doesn't get any better over the course of his story, but he's a big {{Foil}} to Rain ([[spoiler:whom he's [[HeroicLineage the ancestor]] of]]) and even Rhus, the latter being one of the biggest [[TheScrappy Scrappies]] of the season, with the personality and determination to match. Taivas is so popular that the most recent JP popularity poll landed him at the top five, alongside [[BreadEggsBreadedEggs Dark Fina, Rain, Fina and Dark Rain]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


** While lesser than the ones in Seasons 2 and 3, [[spoiler:Rhus' fight with Rain halfway through Season 4 is often hailed as one of the main reasons why [[TheScrappy players hate the character]]. After Rain is finally made aware of his Levonian ancestry, Rhus challenges him to a fight, stating he intends to kill Rain so that he can absorb the Mirror of Equity from him[[labelnote:A thing Rhus didn't seem to take the memo on]]While Rain indeed did ''learn'' the Mirror of Equity via watching his father do it, he never bothered ''mastering'' it. That honor goes to his adopted brother Lasswell, who not only worked hard to learn the technique and master it, he ''evolved'' it into its stronger variants and then into ''his own spin'' via the Final Mirror of Equity in Season 2. Rhus only learns of this late in Season 4, while watching Lasswell fight, '''despite having fought him as a Hollow Keeper in Season 3'''.[[/labelnote]] via Snovlinka's Gemini Lamina, which he reveals to possess. Rhus also reveals, for some reason, that he's Riddar's (Snovlinka's BestFriend) descendant which, thanks to Riddar having overcome an Omega infection, makes Rhus also able to naturally use Blood Awakening like Rain and Lasswell. Rhus then pulls one of the most unexplained IAmNotLeftHanded moments in the game, defeating a Rain who just days prior was able to best Vanharma, a fighter Rhus was ''having trouble with'', and would have killed him had Metze, who [[ContrivedCoincidence was misteriously guided to the ruins of Elmont]], not interfered and demanded Rhus to TakeAThirdOption to his quest for power. The actual main point of contention is how Rain was even defeated, as either Rain [[WillfullyWeak held back]] because he doesn't consider Rhus his enemy, or Rhus was actually stupid enough to hold back actually immense power that would had kept himself and his partners alive in critical situations... such as fighting someone as strong as Vanharma]]. Needless to say, players who saw that event unfold did not take well to how it was handled.

to:

** While lesser than the ones in Seasons 2 and 3, [[spoiler:Rhus' fight with Rain halfway through Season 4 is often hailed as one of the main reasons why [[TheScrappy players hate the character]]. After Rain is finally made aware of his Levonian ancestry, Rhus challenges him to a fight, stating he intends to kill Rain so that he can absorb the Mirror of Equity from him[[labelnote:A thing Rhus didn't seem to take the memo on]]While Rain indeed did ''learn'' the Mirror of Equity via watching his father do it, he never bothered ''mastering'' it. That honor goes to his adopted brother Lasswell, who not only worked hard to learn the technique and master it, he ''evolved'' it into its stronger variants and then into ''his own spin'' via the Final Mirror of Equity in Season 2. Rhus only learns of this late in Season 4, while watching Lasswell fight, '''despite having fought him as a Hollow Keeper in Season 3'''.[[/labelnote]] via Snovlinka's Gemini Lamina, which he reveals to possess. Rhus also reveals, for some reason, that he's Riddar's (Snovlinka's BestFriend) descendant which, thanks to Riddar having overcome an Omega infection, makes Rhus also able to naturally use Blood Awakening like Rain and Lasswell. Rhus then pulls one of the most unexplained IAmNotLeftHanded moments in the game, defeating a Rain who just days prior was able to best Vanharma, a fighter Rhus was ''having trouble with'', and would have killed him had Metze, who [[ContrivedCoincidence was misteriously guided to the ruins of Elmont]], not interfered and demanded Rhus to TakeAThirdOption to his quest for power. The actual main point of contention is how Rain was even defeated, as either Rain [[WillfullyWeak held back]] because he doesn't consider Rhus his enemy, or Rhus was actually stupid enough to hold back actually immense power that would had kept himself and his partners alive in critical situations... such as fighting someone as strong as Vanharma]]. Vanharma, causing some players to outright call Rhus a MartyStu despite his own CharacterDevelopment throughout the season and the story not necessarily revolving around him]]. Needless to say, players who saw that event unfold did not take well to how it was handled.handled, and it was made worse by [[spoiler:Rhus being revealed as the actual {{Deuteragonist}} of Season 4 in its second half]].
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None

Added DiffLines:

** While lesser than the ones in Seasons 2 and 3, [[spoiler:Rhus' fight with Rain halfway through Season 4 is often hailed as one of the main reasons why [[TheScrappy players hate the character]]. After Rain is finally made aware of his Levonian ancestry, Rhus challenges him to a fight, stating he intends to kill Rain so that he can absorb the Mirror of Equity from him[[labelnote:A thing Rhus didn't seem to take the memo on]]While Rain indeed did ''learn'' the Mirror of Equity via watching his father do it, he never bothered ''mastering'' it. That honor goes to his adopted brother Lasswell, who not only worked hard to learn the technique and master it, he ''evolved'' it into its stronger variants and then into ''his own spin'' via the Final Mirror of Equity in Season 2. Rhus only learns of this late in Season 4, while watching Lasswell fight, '''despite having fought him as a Hollow Keeper in Season 3'''.[[/labelnote]] via Snovlinka's Gemini Lamina, which he reveals to possess. Rhus also reveals, for some reason, that he's Riddar's (Snovlinka's BestFriend) descendant which, thanks to Riddar having overcome an Omega infection, makes Rhus also able to naturally use Blood Awakening like Rain and Lasswell. Rhus then pulls one of the most unexplained IAmNotLeftHanded moments in the game, defeating a Rain who just days prior was able to best Vanharma, a fighter Rhus was ''having trouble with'', and would have killed him had Metze, who [[ContrivedCoincidence was misteriously guided to the ruins of Elmont]], not interfered and demanded Rhus to TakeAThirdOption to his quest for power. The actual main point of contention is how Rain was even defeated, as either Rain [[WillfullyWeak held back]] because he doesn't consider Rhus his enemy, or Rhus was actually stupid enough to hold back actually immense power that would had kept himself and his partners alive in critical situations... such as fighting someone as strong as Vanharma]]. Needless to say, players who saw that event unfold did not take well to how it was handled.

Top