Marth: Difference between revisions
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==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*Marth's trophy info in Brawl is not entirely correct as it says Altea was destroyed by Akaneia (Archanea in the North American ''Fire Emblem'' games), while Akaneia only controlled Altea for a period of time and it is reclaimed by Marth near the end of the game. | *Marth's trophy info in Brawl is not entirely correct as it says Altea was destroyed by Akaneia (Archanea in the North American ''Fire Emblem'' games), while Akaneia only controlled Altea for a period of time and it is reclaimed by Marth near the end of the game. | ||
*Marth and [[Mario]] are the only characters to have two different characters as full clones, Marth's being | *Marth and [[Mario]] are the only characters to have two different characters as full clones, Marth's being {{SSBM|Roy}} in ''[[Melee]]'' and {{SSB4|Lucina}} in ''[[Smash 4]]''. | ||
**Interestingly, both Marth's and Mario's name begins with "Mar-" and both are related to at least one of their clones (coincidentally, both the related clones' names begin with "Lu"); in Marth's case, Lucina is his descendant. | **Interestingly, both Marth's and Mario's name begins with "Mar-" and both are related to at least one of their clones (coincidentally, both the related clones' names begin with "Lu"); in Marth's case, Lucina is his descendant. | ||
**In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', both Marth and Mario each have one clone ({{SSB4|Lucina}} and {{SSB4|Dr. Mario}}, respectively) and one semi-clone ({{SSB4|Roy}} and {{SSB4|Luigi}}, respectively). | **In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', both Marth and Mario each have one clone ({{SSB4|Lucina}} and {{SSB4|Dr. Mario}}, respectively) and one semi-clone ({{SSB4|Roy}} and {{SSB4|Luigi}}, respectively). |
Revision as of 14:21, June 29, 2015
- For fighter info, see Marth (SSBM), Marth (SSBB), and Marth (SSB4).
Marth | |
---|---|
File:FireEmblemSymbol.png Official artwork of Marth from Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem, Heroes of Light and Shadow. | |
Universe | Fire Emblem |
Debut | Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light (1990) |
Smash Bros. appearances | Melee Brawl SSB4 Ultimate |
Most recent non-Smash appearance | Fire Emblem Fates (via amiibo) (2015) |
Console/platform of origin | Nintendo Family Computer |
Species | Human |
Gender | Male |
Place of origin | Archanea |
Japanese voice actor | Hikaru Midorikawa |
Article on Fire Emblem Wiki | Marth |
Marth (マルス, Marth) is the main playable hero in the first and third installments of the Fire Emblem series of tactical role-playing games. Previously well-known primarily in Japan for a game series that was never localized abroad, Marth was included in all language versions of Super Smash Bros. Melee as a playable character, and his popularity in the game (along with that of his similar counterpart Roy) influenced Nintendo's decision to release all subsequent Fire Emblem titles (excluding New Mystery of the Emblem) internationally.
Character description
The first game in what would become the long-running tactical role-playing medieval high fantasy series Fire Emblem, released on the Famicom (Japanese NES) and titled Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light), introduced Marth as the main character. His design was noticeably different from his modern-day incarnation. The second game in the series, Fire Emblem Gaiden, took place on the same fictional world but on a different continent and was only tangentially related to the first and did not feature Marth. The third game however, titled Fire Emblem: Monsho no Nazo ("Mystery of the Emblem") and released on Super Famicom (Super NES) early in 1994, was both a remake of the original game and a continuation of that game's story. Marth underwent a character redesign to resemble the more "bishōnen" prince he is portrayed as in today's modern image of him, and he became the only FE -series main character to feature in a starring role from the start of the game in more than one FE title. In both these games, his in-game unit is the only one that belongs to the Lord character class, and that became tradition with all main starring characters of subsequent FE titles, being units that must be kept alive and start out weak but become very powerful over the course of each game.
Marth returns to the Fire Emblem series as a downloadable and playable character in the 3DS game Fire Emblem: Awakening.
Falchion
The Falchion is Marth's sword. It remains his only weapon through his four appearances in the Super Smash Bros. series, and is Fire Emblem's series symbol for Melee, Brawl, and Smash 4. All of Marth's attacks use the Falchion with the exception of grabs and throws. In the games, the Falchion appears to be a golden broadsword during in-game battle sequences. However, it has been shown as a longsword with a steadily widening blade in its official artwork. A Falchion has also been used by Alm, and Sigurd's Tyrfing sword greatly resembles the Falchion. It is extremely effective against dragons in all its appearances and vital to killing Earth Dragons and Dark Dragons.
Marth is one of few playable heroes in the series to actually wield the Falchion. This weapon would later be wield by his descendants Chrom and Lucina, respectively, although with an updated design.
The Falchion's sister weapon is the Fire Emblem or the "Shield of Seals" and they were both created together by the Dragon God Naga from his fangs. However they do not have to be used together as Marth's ancestor Anri uses the Falchion alone, as does Marth himself in Smash. Marth wields the two weapons together in the Fire Emblem games.
The Falchion has a property no other weapon has: attacks are stronger if landed at the tip of the blade, which acts as a sweet spot. Successful use of this is the crux of Marth's success in the Smash games he is playable in.
In Media
When Super Smash Bros. Melee was being developed, requested character polls posted by Japanese fans placed Marth as the most popular character, so HAL Laboratory included Marth as a playable character in the fighting game, and also placed the main character from the then-upcoming Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade (Fuuin no Tsurugi) game, Roy, as another playable character alongside Marth. Nintendo of America feared that these characters would not have appeal to western gamers and thus would have to be removed, but there was enough stateside approval of Marth and Roy that they were kept. Marth and Roy were introduced along with the Fire Emblem franchise through the worldwide release of Melee, and the result was immensely positive, causing Fire Emblem games from installment seven onwards to be released internationally; the first of these games also featured Eliwood, the father of Roy. Marth and Roy were not given dub voices in the game, retaining their Japanese-language voice samples (with Midorikawa reprising his role as Marth's voice actor starting from Melee onwards).
In Super Smash Bros. Melee
Marth makes his Smash debut (and by extension, his international video game debut, excluding the Mystery of the Emblem anime adaption, which was released in North America) as an unlockable character in Melee. He can be unlocked one of three ways: using all fourteen starter characters at least once each in Vs. Mode matches, beating 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 more effective fighters, currently ranking 4th 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 appearance, 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 Akaneia.
- Fire Emblem (Japan Only)
(Famicom)
In Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Marth returns as an unlockable playable character. Marth has superior range to most characters in the game, and relies on the length of his sword to effectively zone against his opponents. But this time however, it is uncertain as to whether or not he has been nerfed since Melee like a lot of other higher tier characters. He is currently resting in the "A-Tier" according to the official SBR tier list.
Trophy
- 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.
- : Fire Emblem (Japan Only)
Sticker
Name | Game | Effect | Character(s) |
---|---|---|---|
Marth | Fire Emblem: Monshō no Nazo | Attack +19 |
Marth (Fire Emblem Monsho no Nazo) |
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 his attire from Fire Emblem: New Mystery of the Emblem, Heroes of Light and Shadow[1] as opposed to his design from Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem, which was used in Melee and Brawl.
Marth was greatly nerfed going into SSB4, as a result of receiving many significant nerfs and exiguous, inconsequential buffs. These nerfs significantly hamper his neutral game, depriving him of his outstanding punishment and comboing capabilities from his previous appearances. Although many returning characters received an overall buff, Marth, along with other Brawl dominate characters such as Meta Knight and Falco, are among the few truly nerfed characters to make them more balanced with the rest of the cast.
Trophies
- Marth
- NA: 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.
- PAL: 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.)
- 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.
- MarthTrophy3DS1.png
Classic (3DS)
- MarthTrophy3DS2.png
Alt. (3DS)
Gallery
Trivia
- Marth's trophy info in Brawl is not entirely correct as it says Altea was destroyed by Akaneia (Archanea in the North American Fire Emblem games), while Akaneia only controlled Altea for a period of time and it is reclaimed by Marth near the end of the game.
- Marth and Mario are the only characters to have two different characters as full clones, Marth's being Roy in Melee and Lucina in Smash 4.
- Interestingly, both Marth's and Mario's name begins with "Mar-" and both are related to at least one of their clones (coincidentally, both the related clones' names begin with "Lu"); in Marth's case, Lucina is his descendant.
- In Super Smash Bros. 4, both Marth and Mario each have one clone (Lucina and Dr. Mario, respectively) and one semi-clone (Roy and Luigi, respectively).
References
Fire Emblem universe | |
---|---|
Fighters | Marth (SSBM · SSBB · SSB4 · SSBU) · Roy (SSBM · SSB4 · SSBU) · Ike (SSBB · SSB4 · SSBU) · Lucina (SSB4 · SSBU) · Robin (SSB4 · SSBU) · Corrin (SSB4 · SSBU) · Chrom (SSBU) · Byleth (SSBU) |
Assist Trophies | Lyn · Black Knight · Tiki |
Stages | Castle Siege · Arena Ferox · Coliseum · Garreg Mach Monastery |
Item | Killing Edge |
Other | Sothis |
Trophies, Stickers and Spirits | Trophies (SSBM · SSBB · SSB4) · Stickers · Spirits |
Music | Brawl · SSB4 · Ultimate |
Masterpieces | Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and the Blade of Light · Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem |