< Breath of Fire
Breath of Fire/Characters
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The Breath of Fire series is a long-running series of games with a fairly long list of characters, so this may take a while.
Breath of Fire I
Ryu
- Accidental Pervert: In The Dragon Warrior manga, Ryu gets to see Nina first as she's bathing on a lake.
- Badass: His first major action in the first game is to walk into a monster-infested castle by himself (this is before he gains any of his dragon forms, by the way), head straight to the throne room, and beat the crap out of the boss monster, thus freeing the town. And things just go up from there.
- Badass Cape: He hangs around with a cool red cape.
- The Chosen One: Not as prominent in the game, but a big deal in The Dragon Warrior.
- Cute Little Fangs: In the artwork.
- Doomed Hometown: As soon as you start!
- Facial Markings: A dragon-shaped birthmark on his forehead.
- Fate Worse Than Death: Myria sends Ryu into one in The Dragon Warrior: the dimension of the Soul Eaters, who would slowly nack at his soul for all eternity, with him still conscious and unable to die.
- Fusion Dance: Agni, the most power dragon transformation, has the entire party melding together into one being.
- Guide Dang It: How to get most of Ryu's dragon transformation sets require having certain equipments with him, all of which are well-hidden all over the world map. There's no in-game mention of even what items one needs.
- The elders living in the ruins where Ryu gets his training will tell him something like, "You need to complete the first level and find the DragonSD." But you still have to puzzle out where to find the equipment. The most powerful transformation is only mentioned once, on a tablet you can find in a well on the world map; it's quite possible to beat the game without ever finding it and thereby getting the "bad" ending.
- The Hero: He starts the trend of the blue-haired young men named Ryu being the heroes of their games.
- Heroes Prefer Swords: Slightly subverted as he's also able to use boomerangs.
- Heroic Mime: For most of the game, anyway. After saving the king of Winlan, he says "Well, there is one thing." in response to the king asking how he can help.
- Averted completely in The Dragon Warrior and Princess Of The Wings mangas.
- Instant Armor: In The Dragon Warrior manga, Ryu's ultimate transformation is switched with this.
- I Will Find You: His main motivation is to find his missing sister.
- Official Couple: Probably the only couple who gets anything close to a hint of having succeeded in the backstory of the second (and third) game.
- The manga adaptations also plays up their relationship, including the Spin-Off Litle Adventurer starring their own child.
- Our Founder: Or more aptly, "Our Hero". Ryu gets a nice gold statue in Camlon for his efforts in helping eradicate the monsters infesting the main castle.
- Outdoor Bath Peeping: Ryu is practically forced to do this as part of the gameplay, so he could see a special tatoo on a woman's back, as the tatoo is the key to figure out how to open a safe. Did I menctioned the woman in question is the Queen of Tuneland and because of the water's reflection, Ryu got the wrong image of the tatoo?
- Power Limiter: The Light Dragons have their powers sealed off in fear of how dangerous they were for the world. So, once the Dark Dragons have the upper hand thanks to Myria, Ryu is forced to go through trials in order to unseal his powers.
- Voluntary Shapeshifting: Comes with being part of the Dragon Clan. This version of Ryu seems to be the most adept at it, as he can shift into a dragon form and stay that way as long as he wants without losing AP.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Like the other Ryus that followed him. Given that his sister has blue hair as well, it's definitively a family trait.
Nina
- Action Girl: Her first exploit ends with her being captured, but other than that, she's a capable fighter.
- Arson, Murder, and Jaywalking: In The Dragon Warrior, she considers peeping to be more vile than poisoning her father.
- Bag of Sharing: Even though Ryu is just sleeping on one of the castle's rooms, and Nina never goes to visit him, she gets to use all of his inventory items during her tenure as the main character.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire II.
- Chekhov's Gunman: The Nina "look-alike" in Tunlan.
- Damsel in Distress: During the Karma Tower arc.
- Much more prominent in The Dragon Warrior manga.
- Find the Cure: Happens twice; first, her introductory scenario, and the second time for her Time Travel-induced amnesia.
- Global Airship: She becomes the airship.
- Healing Hands: She has access to all of the cure magics in the game, making her this.
- Laser-Guided Amnesia: After using the Time Key in Tock, she suffers from this.
- The Load: Deis confronts Nina with this in Chapter 5 of The Dragon Warrior.
- Outdoor Bath Peeping: Nina's introduction in The Dragon Warrior manga, having both Ryu and two bad guys as Accidental Perverts.
- Plot-Relevant Age-Up: Following a botched Time Travel.
- The Power of Love: A theme in Princess of The Wings. Raifel even comments on it at one point.
- Royal Blood: She's the princess of Wyndia.
- Royals Who Actually Do Something: Being the princess, she could have sent someone for the cure for her father. But noooo, she must go herself, alone.
- Weaksauce Weakness: The Xeon Gas, a weakness shared by all wyndians.
- White Magic: She uses mainly healing and support magic, with one paralysis-inducing spell and a few Holy Hand Grenade spells only for use against undead foes.
- Winged Humanoid: Like all Wyndians, she has bird wings.
Bo/Gilliam
- The Archer
- Arrows on Fire: In Princess of The Wings, he uses arrows set on fire with his magic.
- Big Badass Wolf: The good type, obviously.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire II and Breath of Fire III.
- Back for the Dead: In the latter.
- Thought it is subverted later, when there's a wolf-guy sitting on a rocking chair, and one NPC comments he was atacked by the dragon that appeared years ago. And there was no other wolf-guy in the prologue.
- Back for the Dead: In the latter.
- Canon Foreigner: In The Dragon Warrior manga, he gets 3: a wife, a child and a brother-in-law.
- Dead Little Sister: The Dragon Warrior manga gives him one in the form of his wife.
- Fire, Ice, Lightning: He can use all three elemental spells.
- Doesn't have enough in his Mana Meter to back it up though.
- Also the spells start off very powerful, but they'll start becoming less useful later on, as he never learns any new spells. The later parts of the game will see him relying more on physical attacks, or fusions with Karn/Danc.
- The Hunter
Karn/Danc
- Biological Mashup: His ability to merge with other members of the team.
- Bowdlerise: His character portrait in the original depicted him as black with big lips. His skin was toned down and the lips removed on the western version.
- But Not Too Black: Karn/Danc had much darker skin in the Japanese version; he was lightened up in the North American version.
- He essentially looked as if in Blackface as seen here. Most definitely changed due to the Unfortunate Implications to western audiences.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire II.
- Conveniently an Orphan: Perhaps so can he can live as a thief without raising too many questions.
- Dark Is Not Evil: Apparently, his whole race.
- Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!: Delivers one to Ox/Builder in The Dragon Warrior.
- Happily Adopted: He was never interested in learning of his origin, and only sought to become the world's greatest thief.
- In The Dragon Warrior manga, he ends up being adopted by Ox/Builder.
- It's the Journey That Counts: His introductory quest, in Krypt.
- Knife Nut: He can equip daggers and dirks for weapons.
- Last of His Kind: At least he thinks so.
- Loveable Rogue: He's a wisecracking thief who aids the party in their battle against the bad guys.
- Master of Unlocking: He can just walk his way out of prison, he only stays because he wants some peace and rest.
- Play-Along Prisoner: After getting tossed into Auria's jail, the party is promptly let out by Karn, a fellow prisoner. Karn then goes back to sleep, indicating he could escape anytime, but took advantage of his 'incarceration' to catch some Z's.
- Secret Art: Fusion. This was apparently the reason the thief kingdom was destroyed by the Dark Dragons. You can find masters hiding in a few places, and they will impart their wisdom to Karn.
- Thieves' Guild: He was raised in one. After completing his introductory quest, the guild master says there is nothing more to teach him and even offers him leadership of the guild whenever he's ready for it.
- Sole Survivor: In The Dragon Warrior manga.
Gobi/Manillo
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire II.
- Fish People: The Merchant/Manillo race as a whole.
- Get on the Boat: He becomes the boat.
- Greed: A defining trait of his race throughout the series.
- To the point where the resident thief of the party calls him out on this.
- It's All My Fault: In Chapter 5 of The Dragon Warrior, he sells out an ancient and very dangerous weapon to Judas, believing it was just junk. He then gets shocked when Judas use it on the Dark Dragon's own town. This is what determines him to join the gang at the end.
- Prongs of Poseidon: He fights with tridents and other types of polearms.
- This Looks Like a Job For Aquaman: A pretty much identical case to that of the Trope Namer. His field skill and special abilities only work underwater.
- What Kind of Lame Power Is Calling Fish, Anyway?: It only works underwater and doesn't even serves him while he's alone.
- And once the sub-plot involving the attack on Prima is done, there's little left to even do underwater, making his powers useless for the remainder of the game.
- You Owe Me: His excuse for joining the party is that the group owes him money for the Gills they needed to proceed.
Ox/Builder
- The Big Guy/Mighty Glacier: A pretty much identical case to that of the Trope Namer. His field skill and special abilities only work underwater.
- Bizarre Sexual Dimorphism: While Ox and all males of his clan are big muscular men with bull-looking legs, all women are human-like besides a very small set of horns on their head.
- The Blacksmith: In fact, his entire race is this.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire III.
- Drop the Hammer: He fights with hammer.
- Drowning My Sorrows: He's found in this state in The Dragon Warrior manga.
- The Grim Reaper: He appeared in person when Ox was injured and dying. It took the whole team to scare him away.
- Healing Hands: A lesser version, as he's got less healing spells than Nina.
- Heroic BSOD: In The Dragon Warrior. Needs Karn's help to get out of it.
- I Have Your Wife: All the women from Ox's town were kidnapped to force the blacksmiths to work on a secret weapon. Among them was Ox's pregnant wife.
- Meaningful Name: Both versions: Ox is Exactly What It Says on the Tin, while Builder comes from his day job.
- Not Quite Dead: In The Dragon Warrior: at first, it looks like Judas has just gibbed his wife. Then during the castle raid, she appears alive and well.
- Parental Substitute: Becomes one for Karn in The Dragon Warrior, and ends up adopting him at the end.
Mogu
- Battle in the Center of the Mind: The whole travel into his dream/psych.
- Bilingual Bonus: Mogu as in Mogura, Japanese for "Mole".
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire III.
- Back for the Dead: Like Bo.
- Everything's Better with Spinning: His excavation technique.
- Literal Split Personality: After being trapped in his dream, Mogu was split into 6 personalities: Anger, Humor (actually Pleasure), Fear, Sorrow, Reason and Courage. Only when the 6 come together can Mogu join the party.
- Lotus Eater Machine: The Dragon Warrior manga turns his dream sequence in this, having him being trapped in an everlasting peaceful and happy version of his home.
- Tunnel King: Besides being his map ability (dig on marked areas for secret chests), it's his only "spell" (dig to escape battle).
- Wolverine Claws: His mole-claws and whole weapon set of metal/steel claws.
Bleu/Deis
- Cain and Abel: Abel to Myria's Cain.
- Convenient Coma: Found this way in Breath of Fire I and Breath of Fire III.
- Cool Big Sis: Nina looks up to her.
- Easy Amnesia: The justification for having to level her up from scratch: her centuries-long sleep makes her forget most of her magic spells.
- Magic Wand: Her weapon set in Breath of Fire I.
- Mentors: In Breath of Fire III, since she's part of the Masters System.
- Naked on Arrival: In Breath of Fire III.
- Optional Party Member: In Breath of Fire II.
- Queen Incognito: You meet Deis early in Breath of Fire II, but she's disguised as a token NPC.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old
- Ring of Power: Her weapon set in Breath of Fire II, shared with Nina Windia.
- Sealed Good in a Can: In Breath of Fire III. Also an Early-Bird Cameo as one can step into her room and see her long before she becomes important.
- Also in Breath of Fire IV. See Ershin.
- Snakes Are Sexy: The half-snake woman is one of the most sexual female characters in the series.
- Squishy Wizard: She is an incredibly effective offensive caster, but has some of the worst health and defenses in the series. Keep her in the back row and in good armor, or she will go down.
- There Is No Kill Like Overkill: Her hunting skill in Breath of Fire II, which ends up turning everything on the field into charcoal.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Through all games.
Wyndian Soldiers/Sieg, Rai and Enon
- Badass Beard: Enon.
- Blade on a Stick
- The Captain: Enon.
- Heroic Sacrifice: Sieg and Rai/Raifel, both in-game and in Princess of The Wings.
- Mentors: Both Sieg and Raifel serve as Nina's instructors at the start of Princess of The Wings.
- No Name Given: In the original SNES version and the English GBA re-release.
- The manga The Dragon Warrior averts it by giving the fist two the names Kalu and Ilu. Years later, the GBA port gives the three official names.
- Odd Couple: Their characterization in Princess of The Wings: Sieg is the serious guard, following the King's orders and not too happy on letting Nina go on a dangerous quest; while Raifel is more easy-going, understands Nina's feelings to go help Ryu and disregards orders to help her in her goal.
- Palette Swap: Sieg/Rai use the same sprite, while Enon is just a red colored swap.
- Red Shirt: As a funny detail, Enon does use a red uniform, and he survives.
- Shout-Out: They were given names in the GBA re-release, with Sieg and Rai being a reference to two characters of the Princess of The Wings manga adaptation.
- Canon Immigrant, then?
- Tragic Monster: In The Dragon Warrior, the two servants of the Karma wizard are revealed to be Kalu and Ilu, ressurected as zombies and brainwashed to serve him.
- Winged Humanoids
Sara/Sayla
- Brainwashed and Crazy
- Cool Big Sis
- Cool Mask: The Dragon Warrior.
- Curb Stomp Battle: Her fight in the intro against Jade/Judas.
- Facial Markings: Same one as Ryu.
- "I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight: In The Dragon Warrior, she tries to restore Judas from Myria's brainwashing this way.
- Reverse Mole: In The Dragon Warrior, she's faking siding with Judas in order to defeat him. Subverted seconds later, when she reveals it was just a ploy to get the Goddess Key on Ryu's possession.
- So Proud of You: To Ryu in the "good" ending (where you reveal Tyr/Myria's true form by using Agni.
- Spirit Advisor: After her death.
- Taken for Granite: She does it to her own townsfolk in the intro, to protect them.
- Together in Death: How she and Judas end up in The Dragon Warrior.
- Woman in White: She wears a white robe.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: A family trait, since her brother has it as well.
Cort/Kyura
- Bald of Evil
- High-Class Glass: He sports a red monocle over his right eye. Pretty fly.
- Incredible Shrinking Potion
- Mad Scientist
- Our Homunculi Are Different: He has his lab crawling with them.
- Playing with Syringes: Going by Nicolle's case, one can only wonder what all those Rogues/Homunculus were before.
- Shockwave Stomp: The best technique of his transformed self, HornToad/Devilmander.
- Super Serum: The only one of the four Devas who needs one to reach his final form.
Mote/Sigmund
- Battle in the Center of the Mind: He traps the whole party into his head/dream.
- Enemy Within: A rare case, as his own conscience sides with the good guys to stop him.
- Named After Somebody Famous: His Japanese name, from Sigmund Freud.
- Psychic Power
Cerl/Carla
- Fantastic Racism: She was exiled of her hometown due to being a monster.
- Heel Face Turn: After bringing her the Fruit, she reminds her good times with Alan and changes her ways.
- Love Redeems: Thank you, Alan. Too bad...
- Redemption Equals Death: After her change of heart, she dies by destroying her castle and stalling Goda.
- Where I Was Born and Razed: She stops time on her birth town in Revenge for how they mistreated her.
- Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: She inflicted a cruel fate on the people of Carmen, but we see she had a tragic backstory and love for Alan.
Goda
- The Brute: Unlike the other Dark Dragons, he is mostly a physical fighter.
- The Dragon: Acts as one to Jade/Judas near the end.
- Dumb Muscle: For such a late-game boss, all he can do is SMASH!!!
- Golem: A giant made of stone that attacks the heroes.
- Mighty Glacier: He is very resilient to damage.
Zog/Zorgon
- Beard of Evil: As seen in his official artwork.
- Big Bad: At first.
- Disc One Final Boss: His defeat doesn't end the game. Jade arranged his death to release Myria, and he and the goddess must be defeated next.
- Brainwashed and Crazy: The Dragon Warrior.
- The Emperor: The Emperor of the Dark Dragon Family.
- Evil Overlord: lurking on Scande/the Imperial Capital.
- Evil Redhead: That's a red beard you can see it in his artwork, so...
- Large and In Charge: The concept art of Zog's Dragon form seems normal enough (compared to other Dragons in this series, anyway) until you actually get to fight him. Only his head was shown throughout the entire battle.
- His normal humanoid form is taller than everyone else as well.
- Orcus on His Throne: Basically spends the whole game sitting in his castle doing nothing till you come and face him.
- Playing with Fire: He uses fire attacks in his boss fight.
- Take Over the World: Yup. He believes that the Dark Dragons were born to rule the world.
- Tin Tyrant: Like your average Evil Overlord, he wears armor from start to finish.
- Well-Intentioned Extremist: His ultimate goal was to restore all of dragonkind to prominence.
Jade/Judas
- All-Encompassing Mantle
- Blond Guys Are Evil
- Chekhov's Gunman: He's the robed guy!
- The Dragon: First to Zog, then to Myria.
- Good All Along: In The Dragon Warrior, he's revealed as such.
- Manipulative Bastard
- Mood Swinger: In The Dragon Warrior, he switch between a honorable warrior and an Omnicidal Maniac at the turn of a wrist. Later revealed he was kind all along, and his swings were caused by his internal struggle with Myria's brainwash.
- Out of the Inferno: In the game's intro.
- Redemption Equals Death: In The Dragon Warrior, along his lover Sara.
- Together in Death: Him and Sara in 'The Dragon Warrior.
- Slasher Smile: In The Dragon Warrior.
- The Starscream: A successful one, since he just lets the heroes kill his boss rather than trying himself.
- Meaningful Name: If he were Genre Savvy, Zorgon wouldn't have hired him.
- Tears of Blood: In The Dragon Warrior.
- We Can Rule Together: He offers this to the party at one point.
Tyr/Myria
- Big Bad: Becomes this after Zog is removed from the equation.
- Creepy Child: The form she initially appears in is a blonde, creepy little girl.
- Did Not Do the Research: Tyr is a male Nordic god.
- Eldritch Abomination: Her true TRUE form.
- Emotion Eater: In The Dragon Warrior, she feeds off the feelings of anger and hatred against her. This turns into the key Ryu needed to defeat her.
- For the Evulz: All the wars waged to get her wish-granting powers were staged for her own amusement.
- Glamour: Her guise of a confused little child.
- The Man Behind the Man: The Goddess behind the Dark Dragons.
- Plot Coupon: The six Goddess Keys. Some are simply coupons, others have in-game applications as well as plot importance.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Even with her youthful appearance, she is actually a God-knows-how-many hundred years old being.
- Sealed Evil in a Can: She was imprisoned in a tower and sealed with six keys, but then she was freed.
Breath of Fire II
Ryu Bateson
- Bishonen:
- Chick Magnet: Katt/Rinpoo, Nina, Deis, the three harpies boss and Nimufu/Nympho all comment/fawn on him.
- Can't Drop the Hero
- The Chosen One: Barubary says as much in the Prologue.
- Despair Event Horizon: Seeing hopelessly how Deathevans kills all his friends. Followed by a mandatory Unstoppable Rage.
- Half-Human Hybrid: Father's human, mother's dragon.
- The Hero
- Heroes Prefer Swords
- Heroic Mime: He does, however, speak in the flashback where you're playing as his mother.
- Heroic Sacrifice: The bad ending if you don't get TownShip flying.
- Last of His Kind: Ryu... well, at first, anyway. Dologany, the city that falls halfway through the Infinity dungeon, is home to a lot of dragons.
- Orphan's Plot Trinket: The Dragon Tear.
- Paper-Thin Disguise: He replaces Baba in the tournament, only needing to show the axe he got from him as proof. And that despite Baba being a recurrent participant, and a musclebound giant lumberjack.
- Power At a Price: The test he must undergo to obtain the ultimate power Infini finds him forced to choose one of his allies to sacrifice in exchange. He selects to choose no one and wins.
- The Power of Friendship: It's explicity stated that Infini, the final dragon spell draws its power from the bonds between Ryu and his friends.
- Ret-Gone: He is forgotten by everyone in his hometown of Gate. You find out late in the game that Aruhamel erased him from their minds, along with his sister and father. This facilitated Habaruku's infiltration under the guise of Father Hulk.
- Secret Test of Character: How he acquires his ultimate spell Infinity/Afini.
- Time Master: In a small scale. He naturally gains the ability to fast-forward the day/night cycle.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair
Bow/Bosch Doggy
- The Archer
- Automatic Crossbows
- Chivalrous Pervert: Always seems to have something to say about the female characters you encounter.
- Clear My Name: What makes him unavailable for an early portion of the game.
- Conveniently an Orphan: Ryu's becoming an orphan is the very first event shown in the game. Bow's past, however, is never brought to light.
- Healing Hands: Slightly better at it than Rand.
- Lovable Rogue
- No Pronunciation Guide: Does his name rhyme with "ow" (he's a dog,) or with "oh" (he's an archer)?
- Sidekick: To Ryu.
Katt/Rinpoo Chuan
- Action Girl
- Badass Adorable: She's cute, she's funny, and she can pulverize monsters several times bigger and heavier than her.
- Badass Normal: In her default form, probably the closest example of this out of all the characters through the whole series.
- Bare Your Midriff
- Boisterous Bruiser: Katt likes to joke and make fun of her enemies while she's beating the hell out of them. This also counts as one of her game skills, as Katt uses it to break Ryu's concentration during their initial battle and later can use it against normal enemies to make them ignore her party and attack her instead.
- Catgirl. Well, tiger girl.
- Cute Bruiser: One of the party's heavy-hitters and the only character besides Ryu with the ability to counterattack.
- Cute Monster Girl: Except for being covered in fur from the waist down, Katt, a female Woren, is a fairly standard cat girl. In contrast, Tiga, a male Woren, is a Beast Man with a tiger head.
- Dance Battler: The game literally describes her as this.
- The Ditz: Bow asks Ryu to take her along as he quickly realizes Katt isn't the sharpest knife in the box, and if she's allowed to stay with him, she could destroy the house he was intending to fix. Rand even wonders if there's a way to get inside of Katt's head and rewire her brain to make her smarter.
- It's gotten worse in the Fan Translation, even if this wasn't the translator's intention, interestingly.
- Fiery Redhead: Obvious in her red hair and characteristic quick temper. Incidentally, Fireball is the first spell she "learns", and the Fire Shaman is generally the best compliment to her Devil Shaman fusion for further capitalization on her strength.
- Fragile Speedster: While she's one of the fastest and hardest hitting characters in the game, her HP and defense stats tend to be low.
- Glass Cannon: Her ultimate Shaman combination deals maximum damage as a Charge Attack. Her defense, on the other hand, remains the same.
- Genki Girl
- Innocent Fanservice Girl: Katt romps around bottomless.
- Last Of Her Kind: She's never seen another of her kind. Until Tiga's entrance, who tells her that there are very few of them spread all over the world.
- So few that when Ryu and her arrive at the monster hunters's place, they ask Ryu to sell her to them.
- Love Interests: Tiga sets his eyes on her the moment she crosses the door. Later, Katt has to clear up the issues as she can't reciprocate the feeling, in quite a Crowning Moment Of Heartwarming.
- Pettanko: See below.
- Pint-Sized Powerhouse: Katt is short, thin and flat chested, yet she is the strongest character in the game, and her shamanized form cranks it up to eleven.
- Required Party Member: To enter CotLnd/Kott Fortress, and (rather troublesome) to proceed into the whale.
- Running Gag: In the Japanese version, constant mention of her small cup size. If Salvador is recruited as a Township's resident, Katt will ask him to give her a bigger chest when it's her turn to get a statue (he doesn't).
- Simple Staff
- Stripperiffic: Katt's outfit is made of fingerless gloves, toeless boots, a bra... and nothing else. Her shamanized form ditches the bra, replacing it with a tattoo painted around her torso.
- Women Are Wiser: Inverted, as Katt is the dumbest member of the party and gets called on it a few times. It's implied that her low intelligence is simply the result of her poor education, as she was raised to do nothing but fight.
- Your Answer to Everything: Katt tries to fix everything using brute force, death threats and old fashioned violence. The funny part? It works.
Rand Marks
- Berserk Button: Don't mess with momma!
- The Big Guy: Artwork of the game always places Rand in the background because if he was in front, you wouldn't be able to see the rest of the cast.
- Dishing Out Dirt: The only character with access to 8.0, the game's "earth-based" spell.
- Gentle Giant: Very, very imposing, but he climbs on board the hero's band wagon without hesitation when he learns of Augus's plan for the coliseum duel.
- Healing Hands: Second only to Bow in this regard.
- Heroic Sacrifice: He stays behind to hold two closing walls and let the team proceed. His mother then comes and forcefully switches places with him.
- Incredibly Lame Pun: His name. Land Marks. Because he rolls. Get it?
- Mighty Glacier/Stone Wall: Rand is all but incapable of throwing the first punch. However, his punch will hurt you more than yours will hurt him.
- Momma's Boy: The one reason he left his home.
- Power Fist
- Team Dad: He says he sees himself as one during the Anfini test.
Nina Windia
- All of the Other Reindeer: She's exiled due to her black wings.
- Apocalypse Maiden: The people of Wyndia think she's this, which is why she was banished.
- But Your Wings Are Beautiful: Word for word.
- Dead Little Sister: Mina. Oh God, Mina.
- Duel Boss: Against the Guardian of the Wings who ends up being the ghost of the first game's Nina, ancestor of the current.
- Global Airship: No, she's not the airship this time. She's the one calling it.
- Heroic Sacrifice: Attempted to by turning into the Great Bird.
- Modest Royalty
- Ring of Power: Her weapon set consists of rings.
- Royal Blood: Though her parents ignore her existence, due to her wings and one prediction stating that once a black-winged wyndian is born in the royal family, misfortune would strike the country.
- She's Got Legs: Just look at her official artwork.
- Winged Humanoid
Sten Legacy
- The Atoner: Mixed with a huge dose of survivor's guilt.
- The Casanova: He attempts to play this trope with Nina and Katt. Nina gets disturbed, and Katt gives him a savage off-screen beating. Much later, we discover he fits perfectly the trope among his people, and his princess loves him dearly.
- Con Man
- Duel Boss: Against Turbo. Hope you have leveled him up well. Otherwise, you're going to spend some time in the castle's basement.
- Everything's Better with Monkeys
- Faking the Dead: His in-battle option.
- He apparently did this with his fellow Highlanders; they believed he had died in a previous battle before his return.
- Heroic Sacrifice: He appears to sacrifice his life after the defeat of Shupkay, but he turns out to be just fine, something that he didn't want.
- Knife Nut: Although his attack animation looks more like a couple of karate chops.
- Playing Possum: His special skill is feigning being K.O. so that enemies ignore him when attacking.
- Playing with Fire: All of his spells are fire-based.
- The Rival: His old war buddy Turbo/Turvoe.
- Shell-Shocked Veteran
- Stage Magician: This is how you meet him the first time around, although it was just his own way of working as a Con Man.
Spar/Aspara Gus
- Ambiguous Gender
- Green Thumb: His special skill allows him to, among others, command trees to stomp on the enemies or flowers to bloom and restore the party.
- Geo Effects: The effect of the skill depends on the environment during the battle: while a forest background calls forth trees, a desert one will have exploding cacti.
- Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons: His Sana/Shin fusion is some kind of plant-dragon. Sadly, said fusion still uses his normal Geo Effects special.
- Plant Person:
- Incredibly Lame Pun: Now check his full name. Just don't hit your face too hard.
- The Spock: He is only capable of thinking logically, but starts discovering new feelings and emotions near the end of the game.
- Status Buff: Team expert on the subject.
- The Stoic
- Whip It Good
Ekal Hoppe Do Pe Tapeta/Jean
- Aborted Arc: His subplot with Nimufu/Nimpho the witch. She just disappears from the face of Earth after the impostor story is resolved.
- Bilingual Bonus: The "Ekal" part on his name is written "Ekaru" in Japanese, which is an anagram of "Kaeru", Japanese for Frog.
- Bratty Half-Pint: His sister Petape.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire III.
- Chef of Iron: Slightly subverted in that he's a good cook for his race only, considering most of their meals consists of roaches, flies and worms. Otherwise, he was such a well-known chef that a Cooking Duel was set up to demostrate he was the true prince.
- Diagonal Cut: The ability of his Shaman form.
- Gratuitous French: Non, Non, Non!
- The Not-Secret: The castle's self-destruct switch. Only his sister and the impostor believed it existed.
- Obfuscating Stupidity: He plays dumb only because he's very optimistic and easy-going.
- Requisite Royal Regalia: A Royal Ring owned by Tapeta/Jean is used as proof of being the true prince. Too bad the impostor also has one...
- Rousseau Was Right: He thinks there are no truly evil persons, only weak ones that can easily fall into evil's temptation.
- Royal Blood: He's the prince of SimaFort.
- Spot the Imposter: The focus of his whole arc.
Patty Smith
- Genki Girl
- Half-Human Hybrid: She's half-dragon.
- The Not-Secret: Arguably, that she's Ryu's younger sister Yua.
- Phantom Thief: Not very effective as one though...
- What Happened to the Mouse?: Right after her last major story appearance in the opening of Infinity, she's never heard of again.
- Averted in the GBA remake as she appears in the ending (not the cast roll call, either).
- Winged Humanoid
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair
Tiga/Tigger Lee
- Cutscene Power to the Max: Only explanation for his boss fight against Ryu.
- The Infiltration: Claris infiltrated Evrai posing as a believer. The party and Tiga later do the same.
- La Résistance: Tiga is the leader.
- Love At First Sight: For Katt/Rinpoo.
- Love Interests: Katt at first. Then later, realizes Claris is the one he truly loves. Unfortunately, things went sour afterwards. Very sour.
- Love Hurts
- Shout-Out Theme Naming: All characters related to the resistance are named after Disney characters. Yes, Tiga's real name is a reference to that Tigger.
- Stuffed Into the Fridge: Claris is tortured by Habaruku in front of the (infiltrated) party and Tiga. Tiga then becomes the victim along with his love, setting in stone the party's motivation to take direct action.
- Together in Death: He and Claris.
Father Ganer
- Badass Beard
- Badass Preacher
- Cool Old Guy: Your party members comment on it if you speak to them after rescuing him.
- Disappeared Dad: Thank Aruhamel and Habaruku for that.
- Human Resources: He serves as the Power Source in two occasions: during his time as prisoner in Evrai, and to power up TownShip.
- Love At First Sight: Towards Ryu's mother.
- So Proud of You: Right at the end of the best ending, after stopping Ryu from his Heroic Sacrifice.
- Video Game Cruelty Potential/Video Game Caring Potential: During the attack on Evrai, you can either kill him or save him. Taking the latter choice is necessary for the best ending.
Ray Bradoc
- Anti-Villain/Hero Antagonist: He was rather helpful during the adventure, helping the people of Capitan being one of his most noble actions; however, when he crossed paths against Ryu by Habaruku's orders, he decided to sacrifice himself in order to teach Ryu to do the Great Dragon/Kaiser Dragon transformation.
- Badass Preacher: Specially during the Captain Town incident.
- The Reveal: Turns out he's a member of the Dragon clan, as well.
- The Rival
- Stealth Mentor: He dies just for Ryu to learn the Kaiser Dragon transformation.
Valerie McCarran
- Barrier Maiden
- Chekhov's Gunman: That dragon on Gate's back bushes? One guess on her identity...
- Convenient Coma: She's on a deep slumber until after Habaruku's attempt to kill her.
- Heroic Sacrifice: To open the entrance to Infinity.
- Love At First Sight: For Ryu's father.
- Mama Bear: She finally awakens in force once Habaruku threatens Patty/Yua.
- Winged Humanoid: A side effect of her race's continued contact with Deathevan's aura.
- She is also descended from the same race as Nina, so the wings make sense in that regard as well.
- Woman in White
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair
Augus/Argus Cont, Joker Heart, Trout Barm, Kuwadora/Quadra X, Shupkay, Ringmaster John, Father Manson.
Deathevan's servants.
- All There in the Script: Ringmaster John's name is only seen in the Creative Closing Credits.
- Deadly Game: Argus wanted to turn the contest into this, thinking it'd be more exciting and satisfying for the public if Katt died during/after the bout.
- Fat Bastard: Trout and The Joker.
- I Have You Now, My Pretty: Joker's whole motivation was lusting over Nina.
- Man of Wealth and Taste: Trout, again.
- The Neidermeyer: Shupkay.
- Night of the Living Mooks: Manson summons a group of undead before he decides to fight himself.
- Not Even Human: Though its Not Even Humanoid for Shupkay and Kuwadora.
- Obviously Evil: Again, all of them, but the ringmaster who captures Spar is so blatantly evil that it's almost funny.
- One-Winged Angel: They all pull one before you fight them.
- Our Werewolves Are Different: Augus, who has two heads in his true form.
- Palette Swap: Shupkay and the ringmaster's true forms are used as recurring enemies later in the game.
- Shout-Out: Trout and his rich neighbour/rival Kilgore are named after Kilgore Trout, a recurrent character used by writer Kurt Vonnegut.
- Manson is arguably named after cult leader Charles Manson, and his summoning of undead (and his position as Father Manson) may be references to Charles Manson's cult "The Family".
- Sinister Minister: Father Manson.
- Spot the Impostor: Kuwadora, who poses as Jean at one point during the game. Somewhat subverted in that nearly everyone at the castle knew he was full of crap, but went along with him anyway.
- Undead: Manson's fighting form, the Necromancer.
Aruhamel/Alzheimer
- Battle in the Center of the Mind: He's staying within Gandaroof's mind, making a mess out of his mind so he's neutered as an obstacle.
- Easy Amnesia: He uses amnesia as a weapon, being capable of making the characters forget any number of spells from their spell list.
- Meaningful Name: It's rather obvious in the Japanese version.
- Our Demons Are Different: Unlike most other enemies in the game, he's a pure demon.
- Spell My Name with an "S": This guy needs a break. He's spelt Aruhamel in the dialogue, Aruhameru in the Boss Battle and Alheimer in the credits.
Habaruku/Habalq V a.k.a. Father Hulk/Halq
- Abusive Parents: While he isn't shown to be outright abusive to Ray, he brushes him aside as "worthless" when he hears of his defeat at the hands of the heroes.
- Chekhov's Gunman: Remember that slightly goofy priest from the prologue, Father Hulk?
- Cold-Blooded Torture: After abducting Father Ganer, he attaches him to a machine in the facility beneath the Grand Church and uses his life force to power Deathevan. If this doesn't sound bad enough, he tortures him like this for ten years.
- The Dragon
- Early-Bird Cameo: He appears as Father Hulk long before his formal introduction near the end of the game.
- Everything's Squishier with Cephalopods: His monster form.
- Human Sacrifice: In addition to offering sacrifices to Deathevan, he attempts to offer up Patty's life to open the portal to Infinity and release demons upon the world.
- King Incognito
- Light Is Not Good
- Not Even Human: Turns into a Cthulu esque monster when fought.
- Parental Substitute: Raised Ray.
- Sinister Minister
Barubary/Barbaroi
- The Dragon: Along with Habaruku.
- Duel Boss: He offers Ryu to fight one-on-one midway through his Boss Battle. It's up to the player if he accepts or not.
- Hopeless Boss Fight: Right in the prologue.
- Noble Demon: Probably the only demon in the whole series who has anything even resembling a code of honour.
- Our Demons Are Different
- Self-Imposed Challenge: Barubary challenges Ryu to fight him alone. It's actually easier to fight him solo if you stock up on Roasts and Wisdom Fruit then just spam G. Dragon 3 times. If you win, he gives a vague hint where the ultimate armor is.
Deathevan a.k.a. Father Evans/St. Eva
- As Long as There Is Evil: Deathevan feeds off human darkness. Also, Ganer explicity states in the good ending that, if Ryu can eliminate hate and despair on the world, he'd never be able to return.
- Ax Crazy: After Ryu hits him, it all goes downhill for him.
- Big Bad
- Crystal Dragon Jesus
- Dark Is Evil
- Early-Bird Cameo: He shows up in a few instances prior to the climax of the game, represented as a gigantic eye.
- Eldritch Abomination: His true TRUE form. Making mommy so proud!
- Enemy to All Living Things: Deatheven's presence causes the forests surrounding Gate to wither and die.
- Evil Is Deathly Cold: His Ice Breath attack, not to mention his whole freezing the party schtick.
- Evil Old Folks: In his human form.
- God of Evil: Breath of Fire follows a polytheistic universe, and so he is one of many gods rather than a singular god.
- Gods Need Prayer Badly: Essentially says so in the first scene of the game.
- Guide Dang It: What's that? You say you didn't get Anfini before you came to face him? HA-ha!
- Light Is Not Good: He's actually a horrifically evil demon, but invokes this trope when he masquerades as Evans/St. Eva.
- Not to mention his Bone Laser attack is a huge beam of light.
- Luke, I Am Your Father: He's the spawn of Big Bad Myria from the first game.
- Nietzsche Wannabe: "I will bless the world... with desperation. All living things will look up to me and feel happiness as they accept death."
- Not Quite Dead: As Ryu later discovers, Deathevan only lost his physical form after his final defeat. He decides to peform an Heroic Sacrifice to take his mother's place as the guardian of the mountain... or if you get the best ending, your father will take your place and crush the whole mountain with the TownShip!
- One-Winged Angel
- Villainous Breakdown: He does not react well when Ryu utterly owns him in a fit of Unstoppable Rage.
Breath of Fire III
Ryu
- Badass Longcoat: As an adult.
- The Berserker: Turning into the Kaiser Dragon at first turns him into an uncontrollable force that targets both allies and enemies alike. There are only two gene combinations that avoid this, the simpler one reduces his stats gained from the transformation so much you might as well not bother and neither one is even hinted at in-game.
- Can't Drop the Hero
- The Chosen One: Of the people of Dragnier, it's stated that he's believed to be the one to defeat Myria for good.
- Combat Medic: He's the best healer and also one of the best physical fighters in the game.
- Coming of Age Story: The first half of the game.
- Guide Dang It: Accessing certain forms through certain gene combinations.
- The Hero
- Heroes Prefer Swords: Though to be fair, this is because Rei got him a sword as his initial equipment.
- Heroic Mime: He never actually speaks, but he nods his head, and it's implied that he has dialogue the player can't see.
- I Will Find You: Most of Ryu's motivation through the first half is to search for Rei and Teepo.
- I Will Protect Her: Ryu will not let anything hurt Nina. Specially shown during the Balio and Sunder arc.
- Kappei Yamaguchi: Adult Ryu's seiyû.
- Kid Hero: During the first half.
- Last of His Kind: Until he comes across Dragnier.
- Naked on Arrival: Happens twice, at the beginning and after the Time Skip.
- Took a Level in Badass: Just compare his dragon transformations as a kid vs. as an adult. He even takes a minor one early on in the game. Compare his attack animations at the start of the game versus when he meets Nina.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair
Rei
- Belligerent Sexual Tension: With Momo.
- Berserk Button: Mess with his family, and you'll pay. With blood.
- The Berserker: As Weretiger.
- Break the Cutie: He starts out as a teenage goofball thief, but he doesn't take losing his family well.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire IV's New Game+.
- Catch Phrase: "Doesn't that just beat all?"
- Darker and Edgier: After the Time Skip.
- Fragile Speedster: He's always the one to go first unless you cast Speed multiple times on someone and is the most likely to get Extra Turns, and while he can deal some decent damage, he can't take it very well.
- Gentleman Thief: He'd never hurt the townfolks as he steals to survive. Although after the timeskip, he "jokingly" asks Ryu if he wants to go slaughter the population of McNeil together. He also states, vaguely, that "I wasn't even able to control my own power. All I did was just run around attacking things...".
- Knife Nut: He dual wields knives, but he only uses one of them when attacking.
- The Lancer
- Master of Unlocking: If there's a locked door that doesn't need to be electronically unlocked, Rei can pick it for you.
- My Greatest Failure: Losing Ryu and Teepo.
- Required Party Member: You can't get to Eden without his lock-picking skill. You are also forced to use him against Mikba.
- Roaring Rampage of Revenge: What he dedicates his life to after losing Ryu and Teepo.
- Shock and Awe: He specializes in electric magic.
Teepo
- All There in the Manual: The story about how he and Rei met.
- Battle in the Center of the Mind: Teepo forces Ryu into one after their encounter in Myria's station.
- The Cameo: With Rei in Breath of Fire IV (specifically, the New Game+).
- Conveniently an Orphan
- The Dragon: To Myria.
- Early-Bird Cameo: His adult form is seen almost at the beginning of the game.
- Evil Counterpart: To Ryu. Both have similar starts, and while Teepo is attracted to Myria's view of his powers and the Brood and sides with her, Ryu chooses his free will and confronts her.
- Expy: Seems to be channeling Magus's design in both looks and in combat to an extent.
- Guest Star Party Member: Until his Face Heel Turn.
- Hot-Blooded: So very much.
- Made a Slave: He was going to be sold just as Rei appeared, thinking he was the dealer's child, and that in order to protect him, he'd surrender easily.
- Magic Knight: He starts with Flare and from there learns Frost, Iceblast, Simoon and Fireblast until about 14 and also wields a sword.
- Playing with Fire/An Ice Person: Handles both elemental spells.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning
- Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: He doesn't like ghosts and finds it ironic that Ryu isn't afraid of them whatsoever.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Purple.
Nina
- The Chick
- Damsel in Distress: That's basically how she met Ryu.
- Magic Wand: Uses one as a child, it turns into a proper staff when she's older.
- Narrator: In the Drama Album adaptation of the game.
- Rebellious Princess: She refuses to live in a gilded cage and wants to experience the world, but her mother won't let her. Nina's last words to her mother in the story are that she has to be free to be herself before fleeing the castle.
- Royal Blood: A member of the Wyndian royal family. She also has to deal with the expectations that the Queen places on her because of it.
- Royals Who Actually Do Something: She leads personally the investigations on McNeil, Syn City and the Plant.
- She's All Grown Up: After the Time Skip. She gets the typical reaction upon seeing Ryu too.
"Garr? And...Ryu!?"
- Squishy Wizard: Oh so much.
- Winged Humanoid: Much less noticeable due to the race's decrease in power, which leads into...
- Wings Do Nothing: The only Nina whose wings grant her no special skills or abilities.
- Zettai Ryouiki: Grade A.
Momo
- Absent-Minded Professor
- Belligerent Sexual Tension: With Rei.
- BFG: Her magic bazooka. That she can't seem to hit the broad side of a barn with.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire IV. Lampshaded in that an experiment she performs literally blows her into another dimension: the world Breath of Fire IV takes place in.
- The circumstances of The Cameo actually have given some fuel to those arguing that Breath of Fire IV takes places in an Alternate Universe or Alternate Continuity (instead of being a Non-Linear Sequel).
- Genius Ditz: She's very ditzy and kind of absentminded, but she's an expert when it comes to technology and can do just about anything with it.
- Miss Fixit: Need to fix the Lighthouse? Bring in Momo! The ship isn't working and nobody understands why? Call Momo! There are problems in the Plant? Gee, I wonder who can help us?
- Porn Stash: Her father's studio is practically a porn library. It is?!
- Required Party Member: Any time there's a machine/computer involved in the story, don't forget to bring her with you. Don't forget the Factory, where you need her bazooka to blow open a malfunctioning door. Not that the game gives you any indication about this...
- Robot Buddy: Honey.
- The Smart Girl
- Status Buff: Resident expert of the team. Can also serve as The Medic.
Peco/Pecoros
- Breath Weapon: Naturally gains the Firebreath and Icebreath spells.
- Elite Tweak: He starts at Level 1, allowing players who have mastered the Master system of the game to easily manipulate his stats.
- God Was My Co-Pilot: Turns out that Peco is part of the Yggdrasil network.
- Heavy Sleeper: Half the time you see him in the camp, he's soundly asleep.
- Magikarp Power: Thanks to him starting at Level 1. Most people disregard him right off the bat, while others take advantage of the Masters system to raise him into almost a game breaker.
- Plant Person: He's a large onion.
- Power Fist: Though some of his weapons are claws.
- Stone Wall: Has the highest base HP of the whole party and the second-highest base defense, plus regenerative abilities and the biggest reprisal rate. Well-raised, one can win most battles in Auto Battle.
- Team Pet
- The Unintelligible: He speaks using some cutey sounds at all time.
- Use Your Head: His field ability is to headbutt stuff.
- The World Tree: At the end of the game, he's revealed to be connected directly to the Yggdrasil, which proceeds to give the team a hand against Myria.
Garr/Garland
- Akio Ohtsuka: Garr's seiyû in the Drama Album.
- Artifact of Death: His best weapon, the Beast Spear, slowly drains his HP.
- The Atoner: During the second half of the game.
- Badass
- The Big Guy:
- Big Guy Fatality Syndrome: An unusual take on the trope, in which simply choosing to participate in the final battle turns out to be the heroic sacrifice. The others don't know until it's already too late.
- Blade on a Stick: A large spear.
- Church Militant: The Guardians (of which Garr is part) are created specifically for this by Myria, and are profoundly devout to her.
- Climax Boss
- Death Glare: Delivers one that has Balio and Sunder scared shitless.
- Hopeless Boss Fight: During the Inevitable Tournament.
- Knuckle-Cracking: He loves to do it.
- Mighty Glacier: The second slowest party member after Peco, but also the strongest and with high defense as well.
- Mission from God
- Our Angels Are Different: Boy, are they ever.
- Overrated and Underleveled: When you fight him at the tournament, you can't win. When he joins you, he's slightly above the player in level.
- Playing with Fire: His magic specialization.
- Redemption Equals Death: Quite a literal one. All Guardians are strengthened by Myria's energy, so once she's defeated for good, he turns into stone.
- The Quiet One
- Religious Bruiser: A Big Guy who doesn't seem like the religious type at first, prayer beads aside... and then you reach Urkan Tapa.
- Taken for Granite: The "Dream of Stone", the fate of all Guardians.
- Turn Undead: He is the only character who can learn Kyrie just by gaining levels, which proves to be useful against a certain boss.
- Warrior Monk
- Welcome Back, Traitor: Though to be fair, only Ryu knows the true story of what happened.
- Wings Do Nothing: Unless you count his "defend" animation.
McNeil and ghost ancestors (Kanzei, Torast, Kassen, Galtel, Doksen)
- All Your Powers Combined: All ghosts merge to form the Amalgam/Conger Mart.
- Bilingual Bonus/Shout-Out Theme Naming: All the ghosts are named after bussiness concepts.
- Dirty Coward: He's not a fighter, just a spoiled rich.
- Fat Bastard: McNeil.
- Harmless Villain: He's rather harmless on himself. But his "friends", on the other hand...
- Haunted House: His manor.
- Killed Mid-Sentence: Doksen can't even introduce himself when Teepo interrumpts him to start fighting.
- Man of Wealth and Taste
- Our Ghosts Are Different
- Properly Paranoid: He has all his manor's doors and windows nailed shut in fear of bandits, though in reality, he has been hearing the ghosts a little too much.
- The Unfought: Kanzei, the eldest McNeil ghost.
Loki/Zurusuru
- Dirty Coward: After McNeil is robbed, he flees town so The Organization won't get him. He comes back a few years later to testify against him though.
- The Faceless: He's never seen without his hood.
- Greed
- Laser-Guided Karma: First half of the game, he gets scotch-free from having used the party to rob McNeil. After the Time Skip, he finally gets some payback from Rei/Weretiger.
- Manipulative Bastard: He used the party for his own needs.
- Meaningful Name: Loki, as in the Trickster Archetype god of Norse Mythology.
Balio and Sunder
- Biological Mashup: They merge into the Stallion.
- Brains and Brawn: Balio's the Brains and relies more on using Lightning when you fight him, and Sunder's the Brawn and relies more on physical attacks.
- The Ditz: Sunder. He even falls for the skill Influence, who forces low-intelligent enemies to attack a selected target.
- Evil Duo: They're brothers who work together.
- Fusion Dance: Their combined form, Stallion. Ironically also the only time they are truly beatable.
- Hopeless Boss Fight: Their first encounter. It gave birth to countless claims of people who have defeated them. The second encounter as well, unless you Level Grind a while on Mt. Myrneg, then you can actually fight them off (but still not defeat them). The Prima Guide messed up this fact (listing it at the first encounter, and saying the second one is unbeatable), giving fuel to the rumors above.
- The Mafia: Members of the Organization.
- Religious and Mythological Theme Naming: Their names and equine appearance reference a pair of immortal horses from Greek mythology.
- Shock and Awe: Balio.
- Shout-Out: Stallion's design and trademark technique are one to Ultraman. He even strikes his popular L-pose while using it.
- Sibling Team
- Takehito Koyasu: Sunder's seiyû in the Drama Album.
- Those Two Bad Guys
- Would Hurt a Child: Literally stabbing Ryu in the back on the top of Mt. Myrneg, and threatening to kill Nina, a princess from Wyndia, in the game to make Ryu surrender. Yes, they are bastards enough to do it too.
Beyd
- Arranged Marriage: Shadis' father Sinkar has approved of Zig to take her hand, as he wants a strong sailor to marry her. It will become formal once Zig fixes the Lighthouse.
- Badass Normal: The badass part depends on the player's way of training him: if one is dilligent enough, Beyd can end the battle in 1-2 hits.
- The Cameo: In Breath of Fire IV. It's not hard to forget how he ended up in that game.
- David Versus Goliath: The focus of his story, defeating the big and dumb Zig.
- Defeat Means Friendship: Zig cut off the bullying and admits his defeat.
- Girl Next Door: He and Shadis have been friends since childhood.
- Victorious Childhood Friend: When you come back, they even have a child.
- Level Grinding: Training him so he can stand on his own may take some time.
- The Rival: Zig.
- Shout-Out Theme Naming: All characters from Raphala are named after fishing gear: Beyd is "Bait", while Zig, Sinkar and Shadis are named after the "Jig", "Sinker" and "Shad" baits.
- The Smart Guy: He's basically the Guildmaster's bookworm.
- Statistically Speaking: You can overtrain him, make so he takes 1 damage from your + 30 level party and defeats Zig in a few rounds (maybe while him not even landing a punch), and still the next cutscene has him all injured and bandaged.
- Took a Level in Badass: Boy howdy. Wimpy bookkeeper turns into master swordsman.
- Training from Hell: One of the method to train Beyd is to smack him up as strong as possible, so he can build up ressistance. For a guy like him, that probably wasn't pretty.
- Triang Relations: Type 4, Beyd wants Shadis, but she's engaged with Zig.
Dr. Palet
- Even Bad Men Love Their Mamas: He did all the experiments to ressurect his dead mother.
- Mad Scientist
- Mercy Kill: Palet's mom receives it from Momo, who shuts down the machine she's stuck in so she can rest in peace.
- Necromantic
- Plant Person: He turns into the Shroom, a mushroom-man, after drinking Yggdrasil's sap.
- Spell My Name with an "S": His name is one of the Plant's computer passwords, though the translator seems to have not noticed it and left it as "Pelet".
- Super Serum
Mikba
- An Axe to Grind
- Dirty Coward: He attempted to run after Rei/Weretiger become an issue.
- Fat Bastard
- The Mafia: Balio and Sunder's boss.
- One-Winged Angel: He transforms into a big demon.
- Villain Exit Stage Left
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Green.
Gaist
- Church Militant: Formerly.
- Continuity Nod: He transforms into a fire spawn quite similar to an enemy in Breath of Fire II, the Ifeleet/Ifrit, who appears on Deathevan's dungeon.
- No Immortal Inertia
- Playing with Fire: He even uses two torches to power himself up.
- Screw This, I'm Outta Here: Gaist has second thoughts about killing dragons and abandons Urkan Tapa.
- Sinister Scythe: Artbook shows him wielding one.
Elder Jono/Bono
- Brought Down to Normal: He removes Ryu's dragon transformations during his Boss Fight.
- Climax Boss
- Cool Old Guy: Admit it, his lines are some of the best.
- Crack! Oh, My Back!: Every three turns during his Boss Fight, he'll waste a turn with the "Bad Back" skill.
- Dirty Old Man
- Mr. Exposition
- Old Master
- Sealed Inside a Person-Shaped Can: He has sealed within himself the essence and powers of the whole Brood, which once defeated materialize in the allmighty Infinity Gene.
Myria
- Back from the Dead
- Big Bad
- Cain and Abel: The Cain to Deis's Abel.
- Characterization Marches On: In the first game, she was the villain For the Evulz and literally fed on being hated and feared. Here, she's a Well-Intentioned Extremist trying to protect all life from destruction by destroying or imprisoning the Brood.
- Early-Bird Cameo: She appears right on the beginning in Ryu's dream.
- Fan Disservice: She wears Godiva Hair during her battle. Except for her default attack, where her guts rupture out to slap someone as her hair flies back.
- A God Am I: She herself. She seems to be not so sure at the end though.
- Light Is Not Good: A beautiful, charismatic goddess, and while she isn't exactly evil, she is mortally antagonistic to the Brood.
- My Beloved Smother: She's this to all the earth's habitants.
- Nightmare Face: Just see her sprite during the Holocaust attack.
- Our Angels Are Different: She's usually seen assuming the form of a winged woman with light all around her.
- There is a distinct Red Right Hand/Uncanny Valley effect (I'm not sure which trope is more appropriate) when you realize that her wings are upside down.
- Power Source: It is stated the chrysm, the fuel for all machinery on the world, is a medium for Myria to provide the world with her magical energy.
- The Scottish Trope: The Urkans (and Guardians) are prohibited to speak the name of their goddess, or that of her enemy the Brood.
- Space Station: Orbital Station Myria.
- Villainous Breakdown
- Well-Intentioned Extremist: She's protecting life and the world by sending the technology of Caer Xhan to humanity via the Black Ship in manageable doses, keeping the Desert of Death away from humanity with an ocean barrier, and stopping the Brood from destroying the world with their power. Unfortunately, sending machines to humanity means making humanity dependent on her, keeping the Desert away from the rest of the world prevents humanity and Yggdrasil from colonizing and restoring it, and protecting the world from the Brood means either killing them all or imprisoning them in a false Heaven.
Breath of Fire IV
Ryu
- Accidental Pervert: In two of the Bowdlerised scenes.
- Adult Child: Portrayed this way in the manga.
- The Berserker: Same as in Breath of Fire III. Now one needs to find all Endless in order to control the Kaiser Dragon.
- Big Damn Heroes: Subverted at the start of the game. Nina falls down a cliff side and Ryu jumps heroically to her aid... and just then notices Nina has wings. Cue Ryu's smacking the ground face-first.
- Big "Shut Up!": Arguably, Ryu does this to Fou-lu when choosing the "Good End" option after Fou-lu's "The Reason You Suck" Speech.
- Despair Event Horizon: When Rasso slaughters the innocent civilians of Chek, he falls into an Heroic BSOD. This is especially apparent in the manga adaptation.
- Hellish Pupils: The manga's depiction of the Dragon's Eye.
- Heroic Mime: At least until the ending.
- Averted in the manga adaptation, which has him speak frequently and greatly expands on his personality.
- I Will Find You: Ryu searching for Fou-lu in the manga adaptation.
- Katanas Are Just Better: First Ryu to ditch the European swords for a katana. Likely as part of the setting switch from Medieval Europe to Ancient China.
- Kappei Yamaguchi: Ryu's seiyû.
- Literal Split Personality
- Living MacGuffin: Ryu ultimately becomes this.
- Naked on Arrival
- Playing with Fire: Three of his dragon forms are fire-type.
- Red Oni, Blue Oni: The Red Oni to Fou-lu's Blue Oni.
- This Is Unforgivable!: In the manga version, Ryu screams "I won't forgive you" during his Heroic BSOD... right before unleashing THE KAISER DRAGON.
- Twin Telepathy: With Fou-lu, probably closer to Twin Empathy. Depicted more blatantly in the manga (especially so starting around Chapter 19) and is actually the major driving plot-point.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Seriously, this is pretty much contractually obligated for a Ryu in a Breath of Fire game. Any Ryu.
Nina
- Blow You Away
- Cooldown Hug: Actually bringing Ryu down from KAISER RAEG by this, in fact!
- The Heart: Of the team, she is the most affected by the suffering she sees, and it is she who actually recruits the other members (except for Ershin).
- I Will Find You: The game starts out with Nina and Cray searching for her lost sister Elina.
- The Medic
- Morality Pet: Serves as one for Cray, in the beginning. One suspects that the only reason the party got to six members at all is because Nina kept telling Cray to give them a chance. Cray outgrows the need for one eventually.
- Narrator: Each chapter ends with a short narration from her.
- The Pollyanna
- Royal Blood:
- Royals Who Actually Do Something: In her case, go in search of her lost sister Elina. And calm down raging KAISER DRAGON mode Ryu. And in the manga, have an "I Know You're in There Somewhere" Fight moment that slaps sense into Ryu when the latter is in Infini's mind.
- Spoiled Sweet: She only wants to do right, but she is very naive about the world.
- Team Mom
- White Magician Girl
- Winged Humanoid
Cray
- The Big Guy: In that he's the biggest party member. Personality-wise, he's closer to The Lancer.
- Carry a Big Stick
- Da Chief
- Deadpan Snarker: Has his moments.
- Dishing Out Dirt
- Half-Human Hybrid: His mother is human, his father (the previous chieftain) is Woren.
- Heroic BSOD: In the game, after he mercy-kills Elina. He does not speak again until the final dungeon.
- Hot-Blooded: Somthing of a problem for him and his tribe. To his credit, he does try to control his temper, with varying success.
- Idiot Ball: He's no Dumb Muscle, but he still grabs firm hold of this at times, mostly in the beginning.
- Isshin Chiba: Cray's seiyû.
- It's Personal: With Yuna, after he finds out what he did to Elina.
- I Will Find You: Searching for Elina along with Nina.
- Jerk with a Heart of Gold: In the beginning, he's really something of a bully. He all but forcibly conscripts Ryu into the party because of his prophetic dreams leading to Elina, and when they don't pan out, considers ditching him. He also beats up Marlok's bodyguard, forces his way into his house, and demands that he give information about Elina while offering nothing in return. His behavior toward the other members of the party, especially Ursula, isn't that great either, and he often ignores their needs entirely unless Nina speaks up for them. And that's not going into his illegal entry into The Empire, which caused a lot of people a lot of problems which he never apologized for. Despite all this, he really does care for Nina and is protective of both her and the party in his own way. And, through the wonders of Character Development (and a few rounds of Break the Cutie), he pretty much drops the "jerk" part completely by the end.
- Kangaroo Court: The Ludian court isn't exactly on his side when he's on trial. To be fair, they arent entirely wrong either.
- Love Hurts: And how.
- Love Redeems: Cray has his own experience with this when he must ultimately euthanise Elina with the Dragonslayer.
- Morality Pet: Nina, in the beginning. One suspects that the only reason the party got to six members at all is because Nina kept telling Cray to give them a chance. He outgrows the need for one eventually.
- Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: Finding Cray and co. illegally across borders, assaulting Imperial soldiers nearly broke the ceasfire The Empire had with the Western Alliance, and by manufacturing a copy of the weapon that Cray also stole (and gave away to Nina, who gave it to Ryu, who broke it), The Empire was able to modify the treaty between the countries so that they could seize more land on the border, so that they could more easily search for Ryu. A great deal of trouble the Nakama face in the later Acts could have been avoided entirely if Cray has simply searched for Elena through proper channels. Well done, Cray.
- Only Sane Man: Feels like this most times.
- Papa Wolf: In regards to Nina. Considerably more explicit in the manga.
- Proud Warrior Race Guy: Chieftain of the entire Woren nation, at that.
- Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right: His attitude concerning his search for Elena. He learns to grow out of it though.
- Shout-Out: His ultimate combination magic is named "Weretiger" in reference to Rei's feral form.
- Also, at one point, he says Rei's infamous Catch Phrase.
- Team Dad
- What the Hell, Hero?: He faced a LOT of chewing out from the Ludian court for his illegal entry into The Empire and his loss of a priceless hierloom and symbol of the kingdom. His response was to throw it right back.
- Ursula and Ershin also bluntly call him on bad leadership decisions.
Ershin/Master
- Animated Armor: Deis' aura granted the armor a will of its own.
- Badass Cape
- Bilingual Bonus: Two separate ones, in fact, both of which contain spoilers.
- Cloudcuckoolander
- Heroic Sacrifice: Gave up its life to protect the Abbess of Chek while Deis was speaking with the Endless. It didn't stick though.
- Jerkass: Deis was hardly warm to Ershin when it was revealed that it had a mind of its own. She absolutely refused to go back inside, cruelly insisting it was never alive and that it should "go back to being a suit of armor", and then leaving it alone in Chek. She eventually realized how selfish this attitude was when Ershin gave up it's life to protect the Abbess, and goes back into the armor to rejoin Ryu.
- Journey to the Center of the Mind: When the party has to release Deis.
- Meaningful Name: Though hidden by a Bilingual Bonus. The Keep It Foreign renaming of Master to "Ershin"--literally meaning "two souls" in Sichuan Chinese--was to preserve the Bilingual Bonus.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: On some of her character portraits.
- Robot Buddy
- Rocket Punch
- Sealed Good in a Can: It turns out Ershin is actually the robotic "host" for the goddess Deis.
- Team Pet: Though a surprisingly powerful one once she is leveled up.
- Third Person Person: Oh god yes. Entirely justified to the point of Fridge Brilliance based on the above.
- Use Your Head: Following in Peco's example.
- What Measure Is a Non-Human?
Scias
- Alcohol Hic: Unfortunately, Bowdlerised in the English version to a stuttering issue.
- An Ice Person/Healing Hands
- Because You Were Nice to Me: It is implied in the game (and even more in the manga) that the reason Scias left the employ of Ludia was because he was touched by Nina's optimism and faith in him.
- Blinding Bangs: Doesn't stop him from being damn good with a katana though.
- Captain Obvious: Scias' reaction to the discovery that "Fairy Drops" are the Solid Gold Poop of actual fairies.
- Drunken Master: Scias' original characterization in the Japanese version had him constantly falling-down plastered, and still pulling off all the fancpanciest of moves he does in battle. Imagine what he could accomplish sober.
- Dummied Out: Scias naturally-gained "Analyse" spell was removed from the english version. It can still be assigned to any character with a Game Shark, though in a buggy state.
- Flash Step: His attack animation.
- Heel Face Turn: He entered the party in the employ of Ludia to spy on the party, but he reneges and returns the money.
- Hidden Heart of Gold: He tries to project the image of a Badass mercenary, but his campfire conversation and certain other events reveal that he's not nearly as devoid of concience as he pretends.
- Katanas Are Just Better: Much better if they give him an extra attack.
- Shell-Shocked Veteran
- Speech Impediment: His stuttering.
- Welcome Back, Traitor: Occurs as part of his Heel Face Turn.
Ursula
- Arbitrary Gun Power
- Even Evil Has Standards: During her very brief time as an antagonist, she shows disgust with Rasso when he slaughters the women and children of Chek. In the manga, she explicitly describe's Rasso's actions as unforgivable and begs Nina to not think of all Fou Empire soldiers as being similarly monstrous.
- Get a Hold of Yourself, Man!: Fond of delivering these to Cray.
- The Gunslinger
- I Will Find You: At the game's end, she goes looking for her foster-father General Rhun. In the manga, she goes searching for Yuna, presumably to hunt him down and kill him.
- Kumiko Watanabe: Ursula's seiyû.
- Lady of War
- Petting Zoo People
- Playing with Fire
- Sixth Ranger
- Stealth Hi Bye: Her victory sprite has her disappear in a ninja-style Smoke Out.
- Tsundere: Specifically, type A.
- Unwitting Pawn: The manga explicitly depicts Ursula as one regarding Elina's fate.
- Why Did It Have to Be Snakes?: Sea lice. Especially hilarious as sea lice are harmless isopods—and Nina even points this out.
- This in fact SO traumatises Ursula in regards to sea travel that when Khan knocks on the bottom of the ship later, Ursula is convinced it's actually the sea lice who are OUT TO GET HER.
Fou-lu
- An Ice Person: His main dragon form is ice/water-type. He's also weak against fire in general.
- Anti-Villain
- Badass
- Bishonen
- The Blue Oni to Ryu's Red Oni
- Crutch Character: You only control him during his segments of the story, and he's all you'll need. Fou-Lu starts off with all of his dragon forms, and is at such a high level that despite soloing battles he isn't likely to gain any levels, nor does he even need to.
- Do Not Taunt Cthulhu: The Empire doesn't want him around and makes repeated attempts to kill him, which in the end drives his mad and causes him to burn the empire's capt ital to the ground, in addition to, of course, killing nearly everyone sent after.
- Driven to Villainy: At first, a fairly decent warrior god, but then The Empire that he built keeps trying to kill him after he awakes, putting him through some... traumatic... experiences to say the least.
- Dual-Wielding: During the final fight.
- Energy Weapon: He conjures a sword of Pure Energy to attack.
- Evil Counterpart: To Ryu. Turns out he's not really evil at all though.
- God-Emperor: One of the few cases where the God-Emperor started out as a god first.
- A God-Emperor and his shishi/foo-dogs
- One of which he literally sics on the entirety of the Fou Empire in his Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds period after returning to Chedo.
- Heel Face Turn: In the manga ending and arguably in the Good End of the game.
- Spared by the Adaptation: In the manga ending, Fou-lu is shown to be alive in the manga adaptation and lives with Ryu travelling the world. The manga ends with the two heading towards Wyndia, Fou-lu wishing to learn what Ryu sees in humanity.
- Split Personality Merge: After the final battle in the game's Good End, he admits that whilst Humans Are the Real Monsters, they are also "magnificent" and is absorbed into Ryu.
- Hellish Pupils: In the manga version. Justified as the manga in general uses cat-like eyes to denote someone is a dragon.
- I Know Your True Name: Fou-lu ends up a victim of this... twice over. Once during the botched summoning that called him to the world (and split him in half), the other via Yohm having a bit too much knowledge re name magic.
- Isshin Chiba: Fou-lu's seiyû.
- King in the Mountain: Technically, Fou-lu is this to the Fou Empire (what with being summoned as their literal God-Emperor and prophesying his own "resurrection" before going into torpor for 600 years). Unfortunately, The Empire that he happens to be the King in the Mountain of wants him quite dead... thus becoming a particularly brutal subversion of the trope.
- Laughing Mad: After he finds out poor Mami was used as a Fantastic Nuclear Warhead. The manga's depiction of this is especially disturbing, in part because Ryu also feels Fou-lu losing his mind via Twin Telepathy after having had his own Kaiser Dragon Incident.
- Love Hurts: Learns this the hard way when Mami gets used in The Carronade.
- Complete with Blood From the Mouth and MORE than a bit of going Laughing Mad when he finds out Mami was used as a literal human warhead for a Fantastic Nuke.
- Love Redeems: Once he meets up with Mami, he starts down this path. Then Yuna brutally tortures her and uses her as a sacrifice for the Carronade. Ouch.
- Nice Hat: He gets one after he kills Soniel and becomes emperor again.
- "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Fou-lu gives one that is more of a "The Reason Humans Are Bastards Speech"; this is actually how you start the decision path on which of the Multiple Endings to go with.
- The manga (in its Third Option Ending) starts with Fou-lu going into his "The Reason Humans Suck Speech", and Ryu agreeing and choosing to go with what appears to be the Bad End. He gets better though.
- Speak of the Devil: A self inflicted version (in order to avoid Yohm's I Know Your True Name where he refuses to tell Mami his real name.
- Sympathetic POV: The player controls him at several points throughout the game, allowing them to witness various Pet the Dog moments and humanizing scenes.
- Technically a Smile: Fou-lu's character status sprite when he beheads Soniel.
- In the Comic Blade Avarus manga, the last page of Chapter 19 has another example (which, of note, occurs right after the manga's depiction of the above scene). Fou-lu is holding Mami's bells, begging Ryu to hurry up and come, whilst giving a postively feral smile. And this is after being run through with the Dragonslayer.
- Trauma Conga Line: All the way down to frank Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds by the time all is said and done with.
- Twin Telepathy: With Ryu. Again, closer to Twin Empathy and considerably more explicit in the manga version.
- Unwanted Revival: The Fou Empire's leadership in general sees him as this. This even goes to the point of official propoganda declaring him the "Dragon Of Doom", and Yohm explicitly states his reawakening is an Unwanted Revival.
- White-Haired Pretty Boy
- Woobie, Destroyer of Worlds: Once The Empire literally Dropped A Mami On Him.
- Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe: And combined with the Royal We, at that.
- Likely Capcom USA's attempt to deal with the original Keigo, though rather more exaggerated in English.
Yuna
- Big Bad
- Body Horror: His speciality.
- Break the Cutie: His other specialty.
- Dirty Coward
- Dragon with an Agenda: Acts as one to Emperor Soniel. Exactly what he really wants is never made clear in the game, but the manga implies that he has his eyes on the throne.
- Evil Is Not Pacifist: Subverted. He claims to be a "pacifist" and a "man of the arts", but this is just an excuse to save his own ass.
- Evil Sorcerer: Extra emphasis on the evil.
- Karma Houdini: Probably one of the most notable examples of this in video games, especially since he pulls it off twice. He's directly responsible for nearly every bad thing that happens in the game, and to get the best ending, you have to let him get away with it. To make it even worse, the epilogue makes it very clear that he's already planning to rebuild his operation and do it all again.
- Love Hurts: It will if he has anything to say about it. Suffice it to say, Yuna is the last person you want to introduce your significant other to.
- Mad Scientist: He has actually been described as Breath of Fire's answer to Hojo, which pretty much hits the nail on the head. To some, Yuna is even more detestable due to being a Karma Houdini.
- Meaningful Name: Yuna translates to "night", which is a nice reflection on the type of person he is.
- Nice Hat
- Sissy Villain
- Stupid Sexy Flanders: While he doesn't exactly look bad in the original game, the manga plays up his appearance and makes him more handsome. Justified since young women are a target audience of the publisher.
- Treacherous Advisor
- The Unfought
- Verbal Tic: Yaa.
- Villain Teleportation: If not for this little trick...
General Yohm
- Anti-Villain: Arguably. The manga makes rather a better case for this interpretation.
- The Beast Master: He summons mystical creatures to do the dirty job.
- The Dragon: To Emperor Soniel.
- Gonk
- I Know Your True Name: Yohm engages in this in a very literal sense with Fou-lu: even explicitly commenting to him that the very act of speaking Fou-lu's name sends ripples in the world to such an extent Yohm can be inevitably led to wherever he is. Yes, name magic can be used as essentially radar to find Endless, for values of sufficiently powerful Endless.
- Just Following Orders: Yohm even admits as much before committing suicide by immolation.
- Miniature Senior Citizens
- My Country, Right or Wrong
- The Unfought: Like Rasso and Yuna, he is never actually fought during the course of the game. Given his age and physical state though, it's probably justified.
Captain Rasso
- Made of Iron: He breaks a sword by it striking his face. And it only leaves a scar.
- Minor Injury Overreaction: It convinced Rasso to hunt Ryu down before figuring out the latter was the one he was looking for.
- Marionette Master: He never fights, letting his summoned Animated Armors to do the chore.
- Shout-Out Theme Naming: Rasso's three robots are named "Joh", "Ymechaf" and "Ight". Put together, they form "Joy Mecha Fight", a NES fighting game.
- Sissy Villain (bordering Camp Gay): Rasso speaks in a very effeminate way in Japanese (to the point it can be described as the Japanese equivalent of Camp Gay) and also has rather effeminate mannerisms. In the 4-komas included in the manga, Ryu even refers to him as "okama"... which was translated to "THE GIRLY MAN" in the Fan Translation.
- The Unfought: Even though you fight his summons, you never get to battle him directly. The closest one gets is burnination by Kaiser Dragon, and that's not exactly controllable. Still very satisfying to see him annihilated by Kaiser though.
General Rhun
- Cool Old Guy
- Parental Substitute: Raised Ursula.
- Reasonable Authority Figure: in his short screentime. Didn't deter the fandom though.
Emperor Soniel
- Back Stab
- Broke Your Arm Punching Out Cthulhu: Lost His Head Back-Stabbing The God-Emperor. Especially explicit in the manga.
- The Emperor: One of the very few examples where a mortal, rather than the God-Emperor, qualifies.
- Hoist by His Own Petard
- Horrible Judge of Character
- Nice Hat: At least your decapitated head is stylin', Soniel.
- Off with His Head: The result for Soniel of the Back Stab. A victim of Bowdlerisation in English, and treated to a Crowning Moment Of Take That in the Bloodier and Gorier manga adaptation.
- Pride: Especially apparent when he pulls the Back Stab on Fou-lu bragging that he'd killed a god.
- Royal We
- We Hardly Knew Ye: Has a grand total of about two scenes before Fou-lu slices his head off.
- What Happened to the Mouse?: Soniel's ultimate decapitation was, as noted, censored from non-Japanese versions of the game, thus resulting in this happening re his storyline in English versions.
- We're not shown how it happens, but it's made pretty obvious that Fou-lu kills him.
Mami
- Appalachian Accent: With a wee bit of Scots thrown in for good measure (justified in that really deep Appalachian English DOES still use some Scots idioms like "ye ken").
- Probably Capcom USA's attempt to deal with the original Tohoku Regional Accent, though again (much like how Fou-lu's Keigo got turned into Ye Olde Butcherede Englishe) a bit of an exaggeration compared to the original Japanese.
- Country Mouse
- Happily Ever After: What Mami was essentially hoping for. Tragically subverted.
- Love Hurts: Quite fatally for her in fact: unfortunately for poor Mami, the Carronade literally operates on this principle.
- Sacrificial Lamb: For the Carronade.
- Stuffed Into the Fridge: Or in this case, the Carronade. Fou-lu's reaction when he finds what caused the hex he was targeted with is pretty much classic for this trope though.
- Violently Protective Girlfriend: Do not insult or try to drive off her Ryong in her presence.
Kahn
- Affably Evil
- Arch Enemy: Thinks of himself as this in relation to the main party. Thinks being the operative word here.
- Dumb Muscle
- Foreshadowing: The three times you encounter him, he was working under a Master. Try to guess what he becomes after giving up on the party.
- Ineffectual Sympathetic Villain
- Large Ham
Breath of Fire: Dragon Quarter
Ryu (1/8192)
- Audience Surrogate: Per Word Of Capcom in interviews with the producers.
- Deadly Upgrade: While drawing on Odjn's power lets Ryu kill enemies quickly, if his counter maxes out, he will get a Nonstandard Game Over.
- Heroes Prefer Swords: The only weapon able to be equipped to him are longswords and katanas.
- Heroic RROD: Maxing out the D-Ratio at any point, but the end.
- Heroic Sacrifice: He gets better thanks to Odjn.
- I Will Protect Her: To Nina.
- Kappei Yamaguchi: Try to guess?
- Papa Wolf: Towards Nina.
- Power Limiter: The D-Ratio.
- Almighty Janitor: His D-Ratio is 1/8192. but he ends up beating people with D-Ratios over 1/64.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: Specifically, warning of imminent burnination.
- You Are Number Six: The D-Ratios are legally part of names in Sheldar.
- You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Technically, even this Ryu has blue hair. It's very dark (almost blue-black), however.
Nina
- Body Horror: Genetically modified to be an air purifier.
- Cute Mute: But in a particularly disturbing fashion.
- Heroic Mime: She used to be able to speak until the surgeries performed on her. The only thing she is able to say is her name, and even that is implied to be challenging.
- Living MacGuffin: Was created to be a prototype living air filter, and the people who experimented on her want her back, as does Trinity.
- People Jars: Nina is actually a prototype: at one point, Lin discovers a room full of headless Nina clones in jars.
- Being headless wasn't the only thing biologically wrong about those, either.
- Winged Humanoid: A bit of a subversion to the usual Breath of Fire Nina Trope. Her "wings" are in fact genetically engineered air filters... basically modified gills or book-lungs.
Lin
- Catgirl: Quite possibly the only one in the entire franchise who is not a tiger-girl, in fact.
- Cool Big Sis
- The Gunslinger: She fights using a pistol.
- Kumiko Watanabe: Lin's seiyû.
- Lady of War: Lin is stoic and calm in the face of adversity, balancing out Ryu's hotheaded determination, but is no less a warrior.
- La Résistance: Is a member of Trinity.
- Team Dad: Lin keeps Ryu's temper in check and cautions him against making rash decisions.
- You Are Number Six: Subverted. She was stripped of her D-Ratio when becoming a fugitive.
Odjn
- Badass Nickname: "The Thousand-Year Destroyer".
- Body Horror: What his contracts tend to inflict on the Chosen. Odjn himself happens to be a rotting corpse crucified against a wall.
- Et Tu, Brute?: He was pinned to that wall due to Elyon's rejecting their link, and he is pissed.
- Gentle Giant: Particularly compared to Chetyre and Dva, who are both complete basket cases. He calls Ryu his "little friend" and breaks their link after the sky is finally opened.
- Grand Theft Me: A game over by maxing Ryu's D-Ratio will show Odjn bursting out of his body.
- Not Quite Dead
- You Are Number Six
Bosch (1/64)
- Body Horror: He grafts a D-Construct to his left arm in order to amplify his power.
- Break the Haughty: He becomes increasingly psychotic after Dragon!Ryu tears him a new one and kills their boss.
- Glowing Eyelights of Undeath: Half Bosch's face when he has the Terminator-esque grafting of Chetyre, and completely when he eventually reaches a Half-Human Hybrid state proper.
- Kentaro Ito: Bosch's seiyû.
- Laughing Mad: He goes completely insane by the game's conclusion.
- The Rival: Plays this role initially, though he makes a We Can Rule Together offer at the beginning of the game. This transitions into...
- Rival Turned Evil following Ryu siding with Trinity.
- Trauma Conga Line
- "Well Done, Son" Guy: He wants his father to acknowledge him.
Elyon
- Asskicking Equals Authority: Elyon became head of what would become the Regents by kicking Deamoned's ass when he was still a Chosen of Odjn.
- The Chessmaster: Almost everything in Sheldar ultimately boils down to a Xanatos Gambit of some sort by Elyon. The entire establishment of the D-Ratio system and the Regents, the plan to have Ryu become a Chosen of Odjn, and the backup plan of the People Jars full of headless Nina clones...
- Deadly Upgrade: Linking with a D-Construct is pretty much inevitably fatal. Even the ultimately rejected link with Odjn is slowly killing Elyon. The scene revealing this even has half of Elyon's face show Glowing Eyelights of Undeath.
- Expy: According to an interview, he is a different take on Fou-lu from the previous installment (specifically, a Fou-lu expy who was not a God-Emperor).
- Kentaro Ito: Elyon's seiyû.
- Me's a Crowd: Summons two clones of himself in his Boss Battle.
- My Greatest Failure: Elyon is ultimately rejected by Odjn when he refuses to open the sky... fearing it was not his decision and fearing he would be placing all of Sheldar at risk.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Well, closer to a thousand.
- Red Eyes, Take Warning: A permanent stigmata from where he was a Chosen.
- White-Haired Pretty Boy
Cupid
- Kumiko Watanabe: Cupid's seiyû.
- Petting Zoo People: The long floppy ears makes Cupid look part rabbit.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Cupid is just about as old as Elyon.
- She's a Man In Japan: Gender-bended for the US release because of hir implied relationship with Elyon.
Vexacion
- Knight Templar: He trains Bosch literally from toddlerhood in gladiatorial combat... because he feels it's a necessity to protect Sheldar from rogue Genics, including and especially the D-Constructs. It's also very strongly implied that he killed everyone who bonded with a D-construct from the time Elyon bonded (and was rejected) by Odjn up to when Ryu became a Chosen.
- Last Disc Skill: One of Ryu's best level 3 skills, Terabreak, is stolen from him.
- Luke, I Am Your Father: Bosch's father.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: Along with practically all of the other Regents.
Zeno (1/128)
- Action Girl: Eventually transitioning to Dark Action Girl in practice after Ryu's Ranger Trinity Turn.
- Tsundere: Type A.
Hortensia
- Black Magician Girl: Elegant, regal, composed, and sporting a revealing dress that shows her underwear.
- Petting Zoo People: She has fox ears. Concept art shows she was going to have a tail too, like Lin, but her final design doesn't have one.
- Pstandard Psychic Pstance
- Psychic Powers: Is skilled with magic, being able to repel Ryu and co. with the power of her mind during battle, and can see the future.
Jezuit
- Handsome Lech: Often at Hortensia's expense. And, during one minor scene, Lin's.
- Invisibility: Is the main gimmick of his boss fight, along with Visible Invisibility.
- Kentaro Ito: Jezuit's seiyû.
- Wolverine Claws: Fights with these.
Deamoned
- Asskicking Equals Authority: An interesting subversion in Deamoned's case. It's implied he was the original leader of the Regents... until an Odjn-possessed Elyon kicked his ass and took his eye.
- Eyepatch of Power: He lost his eye hundreds of years ago.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: He's almost 1000.
- Scars Are Forever: He lost his left eye when Elyon was a Chosen of Odjn... to an Odjn-ridden Elyon. He was so impressed by this that he stuck around.
Mebeth
- The Dragon: To Elyon, of all people. It's strongly implied that Trinity is in fact a faux La Résistance designed to allow Sheldar's inhabitants to rebel without threatening the Regents (and Elyon's Xanatos Gambit).
- La Résistance: Is the leader of the official resistance to the government.
- Really Seven Hundred Years Old: And now we really want to know what sort of life-extension technology the Regents have...
Chetyre
- Badass Nickname: "Old Deep".
- Big Bad: Of the Hijacked by Ganon variety.
- Bilingual Bonus: Her name is Russian for four.
- Body Horror: Until her regeneration, all we see of her is an arm in a test tube.
- Driven to Villainy: Or something. Whatever happened to her, she is not happy about it.
- Dynamic Entry: CAN IT HATE?
- Grand Theft Me: Pulls one on Bosch after his defeat.
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