

Bows, staffs and knives all come from here. Spears and thunder magic are usually here. Swords and fire magic are usually here.īlue: press left. You can select the colour of your orb before you fire, giving some control on what you might summon, but not selecting an colour fires a gold orb that is more likely to have a rare and powerful unit! Only infantry unit summoning can be influenced like this, so take care. Only one infantry unit can be around at a time, but you can still use B to fire balls of light that don't summon anything. Melee users swing their weapon about, magic users throw out magic, bow users will auto-aim at the nearest enemy, staff user perform a weak attack but heal you at the same time, and knife users perform a weak attack that debuffs the enemy on hit. When it hits something, or when you press b again, a random infantry unit will appear and perform an attack. Kiran shoots a glowing orb out of his gun, which does damage by itself. Let me give a quick moveset as a example. I won't object, she did get 2nd place in CYL, after all. Turns out his gun can shoot balls of light as well as summon heroes! In addition, his support sprites and their animations suggest he might one day be on the battlefield in-game. Thanks to the intro cutscene made for book 2 of the game, it's implied Kiran is perfectly fine with running into battle alongside his fellow heroes. You use the magic gun to summon fire emblem characters, then command them in battle against the Embla army to save Askr!Īctually, no. Kiran/Eclat is you! Or rather, the anonymous dude in the white cloak with a magic gun that shows up for the intro cutscenes that supposed to represent you. Well I have a solution, and it's called "Fire Emblem Heroes is a godsend that will save us from the filthy weeb masses and their pleb tastes." Or as I like to call it, "Put the summoner from Fire emblem Heroes in Smash." With practically everyone demanding Fire Emblem stop having as many characters as Pokemon, how will we ever get our lord and saviour Wrys into Smash? It has 13 games (not counting remakes) over 6 continuities, practically every game has a different set of protagonists, and even with 6 fighters, there are multiple games that don't have a jot of representation beyond a few music tracks. Fire Emblem in Smash has an unique problem.
