Luckily, My Shield Will Protect Me
"Oak and iron, guard me well
Or else I'm dead and doomed to Hell"—Andal Proverb, A Song of Ice and Fire
Metal or wood for personal protection—not those fancy crackly deflecting bubble things.
Historically, shields are a staple of pre-gunpowder warfare, carried in a warrior's off-hand to guard his vital organs and help protect against arrows. Knights are known for carrying large kite shields with their heraldry brightly emblazoned on them, and the Phalanx of the Greeks and Romans uses walls of shields to protect soldiers. Most fictional characters seem to find a BFS or Dual-Wielding to be cooler, deciding that Shields Are Useless, but there are more than a few who swear by a shield to guard themselves!
Shields come in all shapes and sizes (it should be obvious, but somehow isn't, that defences generally are tailored to the expected threats, and small shields are better for active blocking against a highly mobile skirmisher with light weapon, while large ones make better cover against ranged attacks), and can be made out of anything from wood to Unobtainium to pure energy. Sometimes they're paired with a sword or other one-handed weapon, but oddly often they're used on their own—the mark of a Technical Pacifist, Improbable Weapon User or someone who just got screwed by the armoury. Bashing someone with a shield is actually a historical use of shields, and in RPGs this usually serves to stun or knock back a foe. Throwing your shield is also another useful attack.
Shields are also good for riding on. They can also have other designs emblazoned on them, such as faces.
Not to be confused with Character Shield or Luckily, My Powers Will Protect Me (although one may shout "Luckily my shield will protect me!" to invoke the latter trope). Somewhat similar to Deployable Cover.
Shields in film and fiction tend to be far more durable and effective than contemporary accounts would suggest. In the Iliad, warriors are regularly described thrusting their spears right through their opponents' shields. Norse sagas generally describe warriors' round shields being battered to pieces after a few minutes of combat. The Romans, meanwhile, preferred to disable their enemies' shields by throwing pilum javelins into them, which would bend on impact and prove very hard to pull out, making the shields too cumbersome to use. But none of this is much seen in modern entertainment.
Medieval shields frequently sported colorful coats of arms, and movie directors have duly taken full advantage of that fact to make their heroes' armor more spectacular. Less commonly seen in fiction has been the historical use of shields to carry people living or dead. Many ancient Germanic tribes inaugurated a new king by raising him on a shield. Spartan mothers proverbially warned their sons to come back with their shields or on them, because dead men were carried on their shields. (Coming back "with" your shield, on the other hand, supposedly proved you had faced battle bravely, because a fleeing man would always throw away his heavy shield).
This is, rather surprisingly, often an anachronism even when placed into Renaissance- or Reformation-era stories. Once plate armor became common, most forms of large shield were on the outs, since they were now redundant in protecting the legs. Shield walls were made obsolete by mobile pike formations, as well as polearms used against them, that could be also used to pry away (or sometimes circumvent) shields, though pikes led to another shield based tactic: Rodeleros were named after steel round shields they used to swat aside pike heads (as alternative to polearms and two-handed swords, paired with a sword more agile than those, and at least some protection from ranged weapons); they performed well against mixed pike-and-shot formations, but fresh and well-trained pike squares (Swiss at the Battle of Seminara) could crush them, and they lacked Anti-Cavalry defences of pike or polearm. And then the age of pikes ended, but rodela didn't die, only shrank. The Renaissance-era shield, the buckler, is often derided in fantasy settings and tabletop settings as the bargain-bin shield, but it's actually the most advanced of the lot. In fact, despite rarely being depicted using those, the buckler is where the Swashbuckler gets his name from.
Aversions to this trope are Shields Are Useless.
Anime & Manga
- Mobile Suit Gundam carries a body shield. It serves as a sort of inanimate Red Shirt; we know the situation is getting serious whenever part of the shield is blown off. Eventually however, the solid shields are mostly replaced with Beam Shields, which are basically Laser Blades shaped like shield sections rather than sword blades. Crops up a lot in the alternate Gundam universes as well.
- All of the Gundams in Gundam Wing have shields with varying levels of offensive capacity. Wing's is occasionally used as a punching weapon (and Wing Zero's has a pneumatic tip to facilitate this), Deathscythe's can function as a flying beam drill, Heavyarms' has its beam Gatlings built into it, Sandrock's has blinding lamps inside and can combine with its shotels to form a crushing claw, Shenlong's was thrown a few times, and Epyon's (as well as Spiritual Successor Tallgeese III's) mounts its heat rod.
- The Mercurius Mobile Suit also has one of these, having a Beam Saber shooting out in the middle of the shield.
- Gundam SEED and Gundam SEED Destiny had them aplenty, starting with Strike Gundam and going from there until they start introducing mobile suit portable energy shields at the end of Destiny. Infinite Justice has its cake and eats it too with the "beam carry shield", a solid shield that mounts a beam shield emitter (as well as a grappling claw and a beam boomerang that is occasionally used as a shield-mounted sword).
- Before the Infinite Justice, the Victory 2 Gundam of Mobile Suit Victory Gundam had the Mega Beam Shield as part of its Assault armor mode.
- Shinn actually used the Impulse's shield as a weapon during his duel with Kira, throwing it at the Freedom - then firing his beam rifle at it to attack from a strange angle.
- Kyrios and Exia in Gundam 00 both carry shields with integrated weapons. Exia's has a gun with an attached sword blade while Kyrios's has a scissor claw built in.
- Aside from Exia's Blade Below the Shoulder /shield combo, it also occasionally carries a regular shield in its other arm. Exia's successor 00 Gundam initially carried a shield made up of two connected GN Katars, but eschews them when he gets the 0 Raiser with its GN Field.
- In Mobile Suit Gundam: The 08th MS Team when Shiro would have died if not for his MS' shield absorbing the blow, he even says "I am saved..."
- This series is particularily notable for having one of the weirdest shield designs out there. In contrast to the enormous riotshields used by most Gundams, the MS here use what appears to be a buckler with the back end of a clawhammer attached.
- The strange design allows the bottom part (the "clawhammer") to dig into the ground and stick straight up, just high enough to double as a level for the various high-powered long range weapons.
- While it is incredibly small for a MS shield, it's big enough to protect their hover truck, which they do near the end, protecting it from a super-hot shockwave from the Apsaulus.
- Even though it's rarely shown, the Maxter Gundam's surfboard also doubles as a shield.
- All of the Gundams in Gundam Wing have shields with varying levels of offensive capacity. Wing's is occasionally used as a punching weapon (and Wing Zero's has a pneumatic tip to facilitate this), Deathscythe's can function as a flying beam drill, Heavyarms' has its beam Gatlings built into it, Sandrock's has blinding lamps inside and can combine with its shotels to form a crushing claw, Shenlong's was thrown a few times, and Epyon's (as well as Spiritual Successor Tallgeese III's) mounts its heat rod.
- In Rave Master, the shield is one of the most used forms of Musica's Silver Necklace.
- On a similar note, Elsa's Adamantine Armor in the anime sports a huge shield capable of parrying even Wave Motion Gun rays.
- Wendi's Riding Board in Magical Girl Lyrical Nanoha is a Swiss Army Weapon that can be used as a surfboard with flight capabilities, a BFG with modifiable ammo, and yes, a massive, human-sized shield.
- Shiryu's shield in Saint Seiya, which was said to be the strongest in the world, but which was broken several times by strong enough opponents. Hyoga had one too, but wasn't used much.
- Let's not forget the two shields included in the Libra Golden Cloth, shall we? These were both shields and weapons, since you could flail them around by their chains and handles as well. Seiya uses one of them to demolish one of Poseidon's pillars, after all
- The Tower of Druaga seems to love shields. The main character specializes in them. In the first season he has some kind of shield which sticks a spike into the ground to stabilize itself and in the second season he gets a buckler that folds up when not in use. Also, armies of the Kingdom seem to use Phalanx-inspired tactics and often set up rows of shields. All of these shields often get enhanced by mages, becoming some kind of Deflector Shields hybrid (when you're blocking a dragon who can just step over you a normal sized shield isn't too useful), but the strength of the shield holder is always emphasized, rather than the power of the magic.
- Lancelot, Suzaku's mech, uses an energy shield in Code Geass. Early in the second season, Lelouch gets a Crowning Moment of Awesome when he accepts Guilford's challenge to a duel, naming a riot shield as his weapon, then causes the plate they're standing on to collapse and surfs the shield down it to safety. The scene was iconic enough that the action figure of Zero's Burai comes with the riot shield in addition to its normal weapons.
- The Valkyries in the Macross franchise start to include buckler-ish shields from the VF-11 Thunderbolt onwards. They are typically reinforced by the fighters' pinpoint barrier system, and doubles as a knife sheath for the VF-25 while the VF-27's conceals a forearm blade. But these pale in comaparison to the Macross Quarter, whose entire carrier deck is used as a shield in its mech mode, and in addition to reinforcing it with the pinpoint barrier it also conceals missile launcher destroids specifically for pulling off the MACUROSSU ATTACKKU!!
- Neon Genesis Evangelion took this to its logical extreme during the sniper battle against Ramiel, with the only thing protecting unit 01 from the angel's wave motion gun being a shield carried by unit 00 (a shield that in the TV series used to be the bottom of a space shuttle)
- Kamichama Karin - The resident talking cat can transform into a Greek-looking shield which can reflect other people's attacks.
- Gallantmon/Dukemon, Guilmon's strongest form in Digimon Tamers, holds a lance in one hand and a shield in the other...and the shield fires an enormous energy beam as part of his Finishing Move. Shield of the Just!
- "Iron Wall" Pearl in One Piece deserves a mention: he's entirely covered in shields of various size, and even uses a pair with metal studs to attack. Thanks to said shield cover, he hasn't bleed in more than 61 fights.
- The Castleof Cagliostro: The Interpol troopers make good use of their riot shields.
Comic Books
- Captain America (comics) is well known for his signature round shield in an American Flag motif. It's one of the most nearly indestructible objects in the Marvel universe, made of an accidental mix of alloys that no one has ever been able to replicate. Cap has the ability to throw the shield as a weapon, making it ricochet off multiple foes and objects before returning to his hand.
- Cap started with a triangle shield, but this was switched out for the round one because of possible infringement on another wartime superhero (who was imaginatively called The Shield). He's gotten it back a few times, and its appearance is usually a Continuity Nod to his WWII career.
- Cap has been deprived of his Unobtanium shield for several periods. Most notably, during Mark Waid's run it was replaced by a photonic gizmo in his glove, which allowed him to create an energy shield as well as other weapons.
- The improbability of his boomerang skills are frequently lampshaded when others try to do the same: US Agent needed lessons from super-skill copyist Taskmaster, and Vance Astro of the 31st century had to practice for months before he got the hang of throwing it, much less getting it to return.
- Night Thrasher of the New Warriors occasionally uses his skateboard as a shield. A retractable blade is built into the nose, but otherwise it's mostly used for defense. The Punisher, of all people, commented:
"I called it stupid? It serves as a shield, a weapon and transport. Maybe I should get one."
- Paperinik's shield doubles as a weapon. It doubles as a lot of different weapons, actually, and a jet-pack, and some various other gadgets and whatever else could be cramed into the thing.
- In the comic book series Bone, Smiley Bone has the talent of picking a shield up exactly one second before the Annoying Arrows hit him.
Film
- 300 features a moment where Leonidas explains the importance of shields in the Spartan phalanx. The film also features the famous line of Spartan wives, "Return with your shield or on it." Dead Spartans were carried back home on their shields, while fleeing soldiers typically dropped their shields so they could run faster. Essentially their own wives told them to die before fleeing.
- Alexander features the Macedonian phalanx, which incorporates shields.
- The Asterix and Obelix versus Cesar film has Detritus ordering his Roman legionnaires to use the turtle formation: the soldiers form a tight square, cover every single side with their shields, and charge forward. However, this being Asterix, the titular heroes plow through the "turtles" like a hot knife through butter.
- Braveheart features a scene in which Scottish soldiers hide under their shields during an arrow barrage.
- The 13th Warrior features a ritualized duel between two Norsemen in which each combatant is given three wooden shields. Whenever a warrior's shield is splintered, he can stop to take another one. Once you're out of shields, the expectation is that you're doomed. It doesn't quite work out this way.
- In Mortal Kombat Johnny Cage uses a blade-rimmed shield to defend angainst Scorpion's fiery breath, then uses it to hack him to pieces.
- In How to Train Your Dragon, trainees for dragon fighting are taught that their shield is their most important asset, and given the choice between a weapon and a shield, they should always go for the shield.
- In 28 Days Later, Frank barricades himself at the top of an apartment building and fights off infected in full riot gear, complete with shield.
- Troy features a great deal of shield use. Achilles assumes a number of fighting positions that interlocks his spear and shield, which has a notch cut into it for this purpose.
- Used with spectacular success in Dragonslayer, where Galen protects himself from the dragon Vermithrax's fiery breath with a shield fashioned of dragon scales.
- The Phantom Menace shows Gungan personal energy shield. A frame the size of a riot shield with a Deflector Shields emitter that gives some protection from physical attacks and, more importantly, blaster fire. And it doesn't just stop or dissipate blaster bolts, which would release their energy close to the soldier, but reflects them back. Seeiing how blasters are the most powerful of common small arms in Star Wars[1] - it's strange that this technology wasn't widely adopted, being by far the most efficient protection from blasters seen on screen.
Literature
- In the Star Trek Expanded Universe novel The Sword of Kahless, Chancellor Martok and his Ferengi friend are arming themselves for a battle against Martok's illegitimate son who has taken over the Klingon government. The Ferengi is shown to a separate rack that includes an old-fashioned round shield. Martok explains that this is the gear of a shield-bearer, although he adds that the shield-bearers would often be themselves used as shields. Subverted in that the shield fails to protect the Ferengi from a disruptor shot aimed at Martok when he jumps to protect the Chancellor. While this is because he simply fails to raise the shield in time, it is likely an antique shield would do little against a high-powered disruptor shot.
- Conn Iggulden's Emperor books are set during the Roman Empire, and a major part of Roman tactics is the legionaries bunching up, presenting a wall of shields to counter enemy archers.
- Cozards in The Ancestral Trail at one point use a very similar technique to protect themselves against killer bees.
Live Action TV
- In the new BBC show Merlin, the evil (and inappropriately named) Sir Valiant uses forbidden magic to cheat in the tournament by enchanting the snakes painted on his shield to come to life and bite his opponent.
- Deadliest Warrior
- The Spartan's shield was dubbed the most lethal weapon in a contest between a Spartan hoplite and a ninja, scoring even more kills than the Spartan's spear. Much complaining ensued.
- William Wallace's team brought in a Targe with a big ass metal spike in it. As awesome as it sounds.
- Wolzard / Koragg has a shield with the eye of an Eldritch Abomination Big Bad implanted in it. He keeps it (or a red version of it) after turning good, minus the eye.
- The original Megazord used the Mastodon's head as a shield. The Turbo and Astro Megazords also carried shields. As does the Samurai Megazord.
- Kamen Rider Double's CycloneJokerXtreme form has, apart from the Prism Sword, the Bicker Shield, which can either power up its companion sword, fire a powerful laser, or create a larger Deflector Shield.
- Averted in Flashpoint, where the Strategic Response Unit frequently uses extremely heavy ballistic shields for protection in high-powered weapon situations. The officer carrying them is restricted to a handgun, but they have been frequently shown to stop anything up to a rifle bullet.
Myths and Legends
- Perseus using his shield as a mirror in order to kill Medusa without having to look at her is a classic example from Greek mythology.
- The Iliad makes particular mention of shields during various exchanges in the Trojan War, such as this battle between Hector and Ajax Telamonian. They tend to waver between this and Shields Are Useless depending on how badass the enemy is.
[Hector] poised his spear as he spoke, and hurled it from him. It struck the sevenfold shield in its outermost layer- the eighth, which was of bronze- and went through six of the layers but in the seventh hide it stayed. Then Ajax threw in his turn, and struck the round shield of the son of Priam. The terrible spear went through his gleaming shield, and pressed onward through his cuirass of cunning workmanship; it pierced the shirt against his side, but he swerved and thus saved his life.
- In The Bible, Goliath takes his shield-bearer with him for his fight with David. Since Goliath is said to be 9'6 in some versions of the Bible, one imagines that his shield-bearer simply wasn't tall enough to protect Goliath's face from David's sling.
Tabletop Games
- Warhammer 40,000, running with "Warhammer Fantasy In Space" style, got shields.
- Mostly in the Imperium (and by extension forces of Chaos). Imperial Guard uses shields - not commonly, but enough to have specific types mass-produced for it. Arbites (SWAT) have riot shields, sometimes with integrated megaphones, or suppression shields with built-in shockers. Space Marines use their own types of shields, like Storm Shield with built-in forcefield projector. Even the Mechanicus uses shields, such as Sunder Shield with built-in disruption generator (it's a good idea not because shield bash hurts more, but because Power Weapons cancel out, and don't break on parrying each other).
- Necron Lychguards have Dispersion Shields with forcefield that not only stops Power Weapons, but allows to deflect incoming shots at nearby enemies Gungan Personal Energy Shield style.
- In Warhammer 40,000 Roleplay shields work as defensive melee weapons (penalty to attack and bonus to Parry, often greater than for defensive weapons as such), bonus Armor Points (usually for the wielding arm and torso only) and/or cover. Also, specifies that Navy armsmen in boarding action use bigger, tougher shields, that double as hull patches.
- Warhammer Fantasy Battle has shields as basic equipment for most units, though they usually can't be used at the same time as most heavy weapons. Characters have access to some nice magical shields as well. For example, the Skaven have a particularly nice magic item that epitomises the character of the entire race. It's called the 'Cautious Shield'. They hide behind it.
- In Warhammer Fantasy Roleplay, shields are the premier defensive equipment for the adventurer on a budget (i.e., you): They are cheap and grant a free parry once per round with a +10 bonus, which is liable to save your life more often than not. Consequently, most melee fighters in the system without a death wish tend to favour sword and shield over a BFS or Dual-Wielding (which only grants a free parry anyway, but without the +10 bonus).
- Shields are a staple of Dungeons & Dragons, but generally the game mechanics lean in favor Shields Are Useless. Shields are rated as a passive addition to overall armor, providing only a small bonus to armor class. Game mechanics that provide advantages include:
- Magical shields offer an opportunity to double-up on magical enhancement bonuses and often have extra useful tricks.
- Shields can be used as weapons, but do little damage. It's possible to duel-wield two shields, but the armor bonuses don't stack, making this a pointless strategy. Many feats and spells introduced in later books also encourage shield use for Paladins, and make shield bashing a much more viable form of attack.
- Shields can be used as a primary weapon while wielding a smaller weapon in the off hand, dealing only slightly less damage than normal two-weapon builds while granting much better armor.
- Some defensive players use tower shields to give total cover, and shields AC bonus can turn them into Party Tanks.
- Magical enhancements as such as Exceptional Arrow Deflection, Reflecting and Greater Reflection can be pretty good, especially since Reflecting shields can send back spells. Another enchantment causes the shield to float in front of you, basically making it free AC for any character.
- Fourth Edition has some melee combat powers for fighters that require the use of shields, which all generally improve the character's ability to tank and control the position of enemies reasonably well. Shields also grant a bonus to Reflex now, which is usually a tank's weakness.
- The Pathfinder variant also includes a wide set of feats to make shield combat effective, up to letting you use shields to outright deflect spells that have to be aimed. The shield will still be affected by the spell in question, but if you can catch a disintegrate on your shield and then toss it rather than get vaporized yourself it's what is technically known as a good deal.
- In GURPS shields are extremely useful before the advent of guns, giving a bonus to all forms of defense when used properly. Against anyone with a gun (or laser) the shield just becomes a liability due to its weight.
- Yu-Gi-Oh!: Big Shield Gardna. Notably, the shield not only protects against most any attack a four-star monster can throw at it, but, as a one-time bonus, can defend against magic, including, but not limited to mind control. (This was even more useful back when Change of Heart was still allowed 1-per-deck.)
- Exalted takes this trope and, like so many others, takes it to extremes of awesomeness. Shields in general improve one's ability to parry attacks, but carry with them a penalty to mobility. Then, however, you get into artifact Thunderbolt Shields, which even in their as-issued state provide huge defense bonuses and have no penalty to mobility (indeed, they IMPROVE mobility). And finally, there's the shield of the Unconquered Sun, which if lent confers TOTAL INVINCIBILITY.
- Magic: The Gathering has several Artifacts that are shields. These either increase the Toughness of a creature, or prevent damage to a creature or player in some way.
- Except for the Pariah's Shield, which does the exact opposite.
- Shields in the Fighting Fantasy gamebooks can protect you, the player, in a number of different ways depending on which book you're playing through. Sometimes you get a bonus to your combat skill to reflect the shield's ability to protect you from enemy attacks, while others reduced the amount of damage you actually took in combat. Some shields also protected you from specific hazards that could easily kill you if you couldn't defend yourself properly.
- Stars Without Number has Primitive Shield (useless vs. weapon of Tech Level 3 and up) and Force Pavis (a force disc projector with handle, that and works against all sorts of small arms). Unlike in Dungeons & Dragons, shields in SWN have both decent AC values of their own and small AC bonus in case the user already wears something with equal or better AC.
Video Games
- Used by the Player Character in Avalon Code. While it won't be much use at first, it's pretty much the only way to defeat the Big Bad.
- Kingdom Hearts:
- Goofy uses a shield. The manual states that Goofy despises weapons. Notably, in the first game, many of his shields fall into one of two categories: those meant for defending and those meant for bashing.
- One of the options for a tutorial weapon in the first game is a shield, which you use to smack your enemies around. It is also representative of the "path of the guardian" during the Awakening (Dive to the Heart) sequence.
- Vexen's weapon in Chain of Memories is a giant shield. It also has five huge spikes, the longest of which is pointing upwards, and longer than his head. Considering how he wields it, the shield can be used for punch-stabbing.
- In Kingdom Hearts II Final Mix+, Vexen's shield can by synthesized as a weapon for Goofy.
- Among The Heartless, you have Defenders, who utilize shields as their main weapon, which Goofy can also wield.
- Bloodline Champions has a very large shield for the Vanguard bloodline. Used for their Shield-Bash and Reflect ability.
- City of Heroes recently introduced the long-awaited Shield Defence powerset for melee classes (except Stalkers, who hides behind a shield?), meaning that Blue Steel, local Memetic Badass and superhero cop, can finally be represented in-game. The shields usable by players are heavily customisable.
- For a long time the fan theory for Blue Steel was that his attacks were Shield Offense but this was stated not to be the case by Word of God
- The paladin of Etrian Odyssey uses a shield, which is visually more prominent than his sword. The shield is used for most of the paladin's special abilities, particularly when it is used as a weapon for the powerful Smite attack.
- Might not be all that significant, but in Vandal Hearts, one of the few classes to use a shield was the 'Hero' class, solely used by our hero, Ash. (Popular name amongst heroes, come to think of it... wonder if it's worth a trope.) For the most part, it's just a basic Kite Shield, which nonetheless helps make him one of the best units in the game, since it affords him good protection without limiting his mobility, the way the Big Frackin' Shields of the Defender-class does... but when/if you upgrade him to the Game Breaker 'Vandal' class, he replaces it with an umbrella-like green forcefield shield that pops out of his left hand at will.
- Link from The Legend of Zelda series has a series of different shields in each game, able to deflect increasingly powerful attacks. The shield became very prominent in the move to 3D, with some games including puzzles that can only be solved through some use of the shield. Twilight Princess repositions the shield button so that it only activates while targeting an enemy, but also lets you gain a Shield-Bash move to stun the enemy and leave them open to attack. Skyward Sword changed the shield mechanics significantly: you can put out your shield any time you have your sword out, but you have to thrust it out with proper timing to actually deflect an attack—simply holding it out prevents damage, but will still cause you to stagger and damages your shield.
- The RTS game Metal Fatigue had various shield based arms which could be added to the customizable Humongous Mecha the game was based around.
- Two shields, to be precise: the Neuropa K-Shield which looks like a huge riot shield and protects against kinetic weapons as well as the buckler-like Rimtech Power Shield which protects against energy weapons.
- In World of Warcraft, Both Paladins and Warriors can use shields. The former can throw them Captain America style, and the latter can use them to stun enemies. They are also wildly variable in size and style, from bucklers to giant, spiky slabs of iron.
- In fact, for paladins and warriors specialized in protection, many of their signature moves can't be done without shields, and Dual-Wielding shields has been requested for paladins by a vocal minority of players.
- Additionally in order to avert Shields Are Useless for a tanking Warrior or Paladin their shield provides a very large percentage of their armor compared to other items. For example the current top level plate chest pieces have a base armor of 2756 while the equivalent level shield has a base armor value of 9262.
- As far as blocking with shields go as one of 3 defensive mechanics, it's fairly common (both classes can greatly increase their chance to block with tanking abilities) but only reduces the incoming damage by a certain amount whereas dodge and parry negate all of it. Blocking tends to be more effective against many weak attacks as a result.
- Prior to the Northrend expansion drastically changing shield mechanics, the amount of damage mitigated by blocking was absolutely pathetic, but it served another purpose. Blocks out-prioritized crushing blows on an enemy's hit roll, turning what would have been an extra-damage hit that could instantly smash a tank's entire HP bar into a mostly normal hit that could be survived.
- Shields are also used by Shamans of certain builds, as well, although they almost never use them to actually block blows and are valued for their spellcasting boosts rather than the defensive ones, although all shields provide a significant armor boost.
- In a rather humorous reversal of the trope, while death knights are designed and balanced around using either a BFS or Dual-Wielding to tank, it's not uncommon to hear bad players lament or even blame their personal deficiencies on the class's inability to use shields.
- In Warcraft III, the Footman unit could use his shield to greatly reduce damage taken from ranged enemies, though this also slows it. Several other units have shields but do not have defensive abilities like these.
- In the Brood War expansion for StarCraft, Medics come equipped with a shield. Compared to other Terran infantry, Medics are the most durable of the lot, though not by much.
- Starcraft II's Marines have the option to be upgraded with combat shields which increase overall hp by 10.
- Shields in Final Fantasy XI can be used by Paladins to smack an enemy in the face, with the job also having a bonus while blocking with it, and a spell to boost the blocking rate as well as reflect damage back to the enemy. There's even an Infinity Plus One Shield, which isn't as mind-numbingly bad to get compared to the other relics. Other classes can use some shields as well, although Dual-Wielding is normally favored instead of using a shield.
- There are several kinds of shields in RuneScape, including one that protects the user from Dragon breath, and it's upgraded version, which can store the breath and throw it again against the opponent.
- One of the weapons of Zero in Mega Man Zero is a shield that he could also throw like a certain captain's mighty shield.
- The various forms of Sniper Joe in the Mega Man classic series carry big shields that deflect anything you can throw at them.
- Proto Man, alias Blues and Break Man, is another well known shield user. In 9 and 10 where he is playable, he can actually block any shots provided it hits him while airborne and (and facing in the right direction). And in 7, he actually lends Mega Man the shield, which blocks all attacks as long as Mega Man is standing still, although he can't fire while running while he has it equiped.
- Turtle Tamers in the Kingdom of Loathing can use their shield as a weapon with the Shieldbutt skill. And if they have the "Hero of the Half Shell" skill, the shield dramatically reduces the damage inflicted (by using the primary stat Muscle in place of Moxie for defence when calculating damage).
- Kanji in Persona 4 smacks enemies with large objects, including pieces of wood, school desks and steel riot shields. One particular weapon, the Death Scuderro, is, in fact, a round shield with a spike in the center of it. However, none of the weapons are used for protection, as the character much prefers to smash things with them, or throw them really hard at things.
- When told to guard, Kanji will drop his shield and protect himself by crossing his arms. Smart one, Kanji.
- A number of RPGs allow characters to wield two shields. This is incredibly useless for physical attackers, and notoriously close to Game Breaker status for magic casting characters. Notable examples include Final Fantasy 3, 4 and 6, most of the Phantasy Star games as well as older NES games such as the Bard's Tale.
- Lenneth Valkyrie from Valkyrie Profile uses two shields and a sword. The shields bob in the air around her, allowing her to hold her sword with two hands. Lenneth can even use a bow with those floating shields!
- In one of the Ultima games, it was possible to give a character two spiked shields and a spiked helmet, for three (weak) attacks.
- One peculiar shield in Final Fantasy IV: The After Years, the Adamant Shield, is usable by all characters in the game, including those who can't normally use shields. Those characters who can wield two weapons have the option of using two of these shields. While this cripples the attack of the two ninjas who can do this, the monks are still perfectly capable of punching at full strength even while equipping a pair of these shields. Given the massive stat benefits of this shield, it's actually a useful tactic - if you managed to grind enough to get two of them, that is.
- Ancient Domains of Mystery, too, allows the character to wield two shields. The shields mostly give bonuses to DV, which causes attacks to miss or be blocked, but most of them also have a small PV bonus, which is deduced from damage actually taken. When two shields are wielded, attacking is impossible, but spellcasting isn't - and it isn't hindered by armour in any way, either.
- Dual-Wielding shields is one of the most viable ways to use the Viking class in Final Fantasy III and the Master Monk of Final Fantasy Tactics A2 - the former's specialty is drawing physical attacks towards itself, and the latter has optimal attack when bare-handed - and using two shields counts as being bare handed.
- Speaking of Final Fantasy Tactics A2, Dual-Wielding a certain set of shields can be game breaking for Black Mages. Equipping the Fire Shield (absorbs fire), the Frost Shield (absorbs ice), and the Thunder Robes (absorbs lightning) means that a Black Mage can heal himself with his highly damaging spells. Area of effect often means a close range Black Mage can deal damage and heal at the same time, and the two shields make being in close range a lot more viable.
- A pair of villains in the second half of Tales of Hearts are twin robots. One of them uses a pair of cleavers. The other one wields two shields, and uses them to defend himself while casting powerful spells. Of course you fight them both at once.
- There are shields aplenty in Puzzle Quest, but only the Broken Shield actually protects from direct attack damage (and even then at a 10% rate). The rest do things like inflict damage on opponents with every attack, temporarily boost our attack or spell resistance stats, fill your mana gauges, or restore health.
- In PQ2, shields (from lowly Bucklers to the mighty [Templar-only] Tower Shields) add to your overall defensive stats and add a temporary additional boost when used in battle.
- Sophitia and Cassandra use shields and shortswords in Soul Calibur. Several moves (moreso with Cassandra than Sophitia) involve hitting enemies with the shield. Oh, Lizardman also carries a shield from Soul Calibur II to IV.
- In Soul Calibur V, Sophitia is succeeded by her children Patroklos and Pyrrha. Naturally, they both use shields. Lizardman drops his shield in favor of Dual-Wielding axes in this game, however.
- In Fire Emblem games, Paladins and knights may or may not carry shields depending on the game. For knights/Armors (slow, heavily armored foot soldiers) from the GBA games, the shield is actually their massive breastplate, which comes off and can be carried in the hand for some reason. The RNG can make those shields either useless or unbreakable. Armors and Soliders in Radiant Dawn and the DS installments also block attacks as their 'Miss' animation.
- The Fire Emblem in the first and third game (and their remakes) is an Ancestral Shield.
- In Fire Emblem: Gaiden, characters have the option to equip a shield for extra defense, instead of a more powerful weapon or accessory.
- The Hero class unit gets a shield, and has extra defense stats over the Swordmaster to go with it. They don't do much with them, though, aside from throwing them into their air for their critical hits in the GBA games: judging from the rest of their attack animation, it also either doubles as a sheath for their sword or they hold their swords behind their shields. They do block in Mystery of the Emblem and in the DS titles as their 'Miss' animation though.
- Only a handful of classes in Atlantica Online can use a shield. Other classes carry different things in the same slot, such as ammo for ranged and orbs for casters.
- Final Fantasy went back and forth on shields. Cecil and Kain in IV carry shields (for lack of alternatives) while most games make them optional or provide abilities that discards the shield for dual-wielding or two-handed usage of one weapon. In Final Fantasy Tactics A2, it's possible to carry shields (which boost evasion and sometimes other stats) in both hands, which is surprisingly effective for monks. As one encounter demonstrates, this can also be used for mages to absorb all three main elements.
- Final Fantasy VI had possibly the most useful shields in the series, given that they not only boosted characters' evasion, but also gave substantial defense bonuses as well. They would be even more useful in the original if the Evade stat actually did anything.
- The SRPG Gladius has the Myrmidon, who has a skill pool devoted almost entirely to shield use (including the ability to throw their shield a la Captain America for large amounts of damage), as well as special, sometimes rather powerful, shields that only they can use. The downside to this is shields have durability in this game, and if the shield breaks it is gone for good, so one may end up having to spend a lot of money re-equiping the Myrmidon, and once their shield is broken, the Myrmidon is pretty much crippled for the fight. That said, there are unbreakable shields for the Myrmidon. Once you get those, only very specific skills can ever disarm them.
- Most Knight Borgs in Gotcha Force wield shields as well as their weapon of choice. The Imperial and Dark Knights, however, wield two shields, with extendable swords inside.
- Team Fortress 2 has the Sniper able to unlock the Razorback, an Aboriginal-styled wooden shield (with a car battery taped to it) that protects him from the Spy's Back Stab.
- Rather counter-intuitively, the Razorback is actually the most frail "weapon" in the game, as weapons don't break and the Razorback shatters when stabbed. As a result, the real reason Snipers use the item is not the fact that it extends their lifespan by one stab; it's the paralyzing electric shock it delivers to the overzealous spook.
- Even then, competent Spies will just resort to the Revolver or Ambassador instead of the Knife.
- The Sniper now gets the thematically-named Darwin's Danger Shield, which simply gives a moderate health bonus.
- The Demoman's second unlock is the Chargin' Targe, and while it does often protection to the Demoman, it requires... other incentives in order to make the average Scotsman choose it over a weapon.
- Rather counter-intuitively, the Razorback is actually the most frail "weapon" in the game, as weapons don't break and the Razorback shatters when stabbed. As a result, the real reason Snipers use the item is not the fact that it extends their lifespan by one stab; it's the paralyzing electric shock it delivers to the overzealous spook.
"If I were to pick up this cowering-plate, I would have to put down my second sword," a Scotsman thinks. "And surely that is madness." The Chargin' Targe solves this riddle by turning the useless shield into a deadly weapon you can run at people with and then bludgeon to death.
- In other words, it has a large spike protruding from the centre. When the charge is stretched out to its maximum duration, an actual shield bash for 50 damage (characters' HP ranges from 125 to 300) is performed. The charge itself also critboosts any weapon attack done immediately after, which at 195 damage for a melee attack kills all but two classes from full HP.
- There's now also the Splendid Screen, a smaller shield which provides less protection (only 1/2 the fire resistance and 3/8 the explosive resistance of the Targe) but can do damage with a charge from any distance, does 85 damage instead of 50 and guarantees a critical hit with a melee weapon on a successful bash.
- Ragnarok Online has shields available for all of their classes... although some are restricted to certain classes. Paladins can use a skill called "shield boomerang" (no points for guessing what it does). This trope is played straight as it is possible to become immune to all magic if you add some phlebotinum to your shield.
- The shield is one of the most prominent mechanics of Urban Chaos: Riot Response. You are essentially invincible so long as you keep the shield up between you and anything trying to kill you, although many players prefer not using the shield as it makes the game too easy.
- In Gears of War players can metal retractable shields that blocks all bullets. It also blocks large and non-humanoid enemies from passing in single player and hoard mode.
- In the second game players can also use fallen enemies as human shields, but they eventually break apart if shot enough.
- In the first Red Faction players get a riot shield.
- In Heroes of Might and Magic V, some units use shields to reduce damage taken from enemy ranged attacks. Some can even use it to protect nearby allies and use them offensively by smacking them into the face of the enemy, stunning them.
- In Castlevania: Symphony of the Night, Alucard can use various shields—activating them blocks missile attacks, and some of them can be used for magic attacks with the "Shield Rod" or "Mablung Sword" weapons. In the hands of a savvy player, the Alucard Shield turns this into Luckily My Shield Will Win The Whole Game For Me.
- To elaborate: when you use the Shield Rod or Mablung Sword with the Alucard Shield, your shield gains an unblockable Collision Damage attack that does ludicrously high damage, heals you with every hit, restores your hearts (subweapon ammo) and gives you several seconds of invincibility. Well thought-out, it wasn't.
- Olaf the Stout from The Lost Vikings is armed with only a shield. In the first game, the wooden shield was able to stop stone blocks the size of Olaf himself provided the shield was facing the right way. In the second, it was changed to titanium, with an added feature to allow Olaf to shrink to squeeze through passages. In both games, the shield doubled as a hang glider and a temporary platform. Olaf remains the only character in both games who is unable to attack enemies.
- Riesbyfe Stridberg of Melty Blood uses a giant cello-shaped shield as her main weapon, although the shield is big and sharp enough to be a BFS.
- An important feature in Dwarf Fortress, with realistic mechanics: they provide a way for the wearer block an attack entirely rather than reducing damage. Also, learning how to use a shield is a separate skill from both weapons and armor use.
- However, less realistically, adventure mode players can equip 20 or more shields, each with a chance of blocking every attack.
- Modern Warfare 2 added the Riot Shield as a weapon. It can be used to both deflect bullets and bash enemies into submission, but it takes up a whole weapon slot, is vulnerable to explosive weapons and can be tough to use on more open maps. Strangely, although it is bulletproof (mostly), it is a clear shield. Most real-life man-portable shields rated to deflect gunfire are the opaque type with the small viewing port. These are usually referred to as Ballistic shields.
- And even then, virtually no hand-held shield in Real Life can stop rifle rounds - they'd be too heavy.
- Diablo II, in respect of being a Fantasy RPG, features shields. Notably, the Paladin class has a few abilities that require their use.
- Crisis Zone as well as it's Spiritual Sequel Razing Storm give the player a riot shield to defend from enemy attacks. Said shield can completely defend the player from More Dakka, Beam Spam, Ramming from a Humongous Mecha, Macross Missile Massacre, Wave Motion Guns, and loose concrete.
- In Vandal Hearts 2, amongst the weapon classes, "shield" is a separate class. They mostly fill into the Boring but Practical role as shields increase blocking capability tremendously (even against arrows/projectiles). Some shields have spikes studded in them, but are heavy like lead and cumbersome. Then you get the Killer Shield, which is like the aforementioned spiked shield, except much lighter in weight. And then, you can get the Zebra Shield, which teaches you the very rare Re-Animator skill.
- In Prototype the first of Alex's two defensive powers gives him a shield of biomass. It shatters after taking a certain amount of damage and experiences some downtime regenerating. That said, since it outright blocks damage and doesn't affect Alex's diverolling, unlike the Armour that reduces, it isn't completely obsolete.
- Prototype 2 now gives Heller two shields. He is unable to move when using them however they are now indestructible and if timed right send the rockets right back at the them.
- Certain Mooks in the Metal Slug series carry large metal shields that can take several pistol rounds before breaking. They panic once the shield's gone, so you can finally kill them.
- The X-Men Legends and Marvel Ultimate Alliance games have shielded enemies who cannot be damaged so long as they're holding their shields, so you have to run up and tear it out of their hands.
- Shields are prominently used by melee fighters in Titan Quest. They give the wielder the ability to block a portion of damage from the occasional blow. The Defender class is also specifically meant to wield a shield both for offense and defense.
- Like the Dwarf Fortress example above, Final Fantasy XII shields do not boost defense, but rather evasion—since you can equip as well armor with a very high defensive stat, plus certain weapons and accessories that boost your evasion even more, well...you can see where this is heading.
- Except for enemies (read: any monster where a high evasion would be helpful) that can ignore evasion, making shields useless sans their added effects & magic evasion.
- Also like those two, RuneScape's shields make the enemy hitting less likely rather than reducing damage taken as well. It's kind of an aversion, though, since all armour does only that. Until late 2010, at least, when actual damage reduction mechanics were added - and even those work only on 200+ damage hits. Most monsters can't even hit that hard.
- The Warrior of Light, Dissidia's combination Knight in Shining Armor-Cape, is one of only two members of the cast to retain a shield. Very rarely is it actually used to guard attack, though; our buddy WoL seems to be taking cues from another well-known cape and using it as a projectile weapon more than anything.
- Firion, meanwhile, has a small buckler. He doesn't use it to bash enemies with, however. Instead, he uses it to invoke a Beehive Barrier to block and counter attacks with.
- Dragon Age has shields equipable by all classes, but only the warrior gets special skills to use them. As with Dwarf Fortress and Final Fantasy XII shields in DA boosts the chance of avoiding damage rather than reduce damage received. The special abilities include bashing enemies with them, becoming immune to flanking, reducing damage, and further increasing the evasion rate, amongst others.
- Nigh-immunity to knockdown attacks is extremely useful, especially for tanks.
- Dragon Age 2 also has weapon-and-shield as a Warrior build, and when combined with her class talent, a few strategically-placed points in Defender, and a whole-party Arcane Shield buff, Aveline is effectively invincible.
- Demon's Souls allows you to equip anything onto either hands, including two shields. There is a spiked shield that you can use to attack with, but given the difficulty of the game, it's probably better to use a real weapon.
- It is also possible to dual-wield anything in the game, blocking with a shield while doing so has them cowering behind it.
- Mount & Blade allows the equipping of many different kinds of shields, from giant shields as tall and wide as a person, to round shields of varying sizes, to small diamond shaped heater shields. Though you can parry melee blows with any other melee weapon, a shield is your only bet for stopping arrows or couched lances. They also can't be wielded in tandem with any weapon that uses two hands, and, if subject to too much abuse, will break (though they'll be back in your inventory perfectly repaired after the battle). They can't be used as weapons either, somewhat unusually for a game that otherwise is pretty accurate to medieval warfare - several popular mods rectify this by adding a shield bash ability, though.
- The Pokémon series contains a Pokémon called Bastiodon, whose case is unique in that it has a shield as a face. It's in the top 10 for both defensive stats, but all of its other stats are terrible. Sadly, its defensive capabilities are all but destroyed by double weaknesses to two of the most common attacking types in the game, Fighting and Ground.
- Several weapons in the Monster Hunter series come with a shield (Sword and Shield, Lance, Gunlance, optional on the Heavy Bowgun, the Greatsword can double as a shield in a pinch), which can be incredibly useful especially when paired with the right skills/items (Guard skill + Mega Juice). This can lead to the "turtling" tactic for lances and gunlances. Of course, having the shield is no guarantee of safety since Vespoid will hit you from behind, or you get hit by an unblockable attack, or your stamina runs out, etc. Basically, like everything else in Monster Hunter, it all depends on the player's skill.
- Of course the alternative is having no shield at all and for most players, that is not exactly a good proposition because without one, even a full life bar goes down rather quickly.
- The Front Mission series has shields as one of the more common pieces of Wanzer equipment, but they're mounted to the shoulders. Pretty useful, since quite a few of the available arms didn't have hands.
- One of the later transformations of the Wii version of A Boy and His Blob version is a shield which deflects enemy projectiles and some of the enemies themselves.
- La-Mulana has a few shields with varying degrees of protection. A few enemies also use shields.
- In Dragon Quest IX, shields are among the strongest skills to learn, and highly recommended to master first, as it makes even your wizards, Fragile Speedsters, and healers noticably durable in pinches. Mastering them allows you to equip one regardless of class, and with one equipped, grants a passive +6% evasion, gives you access to powerful defensive skills like 'Defending Champion' (a 3mp ability that reduces ALL damage taken that turn by roughly 90%), Magic Mirror (a 4mp skill that reflects ALL harmfull spells back at the user for several turns), Holy Impregnable (a skill that protect the user from all status effects for several turns, and Immense Defence (Increases block chance for several turns). Mastering this skill also grants you access to a sidequest that awards a scroll that, when held in a character's inventory, stops any and all Critical Hits from harming them, which is godly for tanks, healers, and solo hero runs (sadly it gotten rather late outside of a grotto).
- Shield is a critical equipment in Dragon Quest Swords, as it's the only way to avoid or reduce a direct damage done by an enemy. You need to use an item to repair your broken-down shield in the fly if you don't want to be overwheimed by powerful attacks since you can't dodge any attacks and the only other defensive option is to swat enemy projectiles back at them.
- A villainous example occurs in Chrono Trigger. Your characters themselves don't carry shields (except for Frog in the official artwork, but that's Gameplay and Story Segregation), but a number of enemies carry shields that make them almost invincible until they lower them to attack.
- Fiona, your defensive warrior in Vindictus uses sword-and-board in contrast to Lann's Dual-Wielding, Evie's magic and staff/scythe work, Karok's two-handed weapons, and Kai's bow. Using skills like Guard and Heavy Stander, she can stand toe-to-toe against even the hardest-hitting bosses, and her Counterattack skill, which requires a successful Guard, is one of her hardest-hitting attacks. She needs to keep an eye on her shield's integrity though—too much damage to the shield without some way of regenerating (such as campfires) will break it and leave her at a severe disadvantage.
- In Command & Conquer Command & Conquer: Red Alert 3, the Allied peacekeepers (basic soldiers) look more like riot police then front-line soldiers. Their primary weapon is a Short-Range Shotgun, but they also have a metal shield that they can deploy to protect against bullets, while they slowly walk towards the target in order to unleash their weapon.
- Characters in Video Game/Mabinogi can be equipped with shields, which substantially enhance their defense stat and the effectiveness of the Defense skill. Shields can be upgraded to provide even higher levels of defense. Elves and Humans equipped with a shield can use the Charge skill to deliver a high-powered shield-bash, knocking-back and stunning the enemy (Giants do not need a shield to use Charge, due to their size).
- In Oblivion, one can equip a shield with a one-hand weapon. By holding the "Parry" button, one can hide behind it, and avoid almost all damage. However, it reduces one's speed to a crawl, and you can't attack while cowering behind your shield.
- Also available in the game's three predecessors. There the chance for the shield to block an attack was randomly determined based on your "Block" skill.
- Skyrim expands greatly on Oblivion's use of shields by giving the Block skill its own perk tree and some revamped mechanics. In addition to blocking attacks as in previous games, shields now have a bash attack that has a chance to stagger an opponent and interrupt power attacks if used as a counter-attack. The perk tree expands further on shield usage with extra bonuses like a major boost to elemental resistance (which is especially handy in dragon fights) and the ability to negate damage from arrows.
- Shields are commonly used by Warriors and Paragons in Guild Wars. Depending on the build of the player, however, any class can find a shield handy if engaging in melee combat.
- There are two types of (physically) shielded enemies in Borderlands. The first, Crimson Lance Defenders, have huge ballistic style shields that pretty much block every single attack. Fortunately they're not super strong and enough continuous hits to the shield will push it aside, leaving them vulnerable. The second are Spiderants, whose armored head functions pretty much the same as a ballistic shield. Again, multiple rapid hits will force them to one side but they are much much easier to outflank and hit from behind (or above).
- The Super Robot Wars series, featuring Humongous Mecha from all of anime history, of course uses this. Normally, pilots who use shield-bearing mecha will earn a skill called Shield Defense, which causes their mech to randomly pull out the shield and reduce the damage from an oncoming attack (the chance of activation increasing as you level the skill). In Super Robot Wars Advance (and only that game), shields were essentially an extension of the lifebar, activating automatically and having their own HP which had to be depleted before you started hurting the mecha. And of course, pretty much any giant robot example listed in the Anime section above pops up here too.
- Left 4 Dead 2 had a riot shield made, but was Dummied Out for unknown reasons. Modded servers and custom maps have the riot shield fully usable and it is used a melee weapon to bash zombies with rather than actual protection.
- The Smashers each have access to a shield, which forms a protective bubble of energy that blocks any attack that's not a grab (unless it's unblockable). Holding the shield up too long causes it to shrink (so it doesn't cover their whole body) and eventually break, leaving them temporarily defenseless.
- Yoshi on the other hand is too good for bubble shields and uses an egg instead, which doesn't shrink.
- The versions of Link also have their own personal shields, which can block projectiles with no effort.
- Game Mod Red Alert 3 Paradox, along with Peacekeepers, also has a Gundam inspired mecha with shield, the Hanzo Z.
- In Dark Souls, much like Demon's Souls, shields are absolutely vital to your survival and can mostly only be safely put away when any attack will kill you.
- Shields of a variety of sizes can be used in The Last Remnant, from bucklers to giant things too heavy for a human to lift. They are generally overlooked, as they force the user to use only one-handed weapons, rather than the more powerful power-grip, two-handed or dual-wield combat arts. Still useful; not only do they give a huge bonus to physical and mystic evasion and resistance, any character which blocks an attack with a shield will immediately perform a shield bash, blacking out the attacker for the rest of the round.
- Mooks in Batman: Arkham City will start wielding riot shields about half way through the game as Dr. Hugo Strange starts giving them more and more weaponry. The shields prevent Batman from physically harming them and must be disarmed before actually taking them down. However, the shields can be picked up again, so if one mook loses it, another can pick it up and give Bats a hard time that way!
- However, with the right upgrade, Batman can simply bend the shield in half.
- Cerberus "Guardians" in Mass Effect 3 use a heavy alloy shield that can protect them against almost any kind of fire, unless you use biotics to take their shields away or snipe them in the small hole they see through, turning their heads into a pulpy mess. That, or you can have your party members flank them; the best way to take them out is to distract them with AI party members in singleplayer or with allied players in multiplayer, have them move to different angles and fire at the guardians, then when their backs are turned, let loose.
- Wizardry series have standard small-medium-large set, but they add to "Base AC" - even a buckler gives its minimal bonus to all 5 locations, and raising the Shield skill allows more benefit even from this. There are also several artifact shields. Only fairies and some spellcasters cannot use shields. The main drawback is that a shield prevents use of two-handed and common shooting [2] weapons, and this leaves few weapons with range beyond Short. While your damage sponges in the first row are usually classes that may happily wield swords and maces, using a shield in the second row usually means being limited either to very weak weapons like Bullwhip and Feather Darts or skipping attacks, so unless they cast spells or use items, may only counter-attack with Guard action.
- Master of Magic has "Large Shield" ability, which gives +2 Defense bonus vs. any damage-dealing attack other than Melee that can be stopped by Defense: Ranged Missile/Boulder/Magic Attacks, Thrown, Fire Breath, spells that do direct damage (even overland ones, like Ice Storm). The only units that naturally have it are Swordsmen (of all races) and Minotaurs (Beastmen elite unit), though a Hero Unit with Shield/Armor slot can have it via enchanted items: implicit properties (beside the various improvements with separate prices) of Shield item type include "Large Shield" instead of a flat Defense bonus like Chainmail (flat +1 at the same cost) or Platemail (flat +2, but at 3× cost) item types.
Western Animation
- Eric, the team's knight, designated complainer, and Barrier Warrior, uses a magically enhanced shield in the Dungeons and Dragons cartoon.
- Batfink: "Your bullets cannot harm me! My wings are like a shield of steel." And he'd say so in dang near every episode, too!
- A few different Transformers use shields. It's a convenient way for toy engineers to use those leftover vehicle bits - called "kibble" in the fandom.
- In The Mighty Ducks, Wildwing had an energy shield built into the gauntlet of his armour. It only lasted a few seconds, but he usually made them count.
- Samurai Jack once dual wielded shields. They protected him very well, but he had to go on the offensive.
- All the knights and some of the warlords in King Arthur and the Knights of Justice have shields. The knights' shields specifically can bring the animal emblems on them to life.
- Ulysses, in Ulysses31, carries an energy shield to go with his Laser Blade
- Sentinel Prime in Transformers Animated carries an expandable Skyboom Shield.
- Odd in Code Lyoko has a shield made of energy which he activates by yelling "Shield!"
Web Original
- Several heroic spirits in Fate Nuovo Guerra are equipped with shields, such as Achilles, Odysseus, and Perseus. Incidentally, they're all from Greek myth.
- In Unforgotten Realms, Sir Schmoopy of Awesometon uses two discarded cartwheels to dualwield shields. And it works.
Real Life
- Riot Shields. In regions where riots rarely involve firearms, the main piece of technology which rendered the shield obsolete is not a factor, rendering it as effective as it was in ancient times. They are basically a modern take on a classical Roman scuta, to the point where modern riot police mirror Roman formation tactics almost to a point. (Hey, why fix it if it ain't broke?)
- And then there are ballistic shields. Some even protect against armor piercing rounds.
- Shields were used by practically every single pre-gunpowder warrior culture in history in one point or another. A combination of being simple, intuitive, and highly effective means very wide distribution and use. Infantry or cavalry, in or out of formation, and whether deflecting rock, bone, bronze or iron, shields dominated much of the ancient world.
- In the ancient world, shields were also offensive weapons - groups such as early Germanics had spiked bosses (the metal part on the centre of the shield face) for ramming into opponents' faces.
- ↑ personal weapons of medium power knock out and injury even through otherwise rather good stormtrooper armor with direct hits and kill unarmored people with shrapnel from near-misses, while blaster cannons the size of a heavy machinegun destroy light armored vehicles with a single shot
- ↑ the PC must hold ammunition in the off hand