< Devil May Cry

Devil May Cry/YMMV


  • Alternative Character Interpretation:
  • And the Fandom Rejoiced: Dante and Trish are going to be in Marvel vs. Capcom 3. Dante's first game-trailer appearance? Fighting Deadpool. FTW, indeed.
    • Also, Vergil's been confirmed for the Updated Rerelease, Ultimate Marvel vs. Capcom 3... Okay well, he's not so much confirmed as he was leaked, THEN confirmed when Word of God acknowledged the leak.
  • Author's Saving Throw: Many fans are saying that the Devil May Cry preboot being an Alternate Continuity is clearly this due to the backdraft caused by it.
  • Awesome Music: Love should also be given to the battle music, particularly the two tracks from Devil May Cry 3, "Taste the Blood" and "Divine Hate". "Taste the Blood" crosses over with both Crowning Moment of Awesome and Crowning Moment of Funny when Dante gets the Nevan weapon—a literal electric guitar—and tests it out by performing the aforementioned song. Complete with sounds of an audience cheering (though no actual audience is seen) and stage pyrotechnics.
  • Breather Boss: Baal in Devil May Cry 4 isn't a very hard fight, probably because he comes after a long slog through the castle collecting all the Gyro Blades. He telegraphs his attacks from a mile away, they're all easy enough to dodge, and he gives you tons of opportunities to damage him.
    • He can become a pain in hard mode though. Echnida however, is this on any difficulty.
  • Complete Monster: Mundus and Arkham. Arkham especially. While it's implied that Arkham was actually a kind man before his obsession with the supernatural, the guy killed his wife with no remorse whatsoever and was probably going to do the same thing to Lady, his only daughter. Additionally, his Blob Monster of a One-Winged Angel is said to not be caused by his inability to control Sparda's power, but the result of the vast evil within his heart. Wow.
  • Crazy Awesome: For Sparda's sake, Dante uses Bike Fu in Devil May Cry 3!
  • Cry for the Devil: Dante does so when Vergil falls into Demon World of his own volition. Then comes the Title Drop...
  • Demonic Spiders: Blitz from Devil May Cry 4. They're more like Demonic Beetles, really, but most players can agree they'd rather fight an actual boss than one of these. Far from the only one though.
    • Blitz isn't so hard with Nero: Charge Shoot 3, Showdown and the Buster make fin soup of it quickly enough. Dante, however, doesn't have such convenient moves, and it will require much more skill.
    • The Arachne from Devil May Cry 3 also fit this trope when you fight them in swarms.
    • The first game has Phantom, a giant lava spider/scorpion and the Kyklops, large demon spiders.
  • Designated Hero: Trish in Devil May Cry 4, for giving the most powerful weapon in the game to the Order, allowing them to wreak havoc much faster than they would have originally. The only thing possibly keeping Trish a hero is that she's sided with Dante.
    • It's heavily implied that she did such an act out of boredom but also to quickly rise up the ranks of the Order in a short period of time and then relay info back to Dante. Granted, it was still a terrible decision, but it doesn't make Trish that bad of a person, not to mention that she and Dante manage to contain and quickly clean up her folly.
  • Disappointing Last Level: In Devil May Cry 4 due to aforementioned excess of Back Tracking.
  • Draco in Leather Pants: Vergil.
  • Ear Worm: "Devils Never Cry" from Devil May Cry 3. The battle music ("Taste the Blood" and "Divine Hate") will also get stuck in your head eventually, considering how often you'll be hearing it.
  • Epileptic Trees:
    • The collection of swords along the walls of Dante's shop could be a collection of Devil Arms from his offscreen missions.
    • Besides the Continuity Snarl behind the Word of God-confirmed facts that Vergil is dead and Nero is his son, there's questioning over whether or not the Yamato is acting as his Soul Jar, considering that Nero's DT looks considerably like a fusion of Vergil's DT from Devil May Cry 3 and Nelo Angelo. Not to mention that the quote in Nero's section is a psuedo-Call Back to one of Vergil's Motive Rants in Devil May Cry 3.
    • Some fans believe that the zweihander Nelo Angelo wields is actually a corrupted version of the Yamato. Similarly, they believe that Nelo's death factors into the Yamato's broken appearance in Devil May Cry 4.
  • Escapist Character: Dante, tell me you don't wish you'd be that Badass. Not if you were stuck in Perpetual Poverty with two women driving you into even more debt. Three babes and a kickass devil-hunting business? Totally Worth It.
  • Evil Is Cool: Vergil seems to have more fans than Dante, even though he gets defeated in both of the games that have him. This is likely because Vergil and Dante are badass on different scales. Dante's the carefree badass, and Vergil's the refined badass. Either way, both suffer from Stupid Sexy Sparda.
  • Evil Is Sexy: Vergil, and Trish until her Heel Face Turn. Then it becomes full-on Good Is Sexy.
  • Fan-Preferred Couple:
  • Fanon: Nero being Vergil's son is never said explicitly in Devil May Cry 4: the novel stating it and the guy from Capcom's localization having heard this somewhere are of dubious legitimacy. The game just says that he has "Sparda's blood"; which doesn't leave many possibilities, but at least two (Vergil and Sparda himself).
  • Faux Symbolism: See Rule of Symbolism on the main page, for starters.
  • Freud Was Right: The entire theme of Trish (specifically, the implication was that Mundus was using her as a Honey Trap for Dante in the first game), but subverted. As said in Oedipus Complex under Dante's entry in the characters sheet, it doesn't work on Dante: he's visibly disturbed by her appearance.
  • Game Breaker: Devil May Cry 3's style Quicksilver puts Dante into bullet time for rather long periods of time, though it eats up is devil gauge. However, with enough devil gauge restoring items, it becomes a little broken.
  • Goddamned Bats: From Devil May Cry 4, you have the Chimera Seeds. Bladey Planty thingies that just love to attach to other monsters so they can interrupt your combo. And that's just the tip of the iceberg, as on higher difficulties pretty much every mook is one.
    • The Nefasturris boss in Devil May Cry 2 is apparently made of them.
  • Good Bad Bugs: Jump Cancelling, which allows for infinite aerial maneuvers.
  • He's Just Hiding: Vergil, Sparda... Eva might be next, at this rate.
  • Hilarious in Hindsight: Arius' corporation goes by the name of Uroboros. Sound familiar?
    • Doubly so if you consider Arius' international enterprise and the fact that Possessed Arius sports some psuedo-Ouroboros tentacles.
  • Ho Yay Shipping/Foe Yay Shipping: Dante and Nelo Angelo—and arguably Mundus—from Devil May Cry 1, Dante and Vergil in Devil May Cry 3, and somewhere out there is Dante/Nero... not to mention Dante/Weapons, which is what happens when the fanbase starts personifying them.
    • And in a case of horrible, horrible Squick, Cerberus/Dante.
    • Well, to be fair to the fanbase, the games personified them first. Hi, remember Nevan?
  • Magnificent Bastard: Vergil in the first novel. The third game, which otherwise copied the first novel's version of the character ended up with him as the Unwitting Pawn instead.
  • Memetic Badass: Dante, although it's not entirely memetic.
  • Memetic Mutation:

Tameen looked at me a moment and took a drag of his cigarette. Then without blinking, and without pausing to exhale the smoke from his mouth he said, "I don't care."

  • Memetic Outfit: Dante's outfits from Devil May Cry 1 and Devil May Cry 3.
  • Memetic Sex God: Everyone wants to get into Dante's pants. EVERYONE.
  • Most Annoying Sound: KULUE!!! KULUEEEEEEE!!!! Made even worse when Nero starts to have a reverse puberty similar to Dante's below when he cries after fighting Agnus.
  • Narm Charm:
    • The writers are bad at dramatic moments... Devil May Cry 1 being especially bad, and Devil May Cry 3 being somewhat more competent.

Dante: "I should have been the one to fill your dark soul with liiiiiiiiiiiight!"

    • For bonus points, Dante's voice cracks very unmanfully right at the end of that line, like he was suddenly struck with reverse puberty.
  • Non Sequitur Scene: Comes right out of nowhere? Check. Has nearly nothing to do with the plot? Check. Ridiculously way over the top? Check. Never mentioned again? Check. If Dante and Agnus going Shakespeare on one another isn't a complete BLAM, what is?
    • Phantom's reappearance towards the end of Devil May Cry 2. He just randomly pops out of nowhere, despite (in his last appearance) melting after being impaled on a spiked pillar. The fact that he's inexplicably mute doesn't help, although the description for that particular mission hints that Time Travel may be involved.
  • Polished Port: The PC version of Devil May Cry 4, which not only runs very smoothly on a wide array of systems, but puts higher-end systems to the test with Legendary Dark Knight Mode, which fills the screen with enemies. Quite the breath of fresh air for PC gamers.
  • Porting Disaster: The port of Devil May Cry 3 from console to PC, thanks to Capcom outsourcing the porting job to another developer. Thankfully, Capcom learned their lesson after Devil May Cry 3 and Resident Evil 4, resulting in the above.
  • Replacement Scrappy:
  • Ruined FOREVER: How seemingly 95% of the fandom reacted to the debut trailer of DmC.
    • Not even the members of developers' official forums bother defending Dante's redesign in the newest entry of the series.
    • It also doesn't help when the higher ups more or less tell the fanbase that their opinions are wrong, and then claim that "Old Dante isn't cool anymore."
    • Hell, even the creator of the series, Hideki Kamiya, does not approve of the redesign.
    • The general idea for DmC seems to make Dante a young jerkwad who's even prouder and more arrogant than he will be as he gets older. This also, apparently, extends to his fashion and hair sense. It's not clear whether this would have a mollifying effect on the complaining fandom.
    • And now apparently Dante is half demon and half angel as well as more of a street brawler.
      • Of course, they are rather justified in this respect: the whole "half-angel" thing doesn't even remotely gel with existing canon, as Eva being Dante and Vergil's human mother was a central plot point in both Devil May Cry 1 and Devil May Cry 3. In short, it's an example of Canon Defilement.
      • And suddenly it's a Continuity Reboot. Surprise surprise.
        • What is this? It's suddenly back to being a Rebirth with Capcom trying to humanize Dante (despite them putting him as a half-angel/half-demon in this game already). Capcom, MAKE UP YOUR FUCKING MIND!
    • Also, it's T-rated. Cries of Capcom completely missing the point of the entire franchise abounds.
    • Of course, complaints have extended straight out to the gameplay as well, mostly because of slow and dull-looking combat and how Dante seems to take forever and a half to kill a single enemy. Really, when people think Devil May Cry 2 looks like a halfway-decent entry to the series compared to this, you're doing something wrong.
    • "I don't care". These three words, uttered by Tameen Antoniades himself regarding the outcries against the reboot, have pissed off damn near every single fan.
  • Scrappy Mechanic: Okay, so whose great idea was it to invent the Proud Soul system and have it work the exact same way as the regular Red Orb purchases?
    • It works because earlier games forced you to choose whether you wanted to spend your Red Orbs on items or abilities, and refunds weren't allowed. However, in Devil May Cry 4, you can return abilities for a refund in Proud Souls (and at the current price!), allowing you to effectively customize your moveset.
      • Although to compensate for the customizeability, you can only get additional Proud Souls after you finish a mission, making it so that you can't get any new abilities mid-mission, and the cost of every single ability goes up when you buy one, making maxing out all abilities prohibitively expensive, far more expensive than the total cost of all abilities in any of the previous games... and naturally there's an achievement for getting all abilities. Furthermore, few people actually use the Red Orbs for anything beyond the storebought Blue and Purple Orbs and thus most of them just end up going to waste after you get the maximum number of both. The only good aspect about them is the fact that Proud Souls are shared between characters, meaning Dante won't start off with zero abilities when the game switches over to him.
    • Whose great idea was it to put a time limit on Bloody Palace?
    • While the underwater sequences in the first game were neither horrible nor impressive, in Devil May Cry 2, they become this. And guess what? You get to play as them with only Lucia. And did we mention that there's a boss to be faced? Have fun!
    • The style system in Devil May Cry 3. Why the hell should the player choose between the ability to Flash Step and that to guard? Between multi-aiming with guns and additional melee attacks? This is a great source of Fake Difficulty against bosses or enemies you face for the first time, and gets especially annoying in the penultimate boss, where the fact of having Vergil fighting with you prevents you from using any of your styles. Thankfully, Devil May Cry 4 allows you to change styles whenever you want, including mid-combo, making the system much more interesting to exploit, if tricky to master.
  • Seinfeld Is Unfunny: When it came out, reviews lauded the first game for its fast action and deep gameplay; today, many players who try it find it kind of slow, clunky and limited (not to mention the infamous triangle jump). It has the right to be, since it basically set all the foundations of the modern Beat 'em All genre, three years before God of War and Itagaki's Ninja Gaiden.
  • Self-Imposed Challenge
  • Ship-to-Ship Combat: Oh man, is there ever. Expect Dante/Trish fans to bash Lady from being too tsuntsun with Dante (at least in Devil May Cry 3), Dante/Lady fans to be Squicked out by the former, and both to utterly derail Dante/Lucia fans mainly because Lucia was in a less popular game. There's also a vocal minority for the Cargo Ship of Dante/Nevan. With the release of Devil May Cry 4, Dante/Nero has seen its fair share of popularity (although it doesn't seem to cause tension with the relatively untouched Nero/Kyrie). And there's Dante/Vergil, perhaps the most popular pairing in Fan Fics... ever. Then, there's the faction that believes that Dante, being an Action Hero, has no canon partner. That's not even getting into the even palpable art of Crossover Shipping, such as the immensely-popular Fan Preferred Couples of Dante and his Distaff Counterpart Bayonetta or Dante and Morrigan...
  • So Cool Its Awesome: As a credit to the gameplay, let it be known that Devil May Cry, a series of single player action games, is tournament worthy.
  • "Stop Having Fun!" Guys: You play on Easy Automatic? GTFO n00b!
  • Tainted by the Preview: "NERO!"
  • That One Attack: If you get swallowed by Nightmare, you're sent into a demonic dimension where you must fight several Sargassoes and one of the previous bosses to get out.
    • This also doubles as Nightmare's Achilles' Heel. Escaping from this dimension deals a sizable portion of damage to Nightmare's health bar. However, It Only Works Once: you can only be swallowed up by Nightmare once as all subsequent attempts to eat Dante simply results in a normal bite.
  • That One Boss: Griffon, Nightmare, Trismagia, Leviathan's Heart, Arkham, Dante, etc... You take your pick.
  • That One Level: Chapter 10 in Devil May Cry 4 will make you hate lasers! And that's just before fighting Dante...
  • They Changed It, Now It Sucks: How the ones not screaming Ruined FOREVER reacted to DmC's debut trailer.
  • They Wasted a Perfectly Good Plot: In Devil May Cry 4, Nero is eventually revealed to "have the blood of Sparda." Nobody cares.
    • This is how many fans are treating several plot threads left hanging (i.e. the full extent of Sparda (and Eva)'s tale, hints that Nero is Vergil's son, the Sequel Hook for Nero at the end of Devil May Cry 4, etc) in lieu of DmC being a reboot.
    • In general, Vergil Mode in Devil May Cry 3: Special Edition. It's a full-on retread of Dante's story, complete with facing a red-clad Vergil (dubbed "Vante" by fans). Playing as Vergil is undeniably cool, but it's a crying shame that you only get a glimpse of his side of the tale for all of two cutscenes.
    • Not only that, but They Wasted a Perfectly Good Character to fight against in Bloody Palace mode. When playing as Nero or Dante in Bloody Palace mode, the final boss... is Dante/Shadow Dante respectively. You never get to fight an AI controlled Nero as the last boss when playing as Dante.
  • The Unexpected: Few people were expecting Trish to be included on the Marvel vs. Capcom 3 roster. Not that anyone's complaining...
  • Unnecessary Makeover: Lady in Devil May Cry 4, considering she wasn't unattractive to begin with and appealed to a lot of fans in Devil May Cry 3.
  • What an Idiot!: Trish. Taking a powerful sword capable of subduing the Prince of Darkness and handing it to a Corrupt Church is NOT a good idea.
    • Not necessarily idiotic and possibly done because It Amused Her. Judging from the way she and Dante act throughout the course of the game, it was a stunt she pulled without his permission because it was fun. Considering that Dante is a One-Man Army Badass and will curbstomp the bad guys anyway, any entertainment is welcome.
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