Mana Khemia: Alchemists of Al-Revis

Don't forget to take your sword to school!

Mana Khemia: Alchemists Of Al-Revis is a Fantasy RPG video game, a spinoff of Gust's Atelier of games based on the concept of alchemy. In this case, the focus is on Al-Revis, an academy for alchemists. Probably inspired by the popularity of Harry Potter, though it doesn't feature any obvious captain ersatzes.

The main character is one Vayne Aurelius, a White-Haired Pretty Boy with a Mysterious Past that he himself is unaware of, since he grew up without company except for his Mana, Sulpher, a talking black cat. Vayne is found by one of Al-Revis' professors and is invited to join the school. The game follows his attempts to fit in it (complicated by the fact that his timidness and desire to help others make him a doormat) and the slow discovery of his personal past.

Playable characters besides Vayne include:

The game covers three years of Academy Terms, split down into weekly events. Naturally, being an RPG, the school's "assignments" often involve a lot of Dungeon Crawling.

The direct Sequel, set about 15 years after the end of the game, goes by the name of Mana-Khemia 2: Fall of Alchemy.

Tropes used in Mana Khemia: Alchemists of Al-Revis include:

(Note- Please post any character-specific tropes on the characters page!)

  • Adults Are Useless/Competence Zone: The faculty at Al-revis are good at teaching, but not very good helping the students with their problems.
    • Amusingly subverted in one scene where an old codger who hasn't made any sense up until now proceeds to humiliate Tony with a cane when he was trying to cheat in the school trivia contest.
  • All of the Other Reindeer: Painfully applied in the last chapter.
  • All There in the Manual: Something's up when all the other characters are given a blood type and Vayne isn't.
  • Amazing Technicolor Battlefield: Any battle when you fill up the burst gauge. Also, final boss battle; doubly so if it uses a skill called "Lightless World," which on the subsequent turn will turn the battlefield glowy molten red.
  • Anime Theme Song: "Run For Your Life", by Haruka Shimotsuki.
  • Arbitrary Headcount Limit: You have eight party members. You have three on vanguard lines, and three in the support lines. These switch in and out at will during battle. What are the other two doing? Sitting out, we guess. Why? Hell if we know, because they regain SP and HP slower than they would if they were in Support.
  • Arch Enemy: Spoofed twice; once with Tony and Flay; the other pairs Flay again with Vayne, at the end of Flay's character quests and ending.
  • Ash Face: A recurring part of Jessica's character arc.
  • Awesome but Impractical/Slap-On-The-Wrist Nuke : Summon Meteor and Heaven's Gate. Summon Meteor does exactly as it sounds, but takes 300 sp, where in late/endgame the characters' sp can't reasonably afford casting it. It's slow to take effect, and the wait time after using it is pretty long; not worth the damage it does. Heaven's Gate has a pretty nice animation, an awesome name, and takes out a set percentage of hp. Problem is, by the time you can synthesize things with Heaven's Gate, it's useless on most enemies, who are either resistant/immune/not worth using it on.
  • Babies Ever After: Nikki's ending.
  • Bad Bad Acting: Flay's first character quest...
  • Battle Theme Music: A boatload, some of which is pretty damn awesome.
    • For normal battles, we have Splendid Force (Freshman battle theme), Repulsion (Sophomore battle theme), and Disruptor (Senior battle theme).
    • For the game's resident Bosses in Mook Clothing, we have The Menace.
    • For storyline bosses/sidequest bosses, we have Running Shadow and Hallucinate Bell.
    • For Tony/Renee/Roxis (aka the "Mook Squad", as Flay calls them) we have Crystalized, which is actually a Boss Remix of Roxis's Leitmotif.
    • For the boss of Chapter 10 and 11, we have Nefertiti.
    • Penultimate (possibly final) boss gets A Gap to the Darkness.
      • Listen carefully, it's another Boss Remix! This one is Vayne's Leitmotif, which is fitting, since Vayne himself is the boss.
    • The True Final Boss boss gets STIGMATA.
  • Be Careful What You Wish For: Subverted with Theofratus, whose fate is exactly what he was wishing for. Played straight later in the game, though then again, the subconscious wishes from the heart are also a tricky thing...
    • Never wish to be alone. You might not like how it plays out.
  • BFS: Flay's mechsword. Anna's katana is longer than she is tall. Also, Vayne can transform himself into a huge sword, or wield one in his Finishing Move. And Renee from the Quirky Miniboss Squad, as well as some generic student enemies.
    • And when we say Vayne's sword is big, try about 6 or more times his size.
    • And a Boss is one.
  • Bishonen: Have you looked at the box?
  • Bittersweet Ending/Downer Ending: The bad ending, which is, you know, bad.
    • Jess's ending isn't much better. After the credits, we see her taking medicine in a bed (implying her condition has worsened) and Vayne tells her that this one will be the cure.
  • Bizzarchitecture: Considering the island is created by alchemy, any of the natural landscapes could also apply. And they definitely do apply. Floating midair platforms, endless underground levels, and some seriously big trees are the least of what you see here.
  • Non Sequitur Episode: most of Muppy's Character Quests fall into this category.
  • Blessed with Suck: Pity the poor fool who pacts with the Mana of Light. On one hand, yeah! You get combat abilities far surpassing what one could have without a Mana! And you become pretty awesome! On the other, be prepared to be (possibly publically) humiliated (on a huge scale) whenever the Mana is bored and is in need of entertainment (often).
    • Also Vayne, whose powers bring him nothing but trouble.
  • Boarding School: Setting of the game.
  • Boisterous Bruiser: Flay.
  • Bonus Boss: Second playthrough and onwards, you can fight several bonus bosses, who are cameos from Gust's other games.
  • Bonus Dungeon: And related to the above trope; the dungeon that these cameos are found in. Complete with game breaking equips inside.
  • Boss in Mook Clothing: They get their own battle theme and overworld sprites to boot!
  • Boss Rush: The first half of Heart's Prison has the party take on certain storyline bosses for a second time.
    • Justified in that the Bosses involved in the rush are memories of when Vayne used his powers (but not all memories of them). In order: the Huffin tree, fighting the Great Beast, and the awakened Mana. However, the first battle makes little sense; the first battle is against Tony and Renee, but in the main storyline, only Roxis was fought during the Huffin event- it might be that if they'd fought a memory of Roxis, the party would've clued in sooner.
  • Broken Bridge: most of the outdoor locations are in plain sight in the World Academy Map. However, players won't be able to visit them until the story requires them to.
    • Notorious are the "sequential" dungeons (Mana Ruins, Dragon's Grave). In these dungeons, the exit to the next area can be in plain sight (the Outskirts-Interior Heights for the former, for example), yet the player isn't allowed to go in any further until the story requires them to. Slightly Justified by the academy prohibiting students from going into areas out of their experience.
  • Character Development: It's a JRPG, what'd you expect?
  • The Cameo: the Puni Brothers as minor Bonus Bosses.
  • The Chew Toy: Vayne, somewhat due to his Extreme Doormat-ness. Also, Roxis, who never seems to be able to catch a break. (partially because of his own Mana, who enjoys watching him suffer). See: Roxis Character Quest 1 and 4 (4 in particular); Pamela Character Quest 4; a scene that activates around mid-game in the workshop involving Jess; discovering him fainted, foaming at the mouth out of fright in Chapter 3 (He seems to have touchier nerves than others, seeing his reactions to Pamela/his Mana/Flay's appearances out of nowhere).
    • And, to a lesser extent, Nikki, who constantly finds herself being forced to drink Jess's...medicine. She's often found unconscious.
  • Chick Magnet: Gender inverted, with Pamela being quite popular with the male crowd, even monsters. Also, Nikki. Hoo boy.
  • Clingy MacGuffin: Muppy's UFO; Pamela's teddy bear.
  • Contrived Coincidence: Theofratus' attempts at healing Jessica (it got a lot worse for her) caused him to view himself a failure, seeking a way to end his own (implied to be long) life, leading to Vayne being "born". And then it just so happens that Jess is the first person that Vayne befriends in school.
  • Combination Attack: The Variable Strike. It doesn't matter which characters are used for the attack as long as the last one in the chain will be Vayne.
  • Cute Monster Girl: Pamela; also Nikki and the other Beastman girls. And then there are those angel and demon enemies...
  • Dark Is Not Evil: it only wants to grant wishes, that's all...
  • Death Is a Slap on The Wrist: When your party dies, you conveniently wake up in the school infirmary, none the worse for wear- unless you died in a story important battle, where you get a game over.
  • Defeat Means Friendship: Not quite friendship, but you get Roxis in this manner.
    • Played straight with Nikki's gimmick—see 'Monster Allies' below.
  • Delinquent: Frequently enough for the Defender of Justice, at least until his second-to-last Character Quest. Also, Jess confesses to being one before being accepted into the academy.
  • Detached Sleeves: Part of the school uniform!
  • Disc One Nuke: Grand Ray, which has 100% chance of Knockback.
  • Dramatic Wind: There has to be some reason that certain characters' hair and outfits billow around in battle while others in the same environment don't...
  • Dual Boss: the tournament in the first School Festival. Also, Tony and Renee are almost always fought as this, unless the latter summons her Mana.
  • Duel Boss: Comes up in Flay, Anna, and Roxis' final character quests.
  • Dumb Muscle: Also Flay.
  • Early-Bird Cameo: the brief montage of the school when Vayne first arrives shows the first four party members that he will befriend, some of the teachers, as well as the Goldfish Poop Gang. Especially notable as this is Pamela's first appearance, before her formal introduction in Chapter 3.
  • Eldritch Abomination: The final boss, as well as its Bonus Boss Palette Swap, "Pain". The latter was even described this way:

The strongest, worst thing in the world. A concentrated mass of power, this being hints that the end of the world is near...

  • End of the World Special: Wouldn't you believe it, this shows up near the end of the game.
  • Enemy Mine: If the player really counts the Quirky Miniboss Squad as real "enemies". At the end of Chapter 8, the workshop goes off into the monster-infested depths of an abandoned schoolhouse to find a rare flower that just so happens to be the cure for an ailing friend. In an...egregrious case of Cutscene Incompetence (we just killed the biggest monster there was here!), after killing the chapter boss, the party says that there's too many monsters (onscreen: four red monster symbols signifying normal encounters). Cue Renee and Tony, who, under orders, come to assist them. Not very heroically either; the party's reactions are, amusingly enough: "Not now..." "We don't have time to play with you!"
    • The scene's also rather amusing because Tony barges in and all but shoos them away even though the party says that the two'll probably need their help. Pride makes himself known: "There's no way in hell I'd fight alongside you!" Of course...

Renee: ...Umm, maybe you shoulda been honest and let them help.
Tony: Don't be stupid! Coming to their rescue to ask for help? That's just uncool.

  • Exactly What It Says on the Tin: The Final Boss, "Crazed Eye(s)". And Living Bomb. And Kamikaze Doll. And so on.
    • Also, the so-called "trivia" questions in the School Trivia contest somewhat fall into this, much to the surprise of the contestants.
  • Expy: Melanie, the school nurse, is a dead ringer for Justice High's school nurse Kyoko. Just as bootilicious, too.
  • Extreme Doormat: Both the school principal and Professor Zeppel lack backbone.
    • Same with Vayne. About two thirds of the character sidequests involve his friends browbeating him into doing something.

Vayne: Just... please be gentle.

Jess: But it's not a cave...
Flay: What do you know about secret bases?!

  • Instant Expert: Subverted in Anna's case. She first is implied to be one of these when she joins the academy and immediately performs high-level synthesis on par with the characters from a grade above hers. It's then revealed in a character quest that she actually has no idea what she's doing and was simply copying her classmates, leading to poor grades when studying on her own. She is thus forced to learn the process of alchemy from square one, learning it the hard way just like everyone else.
  • In-Universe Game Clock: On the upper right of the screen while exploring a dungeon, there's a clock thing, which has a pendulum. Said pendulum goes from one side to the other in roughly... about one and a half seconds? Apparently, each swing of the pendulum is roughly five ingame minutes.
    • And running from battle, even if you get the first move and don't take many cards to get there (each card is one minute), costs you one hour.
  • Invisible to Normals: The Mana have this as a trait, which also explains why no one can "accidentally stumble" into the academy (Alchemy is a closely guarded secret from those who may abuse it): the floating school is held up by a Wind Mana.
  • Irony: many examples.
  • Item Crafting: It's a spinoff of the Atelier series. It's also based around alchemy. Do the math.
  • It Has Been an Honor: During the Tournament Arc, Flay had to find a replacement for Vayne temporarily. He manages to recruit the referee. After Vayne returns, the referee responds with this line.
  • Kick the Dog: Tony and his burning of the Huffin tree on Chapter 2, just so other students (specifically Vayne and co.) wouldn't be able to acquire the ingredient. As a consequence, we're treated to a not-so-subtle Foreshadowing to Vayne's power.
  • Large Ham: English voiced "The Other Vayne" is... quite hammy.
    • Flay, especially English-voiced, is king of this trope. "STRIKE OF JUSTICE!"
    • Tony's English-voice is particularly hammy, sometimes to the point of reminding this troper of a stereotypical "gangster."
    • Fairly typical, but the Emcee for the trivia contest.
  • Laser-Guided Amnesia: Pamela can't remember her own personal past, but remembers a lot of other things.
    • Who says she's not lying? Though, it's implied that she's been a ghost so long she's forgotten...
    • Vayne can't remember anything about his life before meeting Sulpher. Not that there's much to remember.
  • Law of Chromatic Superiority: Flay is a big believer in this. Red is for heroes, blue and black are for sidekicks! Incidentally, his Defender of Justice mask, which he presumably chose, is blue, while Vayne's is red.
    • To be fair, Vayne is meant to take over Flay's position as the official Defender of Justice.
  • Lawful Stupid: Anna, and Roxis to a degree.
  • Leitmotif: All of the main characters have one, the Quirky Miniboss Squad has one, and Zeppel and Isolde have one.
    • Vayne: A Young Man's Worries (A Boy's Worries)
    • Jess: Whistle Maiden (Whistling Girl)
    • Nikki: Stupid Hair Saga
    • Pamela: Phantom Maiden for Mana-Khemia (Ghost Girl for Mana Khemia)
    • Roxis: Absorbed by the Glasses (My Glasses are Addicted)
    • Flay: The Ally of Justice Has Arrived (Defender of Justice has Come)
    • Anna: Gavotte (Overwhelmer)
    • Muppy: Rectangular Wave of Love (Block Pulse of Love)
    • Tony/Renee: Ah, Youth Discipline Committee (Ah, Disciplinarian of Youth)
    • Isolde: A Smile of Ice
    • Zeppel: Homeroom
  • Lethal Chef: In the first School Festival, the students at the restaurant booth prefer the Principal's baking over the Vice-Principal's.
    • Speaking of lethal cooking, Pamela and Jess's potions technically count. Bonus for Jess actually having lunch that is...purple...and moving.
  • Loads and Loads of Loading: Sadly, the PSP port on UMD is riddled with this, but according to RPGFan's review of the PSN paid download edition, the loading times were reduced, thus making that version tolerable.
  • Load-Bearing Boss: Final castle falls when you defeat the last boss. Justified, in that it's a castle created by wishes.
  • Luminescent Blush: the female characters are often shown having these.
  • Meta Guy: Flay and Muppy occasionally make references to things like RPGs, B-movies, and anime.
  • Mirror Boss: The Final Boss is essentially your main character using some, if not most, of his skills.
    • The True Final Boss also summons shadow dopplegangers of other characters after he reachs a certain HP breakpoint to help in the battle. Said doppelgangers have the exact same abilities as your characters, so yes, Pamela is immune to physical attacks.
  • Moment Killer: Subverted in that nothing romantic actually came out of the moment (Jess just wanted to talk to Vayne alone, although the others thought otherwise), but still attempted by Flay, only to be stopped by Anna.
  • Monster Allies: Nikki can make use of these if she has "converted" them prior using Heart Cracker/Heartful Action.
    • A fair amount of Pamela's Cast from Hit Points spells involve summoning her monster friends. "Be nice~!"
  • Mood Whiplash: The first two thirds of the game are pretty happy. Then comes an end of chapter summary stating "This was the last time I really enjoyed being at school..." Cue the descent into depressing grounds, though it gets better... unless you get the bad ending.
    • Also, Muppy. What. Master of the moodswing non sequiteur, which is somewhat jarring when you're hearing Wailing of the Rain, a song that's otherwise reserved for serious/sad issues, while a pink blob is lamenting about how he'll never pick up an instrument again after his band broke up just because you decided to visit the music room. Humorous joke character indeed, able to make your head spin.
    • And then there's Jess' last Character Quest. Plenty of gags there, despite revolving around convincing someone that death is serious business...
  • Multiple Endings: With a vengeance. There's 8.
    • Strangely enough, most of said endings are ambiguous enough for all of them to be canonical.
      • Not Muppy's, having travelled to another planet and all that...
    • Here's the breakdown of the endings:
      • Jess: Vayne is now a doctor, working on a cure to Jess's condition. This ending has the strongest hint that the True Companions stayed in contact with each other even after five years.
      • Nikki: She and Vayne have married, and they've been very busy. However, because of the size of their family, they have difficulty finding time to be alone together.
      • Flay: He is now an Evil Overlord with a criminal syndicate, and has apparently conquered the world, waiting for Vayne to put a stop to his plans. The Fall of Alchemy subtly hints for this one to be the canon ending, for some reason.
      • Roxis: His rivalry with Vayne continues, but this time on a somewhat friendlier level. Oh, and Vayne has been on a really bad losing streak.
      • Pamela: Like in Jess's ending, Vayne is also a doctor here, but he couldn't remain in one spot because of Pamela, and are instead forced to walk the earth together. The fact that Pamela, who has been haunting the school for generations (She had been around when the principal's grandfather had been a student there), is not in The Fall of Alchemy implies that this could also be the canon ending.
      • Anna: Like Roxis, Anna has become something of a sparring partner/rival to Vayne. Unfortunately for Vayne, Anna decided to resort to unsavory methods in order to win. It's Played for Laughs. Really.
      • Muppy: Vayne helped fix Muppy's spaceship, and Muppy returns the favor by taking Vayne to his home planet. Thinking that the ride was not enough, Muppy decided to offer several government positions to Vayne, until deciding to make Vayne his "Queen".
      • Bad End: During the last battle, when Vayne is preparing to stay behind and sacrifice himself but pretends that he'll follow everyone else out in just a moment, normally the teammate with the highest affection notices what he's trying to do and snaps him out of it. If Vayne's relationship with his teammates isn't high enough (you didn't finish any of their character quests), everyone reluctantly leaves and only notices too late that Vayne never planned on living.
  • My Name Is Not Durwood: Flay refers to the Quirky Miniboss Squad as the "Mook Squad".

Tony: Who are you calling a mook?!

  • Mythology Gag: Alvero mechsword and Yula Hammer
  • Nerd Glasses: All the students that have glasses.
  • New Game+: Doing this carries over all grow book bonuses. Your characters therefore, are roughly around the power they would have been about half of the game in at the beginning of the game.
  • News Travels Fast: A gameplay element. There's an NPC that deals in rumors; you pay him to get a different rumor assigned to you. They have varying effects, ranging from cheaper item prices, to increasing all stats, to increasing item effectiveness. After doing specific things (fight 200 battles, get past part in storyline, get A's in class, and so forth), you unlock different rumors.
  • Nightmare Fuel: "A Quiet Giddiness", the final school theme that plays during the later, Mood Whiplash chapters of the game. A technically excellent song, but the sheer trepidation of it and the fact that it's played everywhere you go in school from then on, in contrast to the first, almost absurdly upbeat school theme, makes it quite hard to bear during those moments when everything's falling apart.
    • Vayne's special attacks all involve shadows, lots and lots of sharp blades, creepy red eyes, and surprisingly violent battle quotes. So it makes sense that the final boss is a horrible mass of red eyes that cry black gunk. Oh, and his true power is pretty scary too.
    • When Isolde kills one of your friends to force Vayne's powers to surface, you have to think: what if Vayne wasn't able to bring him/her back, and Isolde took the leap from slightly unbalanced teacher to murderer? Even worse than that, she didn't even flinch when she killed them. If Vayne couldn't wish him/her back to life, what was to stop Isolde from murdering all of them right then and there to keep said murder a secret?
  • Nostalgic Music Box: Dream of the Black Cat, the music that plays over each chapter's beginning scene/flashback.
  • Not So Stoic/Not So Above It All: Anna.
    • Also a very good example would be Roxis, who despite trying to avoid getting involved in any of the workshop's hjinks gets dragged into them anyway (usually unwillingly).
  • Now Where Was I Going Again?: Your memo.
  • Obfuscating Stupidity: Pamela is not as dumb as she looks...she's also not as nice.
    • Flay's not as idiotic as he looks. Even though he flunked. Twice...Wait, he's a 19 year old sophomore, so that makes that thrice.
      • And flunks AGAIN so that he doesn't leave you behind during your senior year.
  • One Hundred Percent Completion: Collecting most, if not all, the weapon/item/armor recipes and then making them is necessary to fully upgrade the characters' abilities.
    • Not particularly difficult to do that, and that's not even close to one hundred percent completion. However, your reward for a 100% complete encyclopedia- weapons, armor, materials, recipes, monsters, places, etc- is a rumor that increases all stats by 30, which is a fair amount. It's also accessible from the beginning of a New Game+. Now, if 100% grow book chars at the beginning of the game (with those stats their basic attack command can hit anywhere from mid 100s- Pamela, to 400+: Jess. The enemies in early game start with 60-90 hp.) weren't already overkill, 100% grow book chars plus 30 to all stats is.
  • Only Sane Man: Nikki ends up being this when they discover Muppy, who manages to fool Vayne, Jess, and Flay with a story that only idiots would fall for. What about Anna, Roxis, and Pamela? Well, they kinda... make an attempt at ignoring the entire thing.
    • Nope, even Roxis fell for it. He thinks Muppy's "disabled", humorously...
      • He won't risk the possibility, as being in this particular group for so long has desensitized him to the weird... though it sounds more like they're throwing out lame excuses in an attempt to not get involved.
    • Can't vouch for Anna so much either, depending on how you interpret this:

Muppy: ...Look like my mother.
Flay: What a unique mother!
Anna: I'd like to see her someday...

      • Hahaha, hook, line, and sinker. Victory is mine!

Nikki: Someone be on my side!

  • Otaku: Nikki gets a fan club filled with these.
  • Paper-Thin Disguise: Seriously, Flay's disguise is so horrible that it's clear immediately that it's him... and Pamela still can't tell, if you talk to her.
  • Party in My Pocket: In a lot of scenes (but not always), Vayne will walk up to somewhere, and everyone is shown walking out of him.
  • Perpetual Frowner: Moritz, manager of the Athanor room. Lampshaded many times during the group's first visit.

Nikki: Whoah. Scary face alert!

  • Posthumous Character: Theofratus, starting every chapter with bits of dialogue during his life.
  • Power of Friendship: Vayne's "Variable Strike" does more damage if he's close with the other True Companions.
  • Preexisting Encounters: You can see all the enemies on the map and avoid them, save for chapter bosses.
  • The Promise: In general, the character quests end in some sort of promise that Vayne is reminded of when he tries to commit his Stupid Sacrifice. Jess, Nikki, and Pamela in particular make Vayne promise them something.
  • Puppy Dog Eyes: Part of Pamela's Moe Moe charm, leading to her hilarious Character Quest 4. Also, Nikki often uses them, which is ironic, cnosidering what she is...
  • Quirky Miniboss Squad/Goldfish Poop Gang: Renee and Tony. Emphasis on "quirky", especially when referring to Tony.
  • Rare Candy: The "Stat" Fruits, as well as the "Youthful Apple" (HP) and "Eternal Peach" (SP).
  • Redemption Equals Death: After Theofratus attempted to heal a young Jess' illness, he only caused her life to be cut even shorter. Even though he succeeds in curing the actual illness, the rest of her lifespan is dispelled along with the disease. Feeling guilty for worsening Jess' condition, he created a wish-granting Mana so that the latter can grant his wish for death.
  • Relationship Values: Visible in each character's status portrait. If a character doesn't particularly like you, it'll be obvious (Like Flay's shadowed face, Jess's hesitant expression, and Roxis flat out angry). On the flip side, if they like you, it'll also be obvious: Jess starts leaning forward happily, Roxis actually smiles, Pamela starts looking a little embarrassed, and Flay laughs. This also determines what ending you get.
  • Right Behind Me: Used in a throwaway scene involving Pamela and the Principal, where the former reveals that the latter once asked her out on a date, and, much to Principal Bernard's dismay, the Vice-Principal was listening.
  • Rule of Funny: This game rarely takes itself seriously. It'd take forever and a half and a looot of walls of text to list the funny moments.
    • There are, however, a few somber, even shocking moments, such as when Isolde kills one of Vayne's friends just to see if he can revive him/her.
      • And thus warrants the Mood Whiplash entry.
  • Running Gag: A gag also present in the Atelier series, the party members have a habit of yelling/stating/mumbling/declaring Barrel! when you examine one.
    • Another Running Gag is that, in earlier chapters, Flay always appears literally out of nowhere, for no reason at all. The other characters (especially Vayne) are always taken by surprise. To the point that if he decides to enter normally, they're surprised that he isn't falling from the ceiling or something.
      • Vayne and Roxis both.
  • Say My Name: Used hilariously in Muppy's first character quest, where Jess (in tears, even) shouts out his name twice after the latter self-destructed...
  • School Festival: Two of which are part of the plot.
  • Sealed Evil in a Can: The Boss of Chapter 9, although the Boss isn't actually evil; it was just seeking revenge.
  • Sequential Boss: Some optional job Bosses have to be fought at the end of a string of battles. There's also the first Boss in the game that is fought in such a way.
  • She Is Not My Girlfriend: occurs in this exchange (not exactly word for word):

Nikki: (To Tony and Renee) Why don't you two practice your couple's comedy show somewhere else?
Tony: Who are you calling a couple?

  • Shipper on Deck: Flay (and a certain Mana) to Roxis... and Pamela, of all people, although it's only seen once, and just for laughs. And definitely to humiliate the resident Comically Serious even more...
  • Shoo Out the Clowns: The exact moment the game's mood takes a sudden turn for the serious can be traced back to the scene where the Mook Squad is literally sent back home.
  • Silent Credits: Not silent, but fits the trope well enough. The bad ending will let you get to the credits and make a postgame save for New Game +, but the music that plays, instead of TOGGLE, is The Illusionary Patty-Ridge (By the Illusion), a sad and melancholy piano song. The credits on this ending are just text scrolling up through a black screen, lacking the illustrations all the other endings will net you.
  • Squishy Wizard: Pamela, though she gets better later.
    • Roxis might represent this trope a bit better... Pamela eventually becomes an insanely good tank once she gets her null physical ability.
      • Lampshaded in a scene after creating an Ajax Shield. Goes something like this: (not word for word)

Roxis: A shield? That's useless to me.
Vayne: Oh, yeah... you' can't take hits that well.
Roxis: I don't need you telling me that.

  • Stern Teacher: Isolde, Lorr and the Vice-Principal. Nikki even notes that the one time that Lorr was happy, it was a bad thing for the students...
    • The Vice Principal is a particularly good example. She's the only teacher who isn't for taking "disciplinary action" against (read: eliminating) Vayne in the last chapter.
  • Super Move Portrait Attack: The aforementioned Finishing Bursts, and the Variable Strike both have character cutins.
  • Suspicious Videogame Generosity: If there's a save point in a dungeon, there's a boss fight coming up.
  • Team The Mook Squad Wins: possible in the marathon event, if the party isn't fast enough.
  • Suspiciously Specific Denial: Jess didn't put her...medicine inside Nikki's sandwich, really!
    • Flay says, "I wasn't trying to outwit the Vice Principal or make Anna owe me" when asks about his motives for helping Anna's grades. Right...
  • That Came Out Wrong: The Trivia Contest judge explaining his prolonged absence by "playing with the youngsters". The MC was not amused.
  • Theme Naming: The Bonus Bosses all begin with "Dar(k)-" in their names, with the exception of the Final Boss' Palette Swap.
  • Timed Mission: A lot of the classroom assignments have time limits.
    • And sometimes if they don't, then things get turned into a Timed Mission anyway as you attempt to rush to your objective before night falls and the monsters all rocket in power- including the bosses.
      • Oddly enough, some of them are actually Take Your Time, despite having a notation of being timed. For instance, the limit might be one hour, but you can get lost and as long as you don't outright fail the mission, you'll get an A.
  • Tomato in the Mirror: Vayne's actually a Mana.
  • Transformation Sequence: Anna and Jess in their finishing bursts, though neither really goes through the long extended pretty ribbon-filled sequence.
    • Pamela's might qualify too; her bear being Aion, the Mana of Life and all.
    • There's also Sulpher transforming into Vayne's armor and weapon, although this sequence was only seen twice.
    • Flay's is debatable, but he basically gets into his mana like it's a Super Robot.
  • True Companions: The workshop.
  • True Final Boss: See the first entry in the Exactly What It Says on the Tin article. Without enough Relationship Values, the Final Boss will be the main character instead.
  • Turns Red: One optional job sideboss plays this trope straight. It's a glass dragon that literally turns red when you hit it with a fire element move... and when you do so, it gets several consecutive turns and severely boosted stats. Use ice on it after that, however...
  • Two-Teacher School: Subverted. Classes are recycled only through five teachers (six counting the Vice-Principal on one occasion), but the storyline introduces other generic teachers. Double Subversion, seeing as they don't make too much of an impact anyway...
  • Underground Monkey/Palette Swap: Your characters even get skills that do extra damage against certain types of creatures, usually recolors of each other.
  • The Unfought: the True Final Boss in the Bad ending, which was just right behind Vayne when you fight the latter. While the Boss does help Vayne in the aforementioned battle, it is never fought directly.
  • The Very Definitely Final Dungeon: Heart's Prison. Perhaps the first sections don't look that imposing (well, besides going into battle and seeing meteors swirl around in space/the sky), but once you get deeper into the dungeon, the background speaks for itself.
  • Vitriolic Best Buds: Roxis and Vayne, starting out as a mix of Type 1 and Type 2 with more of 1, and ending up in still a mix of Type 1 and Type 2 but with a much larger percentage of Type 2.
  • Walking the Earth: Implied to happen in one of the endings, thanks to the old habits of a certain someone.
  • Wave Motion Gun: Flay's sword, in addition to being a BFS, drill, and shruiken thrower, can also shoot a giant shockwave that looks like this.
  • Weaksauce Weakness: The Bonus Bosses, despite being relatively powerful, have a particular trait that renders them particularly weak to Flay's Demon Striker normal attack, as opposed to most other lategame bosses, who don't have traits, period.
  • Wham! Episode: The end result of Anna's 4th character quest if you tell her the wrong answers. You will feel her hate.
  • Where Are They Now? Epilogue: The character endings.
  • White-Haired Pretty Boy: Subverted, pretty much the only part of the description Vayne fills is the "white hair" part. "The other Vayne," on the other hand...
  • Wiki Walk: Anna Lemouri. Frequently launches into mental monologues that result in strange (and often violent) reactions to perfectly normal events.
  • Wizarding School: Once again, setting of the game.
  • You All Look Familiar: Lots of NPCs. Like Kevin in the Resource Center who is obsessed with glasses, Oratorio in the classroom who is the archetypical studious bookworm, to... ambiguously gay Ronnie in the boy's dorms, who all share the same sprite.
  • You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Jess has pink hair and Anna's is sort of a teal. Pamela's hair is purplish, but that might be because she's a ghost. Flay is a redhead, but it's darker than in real life. Vayne, of course, fits another trope. Blondes Nikki (with her Expressive Idiot Hair) and Roxis (Rapunzel Hair) are comparatively normal.
  • You Lose At Zero Trust: The bad ending is gotten if you don't make any character like you enough.
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