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The second story in ''Mystery of the Emblem'' begins three years after the events of the first game, and follows Marth as he is confronted by his former friend and ally, {{s|fireemblem|Hardin}}, now the Emperor of Archanea and corrupted by Gharnef. After Hardin conquers Altea and declares Marth a traitor, Marth and his allies embark on a journey through Archanea's northern wilderness and follow the legendary path once taken by Anri, where he learns the true history of the dragons and their role in shaping the history of Archanea. Marth is given the task of repairing the titular [[fireemblemwiki:Fire Emblem (Archanean item)|Fire Emblem]] shield to restore its ability to seal away the [[fireemblemwiki:Earth Dragon|earth dragons]], a malevolent species of dragon to which Medeus belongs. The game ends with Marth uniting all seven of Archanea's kingdoms into one after Medeus's final defeat and becoming revered as the legendary "Hero-King".  
The second story in ''Mystery of the Emblem'' begins three years after the events of the first game, and follows Marth as he is confronted by his former friend and ally, {{s|fireemblem|Hardin}}, now the Emperor of Archanea and corrupted by Gharnef. After Hardin conquers Altea and declares Marth a traitor, Marth and his allies embark on a journey through Archanea's northern wilderness and follow the legendary path once taken by Anri, where he learns the true history of the dragons and their role in shaping the history of Archanea. Marth is given the task of repairing the titular [[fireemblemwiki:Fire Emblem (Archanean item)|Fire Emblem]] shield to restore its ability to seal away the [[fireemblemwiki:Earth Dragon|earth dragons]], a malevolent species of dragon to which Medeus belongs. The game ends with Marth uniting all seven of Archanea's kingdoms into one after Medeus's final defeat and becoming revered as the legendary "Hero-King".  


In his starring games, Marth is given the unique {{s|fireemblem|lord}} [[fireemblemwiki:Class|character class]]: as the commander of his army, it is necessary for him to [[fireemblemwiki:Objectives#Seize|seize castles and thrones]] held by enemy armies to complete chapters and progress in his quest, but if he is defeated in battle, the game is over and the player must restart from their last save point. As the first lord in the ''Fire Emblem'' series, Marth established many trends in both narrative and gameplay roles that later series protagonists, such as [[Roy]] and [[Chrom]], would closely follow. The majority of ''Fire Emblem'' protagonists share the lord class with Marth, with only a few notable exceptions such as [[Ike]] and [[Corrin]]. Despite only being the star of four out of the series' sixteen games, Marth is treated by Intelligent Systems as the mascot of the entire ''Fire Emblem'' series.
In his starring games, Marth is given the unique {{s|fireemblem|lord}} [[fireemblemwiki:Class|character class]]: as the commander of his army, it is necessary for him to [[fireemblemwiki:Objectives#Seize|seize castles and thrones]] held by enemy armies to complete chapters and progress in his quest, but if he is defeated in battle, the game is over and the player must restart from their last save point. As the first lord in the ''Fire Emblem'' series, Marth established many trends in both narrative and gameplay roles that later series protagonists, such as [[Roy]] and [[Chrom]], would closely follow. The majority of ''Fire Emblem'' protagonists share the lord class with Marth, with only a few notable exceptions, such as [[Ike]] and [[Corrin]]. Despite only being the star of four out of the series' sixteen games, Marth is treated by Intelligent Systems as the mascot of the entire ''Fire Emblem'' series.


Outside of his own games, Marth is also a notable part of the backstory of ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem: Awakening}}'', and two of its protagonists, [[Chrom]] and [[Lucina]], are his distant descendants. He has made frequent appearances as an optional bonus character, unrelated to the main story, in many ''Fire Emblem'' games from ''Awakening'' onward; he is available in ''Awakening'' via SpotPass and DLC, ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Fates}}'' via [[amiibo]] and DLC, and ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia}}'' via amiibo as an illusory unit. He features prominently in ''Fire Emblem'' crossover productions, including the video games ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Heroes}}'' and ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Warriors}}'' as one of their many playable characters, and the series' two trading card games. He was also the star of a short-lived direct-to-video [[fireemblemwiki:Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem (anime)|anime adaptation of ''Mystery of the Emblem'']] in 1997, which featured actor [[wikipedia:Hikaru Midorikawa|Hikaru Midorikawa's]] first performance as the character, five years before he reprised that role in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''.
Outside of his own games, Marth is also a notable part of the backstory of ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem: Awakening}}'', and two of its protagonists, [[Chrom]] and [[Lucina]], are his distant descendants. He has made frequent appearances as an optional bonus character, unrelated to the main story, in many ''Fire Emblem'' games from ''Awakening'' onward; he is available in ''Awakening'' via SpotPass and DLC, ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Fates}}'' via [[amiibo]] and DLC, and ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia}}'' via amiibo as an illusory unit. He features prominently in ''Fire Emblem'' crossover productions, including the video games ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Heroes}}'' and ''{{s|fireemblemwiki|Fire Emblem Warriors}}'' as one of their many playable characters, and the series' two trading card games. He was also the star of a short-lived direct-to-video [[fireemblemwiki:Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem (anime)|anime adaptation of ''Mystery of the Emblem'']] in 1997, which featured actor [[wikipedia:Hikaru Midorikawa|Hikaru Midorikawa's]] first performance as the character, five years before he reprised that role in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee''.

Revision as of 09:15, July 27, 2019

For fighter info, see Marth (SSBM), Marth (SSBB), Marth (SSB4), and Marth (SSBU).
Marth
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FireEmblemSymbol.svg
Official artwork of Marth from Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem: Heroes of Light and Shadow and Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem.
Universe Fire Emblem
Debut Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light (1990) Japan
Smash Bros. appearances Melee
Brawl
SSB4
Ultimate
Most recent non-Smash appearance Dragalia Lost (update, 2019)
Console/platform of origin Famicom
Species Human
Gender Male
Place of origin Archanea (formerly Altea) (past Archanea Series timeline)
Created by Shouzou Kaga
English voice actor Yuri Lowenthal (Ultimate)
Japanese voice actor Hikaru Midorikawa
Article on Fire Emblem Wiki Marth

Marth (マルス, Marth) is the main protagonist of four games in the Fire Emblem series of tactical role-playing games. He debuted in the first and third games, Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light and Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem, and later reprised his role in the Nintendo DS remakes of these two games. He made his first appearance in the Super Smash Bros. series as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Melee. At the time, no Fire Emblem games had ever been released outside Japan, but his popularity in Melee (along with that of his counterpart Roy) is believed to have influenced Nintendo's decision to release almost all subsequent Fire Emblem titles internationally.

Origin

Marth was introduced in Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light for the Famicom console, which was later remade for Nintendo DS as Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon. While he was absent from the tangentially-related second game in the series, Fire Emblem Gaiden, Marth's role and place in the story of Archanea was later expanded on in the third game, Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem, released on the Super Famicom in early 1994. Mystery of the Emblem featured both a remake of the original game and a continuation of that game's story, and the continued story was itself later remade for Nintendo DS as Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem, Heroes of Light and Shadow.

Marth is the prince of Altea, one of the Seven Kingdoms of the continent of Archanea. He is descended from the family of a legendary dragon-slayer, Anri, who once used the "blade of light", the Exalted Falchion, to defeat the sinister dragon-emperor Medeus. Marth is characterized as a courageous, good-natured and honorable man. He takes his royal responsibilities to his people very seriously, always putting their needs first, no matter how troubled he is by developments in his own personal life. As a leader, he not only cares deeply about his friends and comrades, but believes that he could not have achieved anything himself without their support. Later appearances tend to emphasize Marth's determination to save as many people as possible and ensure that none of his comrades die, even in seemingly hopeless situations.

In Marth's first adventure, told in Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light and its remake, Medeus has been revived by the sorcerer Gharnef and has conquered almost all of Archanea, and by the time that the games begin Marth has spent two years in exile in the remote island kingdom of Talys with his future wife, Princess Caeda. The games follow his quest in the War of Shadows, where he works with Princess Nyna of the Holy Kingdom of Archanea to unite the defeated human kingdoms into an army to fight back against Medeus and his dragon empire, Dolhr, and gain the power to fight Gharnef so that he can retrieve Falchion and rescue his abducted sister, Elice.

The second story in Mystery of the Emblem begins three years after the events of the first game, and follows Marth as he is confronted by his former friend and ally, Hardin, now the Emperor of Archanea and corrupted by Gharnef. After Hardin conquers Altea and declares Marth a traitor, Marth and his allies embark on a journey through Archanea's northern wilderness and follow the legendary path once taken by Anri, where he learns the true history of the dragons and their role in shaping the history of Archanea. Marth is given the task of repairing the titular Fire Emblem shield to restore its ability to seal away the earth dragons, a malevolent species of dragon to which Medeus belongs. The game ends with Marth uniting all seven of Archanea's kingdoms into one after Medeus's final defeat and becoming revered as the legendary "Hero-King".

In his starring games, Marth is given the unique lord character class: as the commander of his army, it is necessary for him to seize castles and thrones held by enemy armies to complete chapters and progress in his quest, but if he is defeated in battle, the game is over and the player must restart from their last save point. As the first lord in the Fire Emblem series, Marth established many trends in both narrative and gameplay roles that later series protagonists, such as Roy and Chrom, would closely follow. The majority of Fire Emblem protagonists share the lord class with Marth, with only a few notable exceptions, such as Ike and Corrin. Despite only being the star of four out of the series' sixteen games, Marth is treated by Intelligent Systems as the mascot of the entire Fire Emblem series.

Outside of his own games, Marth is also a notable part of the backstory of Fire Emblem: Awakening, and two of its protagonists, Chrom and Lucina, are his distant descendants. He has made frequent appearances as an optional bonus character, unrelated to the main story, in many Fire Emblem games from Awakening onward; he is available in Awakening via SpotPass and DLC, Fire Emblem Fates via amiibo and DLC, and Fire Emblem Echoes: Shadows of Valentia via amiibo as an illusory unit. He features prominently in Fire Emblem crossover productions, including the video games Fire Emblem Heroes and Fire Emblem Warriors as one of their many playable characters, and the series' two trading card games. He was also the star of a short-lived direct-to-video anime adaptation of Mystery of the Emblem in 1997, which featured actor Hikaru Midorikawa's first performance as the character, five years before he reprised that role in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

In Super Smash Bros.

Neither Marth nor any Fire Emblem content appears in the first Smash game. However, according to an interview from Making of Fire Emblem: 25 Years of Development Secrets, Masahiro Sakurai wanted to include Marth as a playable character in that game, but was unable to do so due to time constraints. [1]

In Super Smash Bros. Melee

As a playable character

Main article: Marth (SSBM)
Marth as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

Marth makes his Smash debut (and by extension, his international debut, excluding the Mystery of the Emblem anime adaption, which was released in North America) as an unlockable character in Melee. His design is based off his appearance from Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem. He can be unlocked one of three ways: using all fourteen starter characters at least once each in Vs. Mode matches, beating or failing Classic mode with all fourteen starter characters on any difficulty, or playing 400 Vs. mode matches. In each of these cases, after fulfilling the conditions Marth must be battled one-on-one to be unlocked.

Marth is one of the game's most effective fighters, currently ranking 3rd on the Melee tier list. His strengths include the long reach of his sword attacks and the very good damage and knockback specs of the "sweet spot" on the tip of his blade, his moderately fast dash, long grab, usefully floaty wavedash, excellent edgeguarding capabilities, easy and efficient combos, and great SHFFL, with his drawbacks being his lack of a projectile attack and laggy up special recovery. Marth's "clone", Roy, has attacks that are almost identical in animation, and many "Marth vs. Roy" debates ensued in the years following Melee's release but professional analysis places Marth in a higher tier than Roy because he lacks Marth's subtle but vital advantages.

All of Marth's standard and special attacks involve him using his sword, the Falchion.

Trophies

As with the other playable characters in Melee, Marth has three trophies which are obtained by defeating the single-player modes - a normal trophy from Classic Mode and two "Smash" trophies from Adventure and All-Star Modes respectively. The text of his Classic Mode trophy reads:

Marth
The betrayed prince of the Kingdom of Altea, the blood of the hero Anri flows in Marth's veins. He was forced into exile when the kingdom of Dolua invaded Altea. Then, wielding his divine sword Falchion, he led a revolt and defeated the dark dragon Medeus. Afterwards, Altea was annihilated by King Hardin of Akanea.
  • Fire Emblem (Japan Only)

(Famicom)

In Super Smash Bros. Brawl

As a playable character

Main article: Marth (SSBB)
Marth as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.

Marth returns as an unlockable playable character. Like Melee, his appearance is based on his design from Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem. Marth has superior reach to most characters in the game, and relies on the length of his sword to effectively zone against his opponents. While his changes are mixed, he was somewhat nerfed from Melee like a lot of other higher tier characters. He is currently in the A- tier according to the official SBR tier list.

Trophy

Marth's trophy in Brawl.
Marth
The prince of Altea, in whose veins the blood of heroes runs. He and a small group of stalwarts fought to free Altea after it was invaded by the kingdom of Doluna and the dark dragon, Medeus. With his divine sword, Falchion, he fought and defeated Medeus. However, Altea was then invaded by King Hardin of Akaneia and eventually destroyed.
NES: Fire Emblem (Japan Only)

Sticker

Name Game Effect Character(s)
Marth Fire Emblem: Monshō no Nazo Weapon (type) Attack +19 Marth (SSBB)Ike (SSBB)
Brawl Sticker Marth (Fire Emblem Monsho no Nazo).png
Marth
(Fire Emblem Monsho no Nazo)

In Super Smash Bros. 4

As a playable character

Main article: Marth (SSB4)
Marth as he appears in Super Smash Bros. 4.

Marth returns as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U. Marth is now a starter character, as opposed to being an unlockable character as he was in Melee and Brawl. He has been visually updated to closely match to his design from Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem: Heroes of Light and Shadow, although Falchion retains its design from the original Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem.

During the initial release of SSB4, Marth was considerably nerfed, with few noteworthy buffs. These nerfs left him with less mobility and range relative to the cast (though his own range has been improved from Brawl), weakening his neutral game and depriving him of his potent comboing and punishing capabilities from previous games. Because of this, he had previously seen a huge drop in his tier placement. However, he has since received multiple buffs in update patches, with the most notable patch, 1.1.4, granting him improvements to his aerial combos and juggling game, as well as granting bigger tipper hitboxes, and higher damage output on several attacks. As a result, Marth is reasonably better than he was during the initial release of SSB4, and has since seen significantly improved tournament results. Overall, although he's still considered fairly nerfed from Brawl, he ranks highly on the SSB4 tier list, ranking 11th out of 55 characters (tying with Ryu).

Trophies

Marth
North America The first hero from the Fire Emblem series, Marth is the prince of Altea and descendant of the hero Anri. In Smash Bros., he's known as an exceptional swordfighter, swinging his blade with grace. Striking with the tip will maximize the damage dealt. Teach aggressive foes a lesson with his strong Counter move.
Europe Marth, the prince of Altea, is the hero of the first ever Fire Emblem game and its remake, Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon. In this game, his graceful sword skills are what set him apart. Strike with the tip of his blade to deal extra damage, and use his Counter skill to defend yourself, no matter which directions you're being attacked from.
Marth (Alt.)
North America Marth's side special Dancing Blade is a four-stage attack. Aim and time your strikes carefully! The tip of his sword does the most damage. For his up smash, Justice Sword, he thrusts his blade into the air. You can use it to block attacks from above and launch nearby foes.
Europe Marth's side special, Dancing Blade, is a four-stage attack. Aim and time your strikes carefully! As usual, the tip of his sword does the most damage. For his up smash, Justice Sword, he thrusts his blade into the air. You can use it to block attacks from above, and even to launch nearby enemies off the ground.

In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

As a playable character

Main article: Marth (SSBU)
Marth as he appears in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.

Marth returns as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, as with all previous characters. He uses a more detailed version of the New Mystery of the Emblem design from SSB4, and now has a different hairstyle to match his more recent appearances in titles such as Fire Emblem Heroes. Like in Melee and Brawl, Marth is an unlockable character. Ultimate is the first Super Smash Bros. game in which Marth is dubbed in English in overseas versions, specifically by Yuri Lowenthal, his English voice actor in all games as of Code Name: S.T.E.A.M. In Japanese, Hikaru Midorikawa returns to voice Marth with new voice clips for the first time since Melee.

Spirits

Trivia

  • Marth and Mario are the only characters in the Super Smash Bros. series to have two different clones, Marth's being Roy in Melee and Lucina in SSB4.
    • In Super Smash Bros. 4, both Marth and Mario each have one full clone (Lucina and Dr. Mario, respectively) and one semi-clone (Roy and Luigi, respectively).
    • Counting Chrom as an indirect semi-clone, Marth has the most combined clones and semi-clones of any character at 3.
  • Prior to Ultimate, Marth was one of only three playable characters in the game that spoke Japanese in the Western localization of the game (a trait he shares with Roy and Cloud), despite the fact the Fire Emblem games (including one of his own) started seeing overseas releases. The first game to grant him an official English voice actor (Yuri Lowenthal) was Code Name: S.T.E.A.M., which was released after both versions of Smash 4; Lowenthal's first Smash performance as Marth was in Ultimate.
  • Marth is currently one of the only veteran characters in the series to be ranked as a top tier character in all of his appearances; he shares this distinction with Diddy Kong.
    • Though he was initially ranked as a low-tier character in Smash 4, he returned to his top-tier position after receiving buffs in multiple game updates.
  • Marth is the only playable Fire Emblem character to debut in the 20th century.
  • Despite wearing armor, Marth has always been somewhat light since his debut, weighing less than numerous female fighters and fighters of a younger age such as Ness, Lucas and the Ice Climbers to name a few.

References