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“Two sleeping dragons—one a sacred ally of mankind, the other its sworn destroyer. Two heroes marked with the symbols of the dragons. Their meeting heralds the dragons' awakening—and the world's ending.”
—Japanese tagline

Fire Emblem Awakening is a Japanese tactical role-playing game for the Nintendo 3DS, developed by Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo. The game was released in Japan on April 19, 2012, in North America on February 4, 2013, and in Europe on April 19, 2013. It is the thirteenth game in the Fire Emblem series. It is also the first to take place on two continents, Ylisse and Valm, the future forms of Archanea and Valentia respectively. The game requires 8,579 blocks of free space on the SD Card, if the game is downloaded from the Nintendo eShop.

The story follows Prince Chrom of the Halidom of Ylisse and his companions as they struggle during a turbulent era. Players are able to combine the might of nearby allies using Pair Up and enter dual battles using the Dual System to defeat enemies. The traversable world map, last seen in Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones, and special skills like Astra from Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn return. This game also features a playable character that can be customized, a feature previously seen in Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem. Just like in the previous game, the player can choose between Classic Mode and Casual Mode.

Development[]

Intelligent Systems was green lit to create the thirteenth title of the Fire Emblem series in 2010. However, the Fire Emblem franchise had somewhat low sales and the development team was told that if the thirteenth title did not sell at least 250,000 units, the franchise would come to an end.

The development team designed Awakening with the intention of giving the franchise a proper farewell if they were ultimately unsuccessful in selling enough units. They explored many different concepts, including placing the story in a modern-day setting and even placing the story on Mars. Ultimately, the team decided that keeping the story in its medieval roots would be the best route to take. To further celebrate the series, the team pulled various tactics and features from numerous previous titles such as Skills, Promotion Branching, and Supports. Along with the story, the team decided to focus on the individual units themselves, fleshing out their characters with quirkier personalities and emphasized the formation of bonds between units, ultimately factoring in the feature of having children characters. Though the previous title was a Japan-exclusive released title, the first and only since the first internationally released game of the Fire Emblem series, Awakening was developed with an international release in mind.

Release[]

Fire Emblem Awakening was announced at Nintendo's 2011 3DS Conference ahead of the Tokyo Game Show of the same year.

On June 6, 2012, directly after the Nintendo 3DS software showcase at E3 2012, president Reggie Fils-Aime from Nintendo of America [1] revealed that the game would be coming to Nintendo of America under the title Fire Emblem Awakening; this was later confirmed through Nintendo of America's official Twitter account.

On June 22, 2012, during a Nintendo Direct showcase, it was revealed that the game was set for a 2013 release in America. An American trailer for the game was released on October 25, 2012. In the Nintendo Direct trailer from December 5, 2012, it was confirmed that Fire Emblem Awakening would be released in North America on February 4, 2013, in Europe on April 19, 2013, and in Australia on April 20, 2013.

GameStop offered an artbook as a pre-order bonus prior to the game's release; this offer was only available in the United States and Canada. The game's Nintendo eShop listing was added on January 5, 2013, and it was made available for digital download in the United States and Europe the same day the game was released at retail. The game was not available on the Japanese eShop despite availability in the United States and Europe. However, it was later made available for digital download to Japanese consoles on January 30, 2013.

The Demo version of the game became available on the North American eShop on January 17, 2013. It only allows play in Casual Mode, allows for Normal, Hard, and Lunatic difficulties to be selected, and features two chapters from the beginning of the game (Prologue and Chapter 1, skipping the initial Premonition). The demo does not feature Avatar customization in a substantial way; you may only change name, birthdate and emphasized stats, while using the default Male Avatar.

Setting[]

The world at the time of Awakening.

The world at the time of Awakening.

See also: Archanea Series

The game takes place approximately 2,000 years after the events of Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light. In ancient times, the Fell Dragon Grima attempted to destroy the world. To stop Grima, the Divine Dragon Naga chose the ruler of the Halidom of Ylisse (known as the First Exalt), and granted him power through two magical objects: Falchion, a sword with the power to slay dragons; and the Fire Emblem, a magical shield. Using these, the Exalt struck down Grima, sending it into a long slumber. In the intervening period, the continents of Archanea and Valentia became known as Ylisse and Valm.

By the present time, the land of Ylisse is divided between the Halidom of Ylisse, which continues to worship Naga, and is ruled by Exalt Emmeryn and defended by her brother Chrom; the kingdom of Plegia, which worships Grima; and Regna Ferox, a country whose rulers periodically fight for dominance. Fifteen years prior to Awakening, the last Exalt of Ylisse, Emmeryn's father, waged a religious war against Plegia, which greatly damaged Ylisse and left bitterness on both sides. Ylisse has slowly recovered from the war due to Emmeryn's peaceful actions.

Story[]

Anna fates portrait
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Characters[]

See main article: List of characters in Fire Emblem Awakening

Awakening features 43 playable characters (45 if both genders of Robin and Morgan are considered separate characters) in its base roster. Due to the Child Character mechanic present in the game, 30 (or 31) of the playable roster are Parent characters while thirteen (or fourteen) are Children characters. Six additional characters are available as bonus characters through the SpotPass feature, bringing the final roster to 49 (or 51) playable characters.

Awakening also features further SpotPass characters in the form of Einherjar with 120 characters featured from previous Fire Emblem titles. While they have unique unit portraits, they utilize the Avatar builds for their combat models and do not have access to full Support mechanics. Awakening also features DLC Einherjars with 17 additional characters.

Chapters[]

See main article: Chapters (Fire Emblem Awakening)

Classes[]

See main article: List of classes in Fire Emblem Awakening

New Features[]

Collector's Edition[]

The United states edition of the Fire Emblem Awakening Nintendo 3DS that came in the 'Fire Emblem Awakening Bundle.

The United states edition of the Fire Emblem Awakening Nintendo 3DS that came in the 'Fire Emblem Awakening Bundle.

A limited edition Fire Emblem Awakening 3DS hardware bundle was released in the United States and Canada. The bundle includes a pre-installed copy of Fire Emblem Awakening and a specially designed 3DS featuring artwork based on the game.

The same limited edition 3DS was released in Japan alongside the release of Fire Emblem Awakening in the region.

Legacy[]

Due to the mediocre sales of previous titles, many of which barely managed to sell over 100,000 units in Japan alone and seeing similar results internationally, Awakening marked a turning point in the Fire Emblem franchise due in part to the efforts of Intelligent Systems as well as Nintendo's efforts to push and revitalize older less utilized properties like Kid Icarus and less popular franchises like Fire Emblem on the then new Nintendo 3DS. Some argue that part of the game's success was also due in part to the increased use of social media platforms by Nintendo such as their Nintendo Direct series. Its earlier appearance in the 3DS software library timeline also helped to contribute to its massive success as titles such as Pokémon X & Y and The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds would not be released until well after Awakening.

Ultimately, Awakening met its goal of selling 250,000 units, almost reaching it on its first week of release in Japan at 242,600 units. Awakening had achieved the highest sales of any Fire Emblem game at the time. Internationally, similar trends appeared with over 180,000 units sold in the first month in North America, 63,000 of which were purely from eShop sales. By April 2013, the game had sold over 240,000 units in North America alone, later reaching 390,000 in September 2013. As of December 2022, Fire Emblem Awakening is the thirtieth best selling 3DS units with a currently lifetime sales total of 2.37 million units sold worldwide.

Fans have credited Awakening as the game that saved the franchise and is praised by fans for things like the richer personalities of the cast and especially the Support and Child Character mechanics of the game. The success of the game led to a revival of interest in the series and green-lit two games immediately; Awakening's successor game, Fire Emblem Fates, and an enhanced remake of Fire Emblem Gaiden, eventually being named Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia. Both games paid heavy homages to Awakening with Fates directly integrating three characters into the main narrative and three Child Characters are homages to three Awakening characters. It also reused a vast majority of Awakening's mechanics with some level of refinement for certain features. Shadows of Valentia retconned a few narrative points to better tie it to Awakening and a post-story dungeon directly gives a backstory to Awakening's final boss Grima.

Awakening remains one of the most popular games in the franchise due to the incredible amount of exposure and usage since its release. Robin and Lucina were immediately used as newcomer characters in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U and Chrom later joining in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Awakening remains the only Fire Emblem game to have multiple characters from it represented as Fighters in Smash. Tiki in her Awakening appearance would also appear in Ultimate as an Assist Trophy. Both Robin and Lucina eventually became cameo characters in Code Name: S.T.E.A.M. due to their appearance in Smash alongside Marth and Ike. For Fire Emblem Engage, Lucina was designated the Emblem for Awakening while Chrom and male Robin would be a DLC Emblem. A collaboration with Monster Hunter Frontier G included armor sets of Chrom and Lucina for males and females respectively as well as the Awakening Falchion and Binding Shield as a Sword and Shield weapon as well as a Bow based on the Awakening Nidhogg. Characters have prominently appeared in spin-off titles including Tokyo Mirage Sessions ♯FE and Fire Emblem Warriors. A large portion of the Awakening cast were among the launch roster of Fire Emblem Heroes.

Characters of Awakening remain consistently among the most popular characters in the entire franchise with Lucina ranking second overall in the inaugural Choose Your Legends event. Chrom, both genders of Robin, and the Awakening iteration of Tiki would eventually win in later re-runs of the event. Many others have ranked highly these events over the years with Tharja, Cordelia, Lon'qu, Gaius, Nowi, Awakening Anna, Owain, and Severa consistently ranking among the top 100.

Voice Cast[]

See: List of Voice Actors in Fire Emblem Awakening

Trivia[]

  • This is the first Fire Emblem title to have a relation to more than one other set of games in the series. The Deadlords and Holy Weapons found in the Jugdral Series appear, and Priam claims to be a descendant of Ike from the Tellius Series.
  • There is a glitch with the voice language in the North American version of the game. Whenever the voice langauge is set to Japanese, soft resetting the game (L+R+Start) causes the voices to reset back to English except in theater cutscenes. This can be fixed if the player changes the language to English, and then to Japanese again.
    • Additionally, if the voice language is set to Japanese, the female Einherjar characters will use Voice #1. This bug only exists in the North American release.
  • In the demo for Awakening, there is a bug that causes the game to freeze if a unit obtains Leif's Blade through an Event Tile, and then uses Leif's Blade to attempt to obtain a Bullion.
  • Of the Fire Emblem titles represented with playable characters in the Super Smash Bros. series, Awakening features the most with three: Robin, Lucina, and Chrom.
  • The Einherjar bonus teams are mostly comprised of generic units with classes who relate to the Einherjar. For example, Ike's team is reminiscent of the Greil Mercenaries while Nino's references the The Black Fang.
  • Awakening was the first Fire Emblem game to have its English audio recorded by Cup of Tea Productions, who would later record the English audio for Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia, as well as Fire Emblem: Three Houses.

Gallery[]

Videos[]

External links[]

Fire Emblem Wiki