Eternal Champions

Eternal Champions was a 2D head-to-head Fighting Game released for the Sega Genesis in the wake of the success of fighting games such as Street Fighter II, Fatal Fury and Mortal Kombat.

Nine different people from different time periods (ranging from the time of cavemen to the far future) suffer unjust deaths which, in their own way, cause disorder in the balance of the universe. The Eternal Champion, an entity which oversees this balance, uses its power to temporarily remove all nine from the timeline. The Champion knows any one of the nine can restore balance through the ripple effects of what their full lives will accomplish -- which works out well, since the Champion only has the power to revive one of the nine. Being a sporting entity, the Champion places the nine warriors in a martial arts tournament: the winner will be returned to the timeline, moments prior to their death, with the knowledge of their fate and the power to prevent it -- while the other eight warriors will be condemned to their original grisly fates.

A sequel -- Eternal Champions: Challenge from the Dark Side -- was released for the Sega CD. Dark Side doubled the first game's playable roster, and the new characters were revealed to be previously hidden from the Eternal Champion by the Dark Champion, whose goal is to keep the tournament going on a neverending Stable Time Loop to prevent order from being restored. Challenge from the Dark Side plays better than its predecessor, as it features more responsive controls and a (slightly) easier difficulty curve.

A third and final game -- Eternal Champions: The Final Chapter -- was in pre-production for the Sega Saturn after Challenge from the Dark Side became... well, as much of a hit on the Sega CD as anything really could. Final Chapter would have featured a faction-oriented storyline, with characters supporting either the Eternal Champion or the Dark Champion in an effort to allow good or evil to balance the universe in its favor. Character levels were intended to represent the character's time periods, and victory would lock the opposing faction out of influencing a specific time period forever. The game was canceled, however, when Sega feared it would draw too much attention away from Virtua Fighter.

Tropes used in Eternal Champions include:
  • Animal Motifs: The Eternal Champion uses dragon, tiger, hawk and shark styles, and temporarily gains the limbs of those creatures when he uses their attacks.
    • Challenge from the Dark Side gave the Champion four more forms (among them unicorn and elephant); despite the fact that each form had its own life bar, it was still an easier fight than the original.
  • Atlantis: Trident and many other merfolk live here. Had he not been killed during a bout against the Roman empire, his people would not have been banished to the sea.
  • Badass Longcoat: MidKnight, Dawson and Larcen all sport the look, although MidKnight's is heavily tattered. Being a Head Swap of Larcen, the Senator does too... though his Badass credentials are... questionable.
  • Bare Your Midriff: Every female EXCEPT for Shadow.
  • Bittersweet Ending: In all but at least Raven and Xavier's endings, the character you played as will be saved while all the others are returned to their deaths. Even though this fact was made clear to the contestants and player beforehand, it's made all the more bitter when the game plays the death cinematics for every other non-hidden playable character, back to back to back after the blurb detailing how your character improved the world.
    • Well, right before the death cinematics are played, the Dark Champion gloats that the battle will never end. He might just be showing these sequences because he's a dick, plain and simple.
  • Burn the Witch: Xavier Pendragon was to be condemned as a warlock for his discovery of a new type of energy, which many in his era mistook for magic. If he was to win the tournament, he would still be burned at the stake, but he would have the foresight to ask for his device to be burned with him. The result is an explosion that sends him and his Owl familiar into a time-warp, with enough special effects to convince the crowd that they've destroyed the very last warlock, thus ending the witch hunts.
    • In Challenge from the Dark Side, Xavier's Palette Swap Thanatos was also burned in 1692 Salem; if he survives, he becomes the new Kronos.
  • Canon Foreigner: The comic adaptation has The Overlord (only mentioned by name) and Nakano. Meanwhile, the gamebooks have tons of them. Among those worthy of mention are The Overlord (whose role is much more involved, as opposed to the comics), the six Lords of Death, and the Tenth Champion.
  • Cerebus Retcon: Part of how Challenge from the Dark Side goes Darker and Edgier.
  • Charged Attack: Every character uses charge motions for their moves, unless, of course, you buy a Sega Activator.
  • Circus Brat: Jetta Maxx.
  • Clarke's Third Law: Xavier Pendragon's abilities are described in the manual as being based in science, yet perceived as magical.
  • Comic Book Adaptation: In Sonic the Comic. It was one of the most popular non-Sonic Sega strips, producing several storylines and even a summer special. Included a Stable Time Loop plot: the Champions try to prevent the discovery of bio-key technology in the past, but it's one of their pursuers dropping a bio-keyed gun that leads to it being reverse-engineered in the first place.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: Most notably in that it doesn't need any inner strength to use its special attacks.
    • This applies only to the original Genesis game. It got fixed in the sequel. Despite that, however, the AI's difficulty is still off the charts.
  • Content Warnings: Challenge from the Dark Side, in addition to the ESRB's "M" rating, received a special Sega-specific classification known as "Deep Water"; the special rating was supposed to denote games with undeniably adult content, butDark Side is the only game to ever bear this label.
  • Cool Shades: Blade.
    • Parodied with Hooter, who dons a pair of novelty sunglasses whenever he wins a match.
  • Dance Battler: Trident uses Capoeira as part of his fighting style.
  • Darker and Edgier: Challenge from the Dark Side features far more gore than any other game at the time (and more than in a lot of modern games, as well). The story also more or less strips any hope from the proceedings, turning the whole thing into an endless Stable Time Loop and rewriting some of the endings (most notably Trident's) to make them more morally ambiguous.
  • Earn Your Happy Ending
  • Elemental Powers: The Dark Champion utilizes "natural disasters" as part of his fighting style (tornadoes, earthquakes, etc).
  • Finishing Move: And how! The first game featured stage fatalities triggered by landing the killing blow at a specific part of the stage. Challenge from the Dark Side retains these and makes them gorier... then adds a second finisher to each stage and traditional fatalities for each character. Topping things off are the Cinekills: if you beat your opponent to a bloody enough pulp, you'll be treated to a CGI death scene where the Dark Champion kills the poor soul in a blatantly ironic fashion.
  • Fish People: Trident.
  • Fling a Light Into the Future: Ramses' ending.
  • Foot Focus: Jetta, more precisely her introduction segment of the second game's opening CG sequence. The first non-distance view of her is a lingering close-up shot on her bare feet and lower legs standing on a tightrope. The camera quickly pans up her body to Jetta's face as she balances and looks down. The view immediately switches to her first-person view as she stares down... focusing yet again directly on her feet as they step across the rope.
  • Friendly Enemy: The fighters generally don't take the tournament personally, even though it's a life-or-death matter for all of them. Particularly apparent in Slash's ending, since it states that Xavier and the the other fighters taught him quite a bit of the science of their time.
  • The Gambler: Dawson McShane.
  • Giving Radio to the Romans: Slash's ending.
  • Golden Ending: Xavier and/or Raven's in Challenge from the Dark Side.
  • Good Versus Good: The original game. Challenge from the Dark Side adds in a force of evil, however.
  • Gorn: While the first game doesn't really count, Challenge from the Dark Side takes this trope and sprints with it. It's actually quite disturbing at times.
  • Hollywood Cyborg: R.A.X.
  • Hulk Speak: Slash (in the comic adaptation).
  • In Spite of a Nail: In Challenge from the Dark Side, the characters' success often changes the future drastically, yet everyone else still meets their fate in the ending montage. For example, Trident still dies in a battle for the future of Atlantis, even when Slash's ending would ensure that Atlantis and Rome would never have arisen as separate nations.
  • Interspecies Romance: Raven and the Eternal Champion are heavily implied to be a couple in Thanatos' ending.
  • It's a Wonderful Failure: Fail to beat the Eternal Champion in the original game, and you're returned to the moment of your death, but not before being treated to a depressing monologue from the Eternal himself over how disappointed he is in you and how the future is in doubt because of your failure.
    • Fail to beat the Eternal Champion and the Dark Champion in the sequel, and you're treated to a cinematic of your character's death (unless you're playing a hidden character, in which case you'll just get returned to the title screen).
  • Joke Character: The animal characters from Challenge from the Dark Side, and arguably the Senator.
    • Subverted with Hooter, who actually becomes Xavier's familiar if you beat the game with the former or the latter.
  • Karma Houdini: If the Senator wins, he is never imprisoned for any of his crimes, due to turning state's evidence against his enemies; after doing so, he makes millions with tell-all books and speaking deals.
    • Presumably, his tell-all averts the apocalypse by bringing down some of the people and corporations that would have developed the technology which causes it. That seems to be a good enough deed, if entirely by accident.
  • Kung Fu Wizard: Xavier. Just replace "Kung Fu" with "Hapkido Cane Fighting".
  • Large Ham: He never speaks, but the Dark Champion is clearly enjoying himself in the Cinekills. Even the ones where he doesn't laugh.
  • The Mafia: Larcen was a high-ranking member of Chicago's mob scene.
  • Motor Mouth: Xavier in the gamebooks (and the comics as well to an extent).

"They all wish you luck in their different ways. Xavier launches into a long speech and has to be shut up."

  • Ninja: Shadow.
  • Ninja Pirate Zombie Robot: Shadow, Riptide, MidKnight (technically, since he is a vampire due to a virus) and R.A.X. (again technically; he is a cyborg).
  • Nintendo Hard: This game differs significantly from most Fighting Games in its unusual tournament setup. Losses result in not only having to repeat the fight you lost, but the previous fight as well (unless you managed to kill your opponent). Every fighter is quite difficult, and the Eternal Champion himself is extremely difficult. Each time you defeat one of his forms, he renews his health bar, while you get only a fraction of yours back, and if you lose to him, it's Game Over on the spot. It's very challenging to finish the game with even a single character that you've mastered.
  • Our Vampires Are Different: MidKnight, who refuses to kill anyone despite his bloodlust. Subverted if you beat the game with him, as his ending sees him drain the blood of the vampire hunter who would have had killed him.
  • Owl Be Damned: Lampshaded in Hooter's backstory when one of the religious zealots realized that the owl had been present at every witch burning. It didn't end well for Hooter.
  • Palette Swap: Thanatos and the Senator are head-swaps of Xavier and Larcen, respectively.
  • Pirate Girl: Sophia "Riptide" de Medici.
  • Prehistoria: Slash.
  • Reverse Polarity: Raven Gindar, a voodoo priestess who was killed by a Black Magic: using voodoo priest who turned her own White Magic healing spell against her. Interestingly, her Finishing Move does exactly this to the opposing player.
  • Science Hero: Xavier, particularly in the original, is the best example, but many characters (such as Trident, Midknight and Slash) also qualify. Slash is a particularly interesting example, since he not only is a Science Hero in his own right, but he also brings back knowledge from the future characters to his own time, allowing him to invent fire, agriculture and kung fu, among other things.
  • Screw Destiny: The ultimate goal of each of the fighters.
  • Secret Character: Challenge from the Dark Side has nine of them.
  • Sequel Hook: Raven's ending in Challenge from the Dark Side has her not only avoiding her death, but also teaming up with the Eternal Champion to find a way to break the time loop. Unfortunately, the third game never came to be...
    • It's also implied that Xavier, Thanatos and Hooter would have teamed up with the Eternal Champion and Raven, via their endings: Thanatos by becoming the new Kronos, Xavier and Hooter by becoming a time traveling duo.
    • There is also a direct sequel hook, earned by completing the game on the hardest difficulty. Additionally, on that difficulty, you actually get to play -as- the Eternal Champion for the final boss fight, regardless of who you had selected. Sadly, as detailed above, the third game never came to be.
  • Set Right What Once Went Wrong: The goal of every single character in the game, as well as the Eternal Champion, even if he DOES demand a brutal fight to see if they deserve it.
  • Ship Tease: The comic adaptation has R.A.X. and Shadow, with the former having a crush on the latter (who is secretly flattered by the attention). Meanwhile, the gamebooks have Larcen and Jetta, who "admire each other quite often."
  • Shout-Out: One of Yappy's victory animations bears a striking resemblance to the dance of a certain Beagle.
    • One of Slash's victory animations in the first game almost perfectly mimics Rancid's victory animation from Time Killers. Whether this was intentional or not has yet to be confirmed.
  • Shown Their Work: Despite a few inconsistencies--like an Atlantean knowing Capoeira--it's not often you see videogames actually explaining the background of martial arts. Not even Street Fighter does that.
  • Smoke Out: Shadow can do this (and Teleport Spam with it).
  • Spin-Off: Shadow and Larcen both had spin-off games that assume one of them won the tournament. Shadow's game (X-Perts, for the Genesis) was poorly received; Larcen's (Chicago Syndicate, for the Game Gear) was treated kindly by the critics, but it went largely unnoticed since it was on the Game Gear.
  • Strawman Political: The Senator is the corrupt politician's corrupt politician, neck deep in any and every scandal.
  • Stripperiffic: Shadow's original outfit, which has her in a busty corset, open jacket, nylons and tall black boots. The sequel and X-Perts both give her a green Qipao with black vinyl gloves and boots.
  • Surprise Creepy: The "overkill" on Xavier's level. Surprise! Your character flies into the fire and is instantly burned down to the bones.
    • Arguably every Overkill, Sudden Death and Vendetta move in the sequel. The game could of easily gotten away with a T-rating at worst had the finishing moves been removed.
  • Take That: The Senator character is obviously a dig at anti-gaming politicians, but doesn't he look just a leeetle bit too much like Joe Lieberman?
  • There Can Only Be One
  • They Call Him "Sword": Trident, named for his trident that replaces his arm.
  • Thou Shalt Not Kill: Larcen Tyler to a tee.
  • Trash Talk: Insulting your opponent lowers their Chi meter, which affects how often they can use their special attacks. Using it against the CPU is a waste of your time.
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