Rating: 88%
Platforms: Game Boy Advance and Wii U
Genres: Role-playing (RPG), Strategy and Tactical
Themes: Fantasy and Historical
Keywords: anime, medieval, magic, turn-based, prequel, permadeath, multiple protagonists, achievements, multiple endings, dancing, grid-based movement, free-to-play, rock paper scissors, digital distribution, tactical turn-based combat, attributes, rivaling factions, world map, human, shopping, bow and arrow, party system, virtual console, non-player character, recruitable characters, potion, melee, auto-saving, female antagonist, political thriller, villain, healer, level cap, villain turned good androgyny, monarchy, women in refrigerators syndrome, lock picking, gacha system, bad parents, connectivity, movement penalty, class change, tactician, monomyth, tragic villain, e3 2003, wii u virtual console, nintendo switch online - expansion pack and nintendo gateway system
Perspective: Bird view / Isometric and Side view
Developer: Intelligent Systems Co., Ltd.
Publisher: Nintendo
Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade
Summary:
It is the seventh game of the Fire Emblem series, the second game in the series to be released for the Game Boy Advance, and the first to be released in both North America and Europe. It features a prologue storyline designed to introduce newcomers to Fire Emblem gameplay and tactical basics. The overall narrative is a prequel to the events of the previous game, Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade, which is set twenty years later.The game was first released under the localized title "Fire Emblem" in the West, but it was later rebranded as "Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade" when Fire Emblem Heroes was released.