Record of Agarest War

Agarest Senki (known as Record of Agarest War in North America and Agarest: Generations of War in Europe) is a strategy RPG developed by Idea Factory. It was released Europe by Ghostlight on October 30th 2009 and in North America by Aksys Games with a different translation on 27 April 2010 for the Playstation Network and the Xbox 360, both using different translations.

The story begins with Leonhardt, also known as General Golden Leo, turning against his men while protecting the life of a young elven girl and giving his life in the process. He is approached by a mysterious woman known as Dyshana, who agrees to resurrect him in exchange for an oath: To become a Spirit Vessel and pledge both his life and the lives of his descendants to her cause.

A prequel under title Agarest Senki ZERO and a sequel under the title Agarest Senki 2 was also released. A spinoff, developed by former members of the then recently defunct Flight Plan, titled Agarest Senki Mariage [sic] was released on PSP. All 3 console games have been released in English and ported to the PC, however Mariage remains Japan and PSP only.

Don't confuse with Record of Lodoss War.

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Agarest Senki contains the following tropes:
"Young Elf: B-But... had she not brought you here, none of this would have happened! Even if the dark elf did not draw the monsters herself, this is still her fault! Thoma: A slow mind will never win a woman's heart, you know. Besides, she has a name--Lavinia. And a pretty name at that. Perhaps you could be a gentleman and use it? Young Elf: Be silent, outsider! You know nothing of us! You should not profess opinions on that which you do not understand! Thoma: I may be an outsider, but I hardly see why that deserves such an exaggerated display of emotion. And where, may I ask, were you, while we were fighting to save your village? While Lavinia was fighting desperately to save your village? How pathetic you are, to cast blame on one who risked her life to protect yours. Elf, dark elf, it matters not. A woman is a woman. There are women who surpass me in strength. There are those who I surpass. But many women do not know how to fight. If you are strong, what is your obligation as a man? What must you do when women are in danger? Do you cast aside those whom you do not care for, and abandon them to their fate? Or do you give aid to women in peril, regardless of whether you love or hate them? How can you call yourself a man when you hide from danger and tell the person who saved you to leave? You, my friend, are not only a failure as a man, but as a person as well."
 * A-Cup Angst: Special mention goes to Lizerotte for this one. If all of your companions were busty...
 * Action Girl: At least one of the love interests in each generation is a strong melee attacker. Noah in third generation stands out, being practically an Expy of one Henry Jones Jr.
 * Adventurer Outfit
 * Aerith and Bob: Zerva, Vashtor, Dyshana, Qua, Ryuryu. Do we need to go on?
 * Artificial Stupidity: Auto-battle, why did you just have the squishy mage jump into melee range and physically attack an opponent who can counter? Why did you spend everyone's AP to ensure an overkill against one monster when there were seven others still on the battlefield? Why did you use an attack that was completely ineffective against/healed the enemy?
 * However, auto-battle is good at moving (since it knows where the computer is going to move, also being the computer), as well as setting up Extended Area Combos. Just don't let it do the attacking as well.
 * Anti-Grinding: Despite having a lot of things that encourage players to grind, straying out of the main quest to train adds more turns to the total count, which will result some events and characters to be blocked or lost permanently. Being stronger than the game expect also cut down battle bonus and benefit you get in the main quests. US release modded the game so that you can grind in a dungeon all you want without spending turns.
 * Babies Ever After:
 * Badass Boast: Rex loves doing this to keep reminding us the players that he is the real hero.
 * Badass Family: The Raglen family.
 * Bait and Switch Boss: In the Dark Ending.
 * Battle Harem: Five generations' worth.
 * Beach Episode: Oddly there is one for our viewing pleasure.
 * Best Known for the Fanservice: Everyone mostly remembers Yayoi as the girl with sausage on Akyss homepage.
 * Everybody remembers the mousepad with Vira-Lorr's boobs.
 * Big Eater: Faina, oh boy for an Ill Girl she sure eats a lot.
 * Blade on a Stick: Elaine(First Generation) and Valeria(Second Generation).
 * Ganz (Third Generation) and Reverie (Fourth Generation).
 * Break Meter: Empties as the target gets hit and is vital to the strategy to the game. When the meter is emptied after being hit enough, attacks do extra damage and some Arts get in a few extra hits at the end of their animations. The game encourages you to use high break attacks first, then stack as many Break Arts as you can at the end of the For Massive Damage.
 * Calling Your Attacks: Everyone does this when they use their 3rd EX along with a Badass Creed.
 * Captain Obvious: "Silver Sword: A sword made of silver" Gee, thanks item description!
 * Winfield calls Dyshana as this when she points out things he already knows in the fifth generation.
 * Chaste Hero: Ladius is pretty much the epitome of this trope.
 * Chewing the Scenery: Thoma and Winfield's conversation at the hot springs. It must be seen to be believed.
 * Christmas Cake: Interesting example: basically the last generation descendant Rex gets to choose any single girl as his love and some of them might have fought alongside his Ancestor Leonhardt.
 * Combos: Which leads to breaks, then to Overkills.
 * Combination Attack: They must have spent most of this game's budget for those awesome combos.
 * Critical Status Buff: Some characters have passive abilities that activate when their health drops low enough
 * Cursed with Awesome: Winfield is cursed by the Bracelet, thanks to it now he is fated to become a demon and bring the Bracelet to the Demon King, but on the same time the Bracelet won't let him die until he fulfilled his role therefore making him practically immortal.
 * Cute Monster Girl: In the second generation, there's Sherufanir, the Kitsune-like daughter of a male neocollom and a god-blooded human woman (which may disqualify her from counting, as she's a Half-Human Hybrid). She's also a valid choice in the Romance Sidequest.
 * You've also got the harpuia Silvi and Murumina (in the fourth and fifth generations, respectively), and Qua the rabbit-type neocollom girl. Not to mention some of the capturable monsters, like the Nekomata-types.
 * Dating Sim: Shades of it. Yeah good luck choosing.
 * Deal with the Devil: Played with, although Leonhardt made a deal with Dyshana to protect Ellis, it's a for a noble goal and not a selfish one, although somewhere along the generations they tend to not agree.
 * Decoy Protagonist: Leonhadt is on all promotional artwork, everyone thought he is the main character. He's not, it's his great-great grandson, Rex.
 * Degraded Boss:
 * Design It Yourself Descendant: Whoever the protagonist of that generation chooses as his wife, the next generation will have a different look.
 * Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?: Hmm...
 * Agarest Senki 2 also does this one in the opening! According to the gameplay however, it was a bad idea to punch out.
 * Dreaming of Things to Come: Leonhardt dreams that he is killed by a Black Knight, guess what happens three minutes later.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: TOO DAMN MANY TO COUNT, but here are some examples. Beware: you might get the wrong ideas (or the right ones).
 * Vira-Lorr's idea for curing hangovers
 * Yayoi..see yumyum at the bottom for that.
 * Luana with new clothes
 * Fiana's training ideas
 * Double Entendre: The first boss is Jumbo Cock.
 * A lot of the dating sim dialogues are built with double entendres 'RIVALING Endless Frontier and Ar tonelico.
 * Dual Boss: In Fifth Generation, the Gurgs start appearing in caster/melee pairs.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending: It took 5 generations but you finally did. Or did you?
 * Easily Forgiven:
 * Episode Zero the Beginning
 * Erotic Eating: Happens at least one in every game. Bananas, sausages and other things.
 * Eleventh-Hour Ranger:
 * Evil All Along:
 * Fake Longevity: All games in the series are long enough with the passing through generations aspect of it, but the sheer number of obligatory fights in each one of them makes it longer than it really is, really longer.
 * Expy: Rex(5th generation) is basically Leonhardt (First generation) with different hair.
 * Five-Man Band: Happens in each generation.
 * The Hero: Leonhardt or his descendants.
 * The Lancer: Hero's love interest usually.
 * The Chick: Ellis(through all the generations).
 * The Big Guy: Depends on who you take.
 * The Sixth Ranger: Again, depends on who you take.
 * If we go by the First Generation True Companions with their EX 3 Combo Absolute End excluding the love interests:
 * The Hero: Leonhardt
 * The Lancer: Zerva
 * The Big Guy: Borgnine
 * The Chick: Vira-Lorr
 * Tagalong Kid: Ellis (remember, this is generation 1)
 * The Sixth Ranger: Winfield
 * Gambit Pileup: Let's just say  and go on from there.
 * Generation Xerox: The next generation's protagonist appearance will be based on who his mother was and will take up the same quest his father had. Rinse and repeat until one of them kills the final boss.
 * Genki Girl: Qua
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: The promo art could be considered porn, yet somehow the game gets away with a "T" rating.
 * The ESRB's explanation? Despite the constant sexual innuendo, ridiculous amount of fanservice, and CGs of almost completely naked women, nothing strictly warrants an M rating.
 * Grandma, What Massive Hotness You Have!: Last Generation's potential love interests might have fought alongside his ancestor, but they still look they like did back then or aged very little.
 * Guardian Entity: Borgnine is this to Ellis.
 * Guide Dang It: The True Ending is really easy to miss since you have to keep track of where the Karma Meter is at and making sure you don't grind too much since a high "turn count" (battles fought) will lock you out of getting it.
 * Happily Ever After: Certain endings for 5th generation girls. Here's an example:
 * Heroic Sacrifice: Well...in a sense.
 * However, in the True Ending Route of the Digest mode of Agarest ZERO,
 * Heroes Prefer Swords: Leonhardt uses swords. Soul breeding will typically result in his descendants using them as well.
 * Hey, It's That Voice!: Dyshana is Domon Kasshu's daughter!
 * Leonhardt would like you to know that he comes to deliver bad luck.
 * Hot Springs Episode: Present throughout the generations. Totally worth the dark karma.
 * Immortality Begins At Twenty
 * Infinity-1 Sword: There's a sword named Shining Light, to get it you have to: 1) Get to the true route; 2) Have 2 sword that costs more than 300000 G combined; 3) Have an item that you get by beating a boss in The Very Definitely Final Dungeon; 4) Beat 5 over-leveled gods. In the other side you have the less powerful Leo's sword, which you automatically get by fulfilling the first step.
 * Though if you're just looking for pure physical power, the extra STR given by Leo's Sword makes it stronger than the Shining Light, but just barely.
 * Instant Death Radius: That One Boss Midas will kill any party member within 2 squares with Phoenix Strike. No exceptions.
 * Interface Spoiler: There are some, in pretty much all games so far, in the Gallery; specifically in the characters bio, party members will get an entry in the database as soon as they're introduced, there's the possibility that this member will do something of importance in the next generation, which usually is tied to The Hero of said generation, and the information about it will be available as sson as their general info became available in the Gallery; of course this is reserved for the supporting cast, The Protagonist and Love Interests of the given genration are free of this.
 * Interspecies Romance: Each of the generations that has a Romance Sidequest has at least one non-human girl as an option. Leonhardt (first generation) has a Syrium named Fyuria (basically a flat chested Elf). Ladius (second generation) has Sherufanir, a Cute Monster Girl Half-Human Hybrid. Thoma (third generation) has Lavinia or Faina, sisters and High Elf/Dark Elf hybrids. Finally, Duran (fourth generation) has Silvi, a Featherfolk.
 * Karma Meter: The simplified version.
 * Kill'Em All:
 * Knife Nut: Fyuria, Sherufanir, and Alberti. Beatrice can also equip knives too.
 * All four also have a Combination Attack with each other.
 * Level Grinding: Some grinding to required to beat the crap outta Especially on hard mode.
 * Limit Break: Under certain conditions like low health, high SP, etc... your character can pull off a high damage special attack that is basically this.
 * More specifically there are certain passive abilities that greatly increase damage at low health, and all characters gain three unique attacks that can only be used with large amounts of SP, which is gained in small amounts by attacking and being attacked as well as massive amounts to all party members by having characters die. If both low HP and high SP are met on characters with the right passives they can easily destroy an enemy hundreds of levels over them in a single blow.
 * Loads and Loads of Characters: To be expected considering the game spans five generations.
 * Loads and Loads of Races: This game's got humans, syriums, high elves, dark elves, onerthes', neocolloms, ryulents, larvas, greers, nelths, harpuias and yulishees.
 * Love Confession: Present throughout the generations; Leonhardt's descendants must choose a girl to marry.
 * Love Interest: Each protagonist has three potential brides per generation except for the last guy, who gets his pick from any of the single women who weren't a previous love interest.
 * Magic Knight: Soul Breeding can result in the main character being one.
 * Magic Skirt: Despite all the sexual fanservice the game throws at you, you will never get a glorious Panty Shot from any of the girls. Even when tentacles are involved.
 * Master Swordsman: Leonhardt and his descendants are this.
 * ...Provided who you chose as a wife in the previous generation would allow said descendants to wield swords.
 * Metal Slime: Golden Bats. They typically have levels far higher than normal for the area you in, but have roughly the same health as the monsters you should be fighting, so if you can end the fight quickly you can see roughly a 600% or higher bonus to your rewards. However their Will Powers make it so they take significantly reduced damage from everything, they naturally resist magic, and once they hit 25% health physical attacks no longer work. Oh, and they regenerate 20% of their health a turn, can drain your health, and can easily fully heal all of the other enemies while they're at it. If the fight goes too long, expect to see a penalty on your rewards, rather than the standard reward you could've gotten had those Goddamn Bats just not been there.
 * Your Limit Breaks help quite a bit toward getting through that 25% phase--they bypass the aforementioned Parry willpower entirely. On that note, the Accuracy willpower works too as long as that character can lead off the attacks and generate that much SP quickly enough.
 * Modesty Bedsheet: Appears in every generations ending.
 * Monty Haul: Bought all the DLCs? Congratulations, now nothing can stop you from annihilating all enemies from Gen 1 to Gen 4.
 * Except Midas.
 * Mood Dissonance: For all the sexy scenes the game likes to advertise with, the story is a fairly serious war drama. Which makes it all the more jarring when the scene shifts to a bunnygirl fellating a banana.
 * Mood Whiplash: The mood at the end of Generation 4? Hopeful, and on a high note. And then you're shunted to the beginning of Generation 5, where the very first thing you get to hear is how screwed everything is on the demon-fortified continent, how the best resistance against the forces of darkness fell ten years ago and started the decline, and how victory is highly unlikely, even if one could pull off the herculean task of uniting the remaining human countries in spite of the myriad of demon fortresses.
 * Oh this game has a ton of these. Just check the Mood Dissonance trope.
 * More Friends, More Benefits: It is possible, with judicious use of a guide to have all 3 love interests at intimacy 5 (blushing) at the end of every generation. It's even required to unlock some events.
 * Multiple Endings: Three endings: True, Normal, and Bad.
 * My Sister Is Off-Limits: Lavinia tries this with Thoma. It doesn't work.
 * Ninja: First generation love interest Fyuria fits this trope.
 * Beatrice fits this better, considering two of her unique abilities specifically state that they're Ninja Arts.
 * New Season, New Name: Leo's Golden Sword seems to change each games, in the first it's named Leo's Sword, in ZERO it's named Treasure Sword of Oath, and in the second it's named Veldafard.
 * No One Could Survive That: Leonhardt knocks the dark knight off a cliff at the end of the first generation. He's back in the second generation.
 * No Points for Neutrality: Averted. The best ending requires a Neutral karma meter.
 * Non-Standard Character Design: Hello there random 3D monsters
 * NTSC Bonus: The North American version came out 9 months after the European version, and fixed much of that version's Blind Idiot Translation. This version also lets you grind in a dungeon without spending turns.
 * Odd Name Out: Ellis, Alice and...Fiona?
 * Old Save Bonus: If you have a cleared data on Agarest 1, you can use it to import data to Agarest Zero. Likewise, Agarest Senki 2 will also be using this setup by importing data from Agarest Zero.
 * Our Elves Are Different: For one, they seem to age to a certain point and then stop; and two, they're not always called elves.
 * Optional Sexual Encounter: Played with, you have to marry one of the girls in the current generation where you are treated to a scene of them with nothing but bedsheets. One of the few JRP Gs to let the player have sex with their love interest
 * Pals with Jesus: Borgnine not only is one of the first characters to join your party, but also happens to be a Larva, a lesser god.
 * Relationship Values: The better a potential love interest likes that generation's protagonist, the better stats their son gets in the next.
 * Replacement Love Interest: Ellis denies it but it's pretty much obvious that she loves Rex because he looks like Leonhardt.
 * School Swimsuit: Winfield forces Hildegard to wear one.
 * Screwed by the Network: Why was the North American PlayStation 3 version not released on a retail disc? Sony America doesn't allow retail discs without English voice acting.
 * Oddly averted with with the prequel, which still has no English voice option, but did get a disc release.
 * Serious Business: Winfield (and later Thoma) takes peeking girls at hot spring too seriously, to the point he thinks it's worth dying for.
 * Sex Sells: The US marketing campaign for the game actually managed to exaggerate the amount of Fan Service in the game -- there's a lot of it, but from the promotions, you'd think the game contained nothing else. This managed to backfire spectacularly -- at least one store was reported to sell the special edition wrapped in white paper with the warning that it is the "(Adult Only) Special Edition."
 * Sibling Yin-Yang: Fyuria has light-based attacks, her brother Zerva has darkness-based attacks. Together, they have a powerful Yin-Yang Bomb.
 * Stripperiffic:
 * Fyuria wear Too Many Belts, and not a lot else.
 * Sherufanir wears a dress that combines an Impossibly Low Neckline with a window in the front to show off her garter-belt.
 * Sword of Plot Advancement: Leonhardt's Sword, you'll need it.
 * Talking to Himself: Due to the fact that there are just tons of characters in this game, some of them had to be voiced by the same seiyuu. Examples include Leo and Rex (though that one's justified, and Alberti sharing a voice with
 * Tenchi Solution: Plum invokes it toward the end of the fifth generation. It's not an option.
 * In new scenes in Zero's Digest Mode it's revealed that in the end Leonhardt, Ladius, Thoma, and Duran settled for this after death with their respective love interests.
 * The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: SO MUCH!
 * Until you realize that almost any fight, including Midas, can be won by sticking one character right up in the boss's face and keeping everyone else about six spaces back. Almost all bosses have Impulse Wave or a similar skill, which will toss the dead character back to the others, just in range to be revived and sent right back the next turn. Repeat as necessary until you have the SP needed to just kill the boss in a single turn.
 * The fact that the bosses will still have combination attacks as base skills rather than requiring the attacks that make up those skills still comes across as a bit of cheating though. They also seem to use less AP to pull of these abilities, as though they have the AP reducing Will Power even though they don't or don't even have the SP to have it active.
 * Cross Edge has done a similar thing.
 * The Hero: Leohardt and his descendants but with an interesting twist:
 * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Thoma gives a fairly impressive one to a racist elf.
 * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Thoma gives a fairly impressive one to a racist elf.


 * Qualifies to me more as a Screw You, Elves speech.
 * Not at all. It had nothing to do with the jerk being an elf and more to do with being rude to a woman that saved him while he cowered.
 * There Is No Kill Like Overkill: There's is an overkill message if you do so, and a few good items when doing them.
 * Third Eye
 * Timed Mission: The true ending is locked out if you take more than 500 turns to get there.
 * Time Skip: The story spans 5 generations, so this is a must.
 * Token Evil Teammate: Vashtor, as if it wasn't obvious.
 * Translation Tropes: The text gets a full translation, but there was no voice acting done so all the characters speak in Japanese.
 * True Companions: Each generation gets their own.
 * The first generation fits this more than the rest however.
 * Tsundere: A male example is Duran, so very much so. Watching him get flustered is half the fun. And one of his potential love interests Ryuryu is a mix of this, kuudere, and Emotionless Girl, making for some rather interesting cutscenes (read: adorable)
 * The "Canon" route (if you based it on the opening, the portraits of the trophy list, and the image of the page itself) has the following route: Fyuria, Valeria, Lavinia, and Hilda. One thing in common? They're all tsunderes.
 * Unwanted Harem: Played with near the end, basically there are more female than male party members and as such it comes to this. Especially in the last generation with Rex who is basically Leonhardt 2.0 with ALL the girls who the others before him never married or fought alongside.
 * Actually weaponized in the combo EX Pink Poison. Queuing up the level 2 EX of Rex, Qua, Beatrice, Murmina, Plum, and Reverie plays a skit in which the five of them confront Rex as he faces down the targeted monster. They then begin glowing with menacing auras and charge at him in a Big Ball of Violence. Rex narrowly escapes. The monster is not so lucky...
 * Updated Rerelease: Reappearance added in more voicing, upgraded the visuals, added in the gallery, as well as new items and a new dungeon. Zero's Digest Mode for the first game cut out all non-story battles, locked onto the true end, and added in new scenes to the post-game content that imply or outright state relations between characters in the two games
 * Used to Be a Sweet Kid: Fyuria admits that when she was a kid when there are no wars, she used to be a very cute generic girl, all she wants is a doll and making a flower crown. Aww...
 * We Are as Mayflies: Of all the races presented in-game, humans are the only ones that noticeably age over the generations.
 * We Have Reserves: Have to  No worry! Make children and let them carry on your task!
 * Wham! Episode: Sure, you can see  betrayal coming from a mile away. What you don't get to see is that
 * Wife Husbandry: Most of Rex harem consists of the girls that raised him ever since he was born.
 * Wolfpack Boss: Once you're used to killing Dual Boss Gurgs, the game throws four of them at you in one fight.
 * You Are Already Dead: A key mechanic to the games; You can continue to attack an enemy long after it's died, as long as you keep the attacks going with the intent to push the enemy into Overkill for extra items needed to improve your equipment. Once you stop, the enemy, or enemies, will die one by one. This is also the name of an achievement for getting a 650 hit chain on an enemy in Zero.
 * You Can't Fight Fate:
 * Your Princess Is in Another Castle: Congratulations!.
 * Yum Yum: You tell me

Agarest Zero
Agarest Zero is the prequel of the first game and deals with Leonhardt's ancestor, Sieghart. Set one thousand years before the first game, the battle between the light and dark forces were still undergoing. Sieghart one day finds a woman named Mimel and he gets involved in the battle between light and dark.

Released in the US on June 14, 2011.

Agarest Zero contains the following tropes:
"Decimal: "Bu-kaw... (Translation: Ugh... What is the matter with me?" Leonis: "Oh, I see someone has been kind enough to translate his comments for us." Dana: "That seems rather miraculous as well..." Shernini: "Only now, Decimal, do you understand! Oh, I shall never let you go!" Decimal: "Buh...Buk... (Translation: Y-You are choking me, evil woman!""
 * Beach Episode: As an event no less!
 * Big Eater: In one of the cutscenes, Leonis is implied to be one.
 * Calling Your Attacks: Much like the first game, the characters call their 3rd EX skill.
 * In one cutscene early in the 2nd generation, Tetora does this to Niel with her "Magnificent Descending Cumulus Fist!".
 * Dark Counterpart Race: Shernini reveals to Leonis that the Syrium are this to High Elves, right down to their creators; Lenion and Chaos.
 * Foregone Conclusion:
 * Also, Leonis must survive.
 * No Fourth Wall: While the game takes itself fairly seriously, the fourth wall is torn down for the post-game Boundary Plane events. For example;

"Friedelinde: "Tune in next week for the thrilling conclusion of "Decimal".""
 * The scene goes on like that for awhile, ending with a Fade to Black and Friedelinde telling everyone;


 * Hot Springs Episode: Happens as an event no less!
 * Les Yay: Happens during many of the "Fan Service" type scenes (Beach Episode, Hot Springs Episode, ...).
 * Refuge in Audacity: You can capture bosses in this game!
 * Running Gag: Sieghart dies in the prologue, just as how Leo died in the beginning of the game.
 * Sequel Difficulty Spike: Don't be expecting the bosses to just sit around pounding one of your characters to death repeatedly while you revive him to take another death to fuel your EX Skills. They have minions almost all the time now, so they're going to be jumping around and ruining your day. If you kill the minions though, you've fueled the boss's own EX Skill, so it's not even safe to go that route. Fortunately there's always Sleep, Paralyze, Stun, and Bind to keep them under control.
 * Nevermind that Sleep and Paralyze tend to only be if you have abilities that can use it, and those tend to be highly unreliable. While you may be able to get VERY reliable Stun and Bind on certain characters (Mimel and Tetora come to mind), there is a catch: It's on their second Limit Break. That is to say, you need to not only get the SP for it, but plan around the very heavy pre-promotion AP expenditure.
 * Sex Sells: Averted oddly, considering this is released by the guys who made the first game look like an over-the-top Fan Service game.
 * Shameless Self Promoter: Aksys Games' response to the Catherine promo video.
 * Shout-Out: MikeZ's infamous REAL Soviet Damage! is one of the achievement/trophy names of this game.
 * On that note, a number of achievement/trophy names are shout-outs. Among others, there's 'It's a Trap!', 'Stay Classy, Kraltarla', 'Nirvana...?' (earned for creating a marionette; it is worth mentioning that Aksys localized both Agarest and Blaz Blue), 'Fight in the Shade', and 'You're Already Dead!'.
 * There's a smithing item called the Mirror of Erised.
 * Skinship Grope: Mimel does this to Sayane during the Hot Springs Episode.
 * Spiteful AI: Hope you've stuck range-5 moves or gotten Alice up to level 25 by mid-late generation 1. Otherwise you'll be stuck chasing enemies around that run away for the sole sake of lowering your combat rating, in turn reducing the amount of EXP, money, EP, and TP gained.
 * Wham! Episode: You knew it was coming but not how;
 * What Happened To The Dark Elves? The first game had stated that the Dark Elves served Summerill, and yet they're nowhere to be seen and never mentioned. This makes The Reveal about what the Syrium are all the more irritating, as it seemed like that was going to be the Dark Elves' thing.
 * You Don't Look Like You: Some of the 3D enemies have had their models replaced. Most noticeable with with the Jumbo Cock, who is no longer a giant chicken but rather a Griffon thus ruining the joke, and Tyrant type enemies going from massive armored enemies to using the model for spirits from Hyperdimension Neptunia. This is not only present in Zero's battles, but the battles in the game's abridged version of the first game as well.

Agarest Senki 2
Agarest Senki 2 (also known as Record of Agarest War 2) is a sequel in name only of Agarest Senki 1. It is set in a parallel world opposite the Agarest World of the first game. The story follow a man named Weiss who has an amnesia after he killed a god. He then encounters a woman named Eva who tells him that it was a bad idea, and that he now has to revive them with him and three women as a catalyst. The game then follows him and his descendants trying to revive said gods while finding out who Weiss really was.

Developed by Idea Factory and Compile Heart, this game was released in Japan on November 18, 2010 for the PlayStation 3 console. Gameplay-wise, it looks very similar to Cross Edge except that it is now easier to play this game rather than a Guide Dang It battle system.

There's a confirmation that the US and Europe are getting it.

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Agarest Senki 2 contains the following tropes:

 * Absolute Cleavage: Eva, and Victoria.
 * Abuse Is Okay When It Is Female On Male: If you think all the women, then it is this trope.
 * Abusive Parents:, we're looking at you.
 * Accidentally Accurate: Black Hole in this game pull enemies into it's mass black body before evaporating into a small white mass which causes a massive explosion. This is actually accurate, Black Hole did not just conveniently disappear like in some other fictions shown, Hawking radiation has proven that after a Black Hole lost it's masses an enormous explosions surpassing nukes will happen.
 * Action Girl: Par for the course.
 * Adventure Guild: What you will be visiting a few times if you want to advance the plot.
 * Aerith and Bob: On one hand, you have some normal names like Fiona, Eva, Victoria, and Janus to name a few. On the other hand, you also get names like Ri Ra=Rua, Firiine, and Lizerotte.
 * Ambidextrous Sprite: Uh yup, definitely present in battle animations. Gets more jarring when Georg's scar is located on his left eye, instead of the usual.
 * Amnesiac God:
 * And Now for Someone Completely Different: For a brief while when  not in your party, you can have Jude be the guy walking on the map.
 * Anti-Villain:
 * An Axe to Grind: The garvels wield axes in this game
 * A Taste of Power: Weiss kills the Warmup Boss at level 99 with his Infinity+1 Sword. He loses his level, but strangely enough, his sword is still with him albeit in cutscenes only.
 * The Bad Guy Wins:
 * Beta Couple: That would have to be Janus and Chloe, and Ignis and Cynthia. Both of them do also have one child who travels with you (Jude and Lizerotte respectively).
 * BFG: Jude's gun is a little bit longer than he is. And then there's Janus' Arc Cluster Original Skill.
 * BFS: You can equip the swordsmen with this, though Georg plays this one straight.
 * Big Bad:
 * Black Knight:  Unfortunately, they also got Demoted to Extra.
 * Blade on a Stick: Victoria in the first generation, Silvi in the 2nd, and Lizerotte in the third.
 * Boss Rush:
 * Bottomless Magazines: Jude, and Vanessa will never reload in this game at all. Curiously enough, Janus actually reloads his gun implying that he can run out of bullets.
 * Brother-Sister Incest: The protectors tradition to preserve their pure blood. For examples are: ,Yumil and Luster,.
 * The Cameo: Leonhardt, Ellis, Valeria from the first game, and Meu from Spectral Souls are in this game. Doubles as Continuity Cameo and Contest Winner Cameo.
 * Captain Ersatz: Janus is pretty much Winfield 2.0 except that he's a normal human being who ages quite noticeably, and has a son named Jude.
 * Censor Steam: The Hot Springs Episode won't be complete with this one. Justified seeing as this game is rated to the equivalent of Teen in the US.
 * Combos: Since this game has almost the same gameplay as Cross Edge, this was inevitable.
 * Combination Attack: The bread and butter of the gameplay itself.
 * Colorful Theme Naming: Weiss (white), Schwartz (black), Gray.
 * Curb Stomp Battle: Oh Summerill, you never stood a chance.
 * Dancing Theme: One of the first few trailers of this game has Fiona and Eva pull off an Idolmaster. And yes, you can obtain said trailer in the game itself.
 * Devil but No God:
 * Did You Just Punch Out Cthulhu?: This, apparently was a bad idea however.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: Let's just say they took this trope in Agarest Senki and bumped it Up to Eleven and leave it at that.
 * Mr. Fanservice: For some weird reason, the males in this game are ripped.
 * Expy: Most of the playable characters can be possible expies from the first game:
 * Weiss is Leo, Gray is Ladius minus the emotion, Janus is Captain Ersatz of Winfield, Ignis can be Zerva, Eva is Dyshana, Fiona is Ellis 2.0, Victoria is pretty much Elaine, Vanessa is both Hilda and Murmina, Yumil almost has the same storyline as Silvi, and Schwartz is pre-Character Development Duran taken Up to Eleven.
 * Whoa, whoa, now don't tell me I'm the only one that see Cloud in Weiss, right?
 * Faz looks eerily similar to Lezard for some weird reason.
 * FANSERVICE: Idea Factory and Compile Heart seem to have gotten the memo from Aksys.
 * Fan Service Pack: Welcome to the Agarest Senki 2 bike shop where we have all your wants and needs. We guarantee you that the seat will always be warm.
 * Fetch Quest: Present in this game from find x number of items to kill x amount of monsters to collect items. Doing these will net you money, and also items from the NPCs that you helped out. A large part of the second generation story is pretty much a gigantic Fetch Quest in that you have to collect items so that you can save Luster, Yumil's brother.
 * Flechette Storm: The level 3 final animation of Thousand Kill.
 * Forced Tutorial: There should be no reason why the hell Weiss needs a tutorial when he kills the Warmup Boss because he's already level 99! He should already know the basics on how to fight!
 * Gameplay-Guided Amnesia: After you get tossed to who-knows-where and having an amnesia, the rest of the party give you a tutorial.
 * Gainaxing: Oh boy. Notable for the fact that even just a simple sentence, somehow the women must move their avatars just so they can get their point across complete with Gainaxing.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar: Despite the fact that there are implied torture, Erotic Eating, Hot Springs Episode,, and almost full-blown stuff that happens in here  , it's still Rated T by the ESRB. And Aksys one ups it by having the limited edition come with a blow-up doll
 * Grand Theft Me: Happens thrice in this game.
 * Guide Dang It: This is Compile Heart we're talking here. We would not have it any other way.
 * Handsome Lech: The father-son duo, Janus and Jude. Being the expies of both Winfield and Thoma will turn anyone into this trope.
 * The Hero: Weiss, and his descendants as usual.
 * Hey, It's That Voice!: Far too many in this game, mostly from the women.
 * Faz is voiced by Yuuki Tai, the famous Time Driver, Cobray Gordon himself.
 * Fans of School Rumble might point out that Hanai has the same seiyuu as Gray. Better yet, he's Viewtiful Joe in Tatsunoko vs. Capcom.
 * Hot Springs Episode: This is Agarest we're talking about.
 * Special mention for the final one that has every heroine from all generations.
 * Idle Animation: Some enemies will do a particular action if you're just going to let them stand still. One good example is a pixie eating an apple.
 * Idol Singer: Both Fiona and Eva become one at Flens Berge. Remember that gag trailer where they pulled off an Idolmaster? That's the same thing they do in-game. Though why Eva participated on it when she's still The Stoic at this point is anyone's guess.
 * Implausible Fencing Powers: How Weiss was able to handle that sword in the prologue.
 * Impossible Thief: Janus has the same problem as York from X Edge, but Melvina takes this trope Up to Eleven by stealing from her enemies using thunder.
 * Interspecies Romance: Present in this game as well.
 * Jerkass: Schwartz is pretty much pre-Character Development Duran. Same with Eva, and watch as they argue with their ideals a lot.
 * Kick the Dog: Danaos pretty much chains Melvina to the floor, kick her, and just be a Jerkass to her.
 * Killed Off for Real: As always the protagonist and heroines of non-last generations falls victim to this trope.
 * Death Is Cheap: And then
 * Knife Nut: All three protagonists, but Schwartz plays this one straight whereas the other two transform theirs into a Laser Blade.
 * Laser Blade: Weiss and Gray's dagger whenever they do their Original Skills turn into a lightsaber.
 * Laser-Guided Amnesia: Weiss has no memory of what events have transpired prior to him meeting Aina.
 * Late Arrival Spoiler: It's hard to tell anyone else about this game without spoiling the opening where Weiss.
 * Lazy Backup: Despite the fact that you can switch party members, if all four main party members die on the battlefield, it's a game over even though you have a lot of characters to choose from.
 * Leaked Experience
 * Like Father, Like Son: Jude in regards to Janus. From his personal choice of equipment, to his tendencies to peek at the hot springs. Of course, the similarities end there.
 * Limited Wardrobe: Definitely applies to the guys. For the girls, well it also does apply unless you bought the DLC costumes, in which you can switch their costumes.
 * Loads and Loads of Loading: Not as bad as other examples, but it's still there unfortunately. Compile Heart has not released an "Install" option to be able to play this game faster either.
 * Louis Cypher: . Although role wise,   plays this trope perfectly. See Expy up above.
 * Love Confession: Present in this game as well. You can only choose one girl.
 * Mad Man's Hot Daughter:
 * Master Swordsman: Georg and Mervina. Their Finish Strike is even called Blade Arts.
 * Monty Haul: DLC is back in this game of course. While they're still powerful, they're not as godly powerful as Agarest Senki due to the fact that enhancing items in this game now also take up items instead of just paying Gordon the blacksmith EP.
 * Mood Whiplash: In the first few minutes, you kill a lesser god, and a god. You then get blown somewhere far away and then someone narrates the prologue. Finally, an upbeat Dancing Theme plays in your screen.
 * My Name Is Not Durwood: Before Ignis calls Cynthia by her name, he usually refers to her as kisama. She usually would retaliate as "Kisama ja nai, Cynthia desu!
 * Mythology Gag: Inverted this time. Weiss kills the Warmup Boss at level 99. The level of the Black Knight who kills Leo is also level 99.
 * Non-Action Guy: Fasti/Faz  
 * Off-Model: In Luminous Prima III, when Fiona opens her mouth in the beginning part of the song, her mouth seems to be wider than usual.
 * Old Save Bonus: If you have a finished Agarest Senki Zero save, you can use this to import some items to this game.
 * Out of Focus: Weiss...is very transparent in the first generation, heck Janus seems to have even more role than him. Ironically, he gets much bigger role in the True ending route as a Supporting Leader for the party.
 * Panty Shot: Compile Heart could not resist the urge anymore with this Dancing Theme.
 * Plot Hole: If Summerill is sealed under a goddamn volcano, then how the hell did he appeared at Zendrook pillar?
 * Maybe he just guarded Zendrook pillar for a very long time until Weiss killed him, and sent him back to the volcano?
 * Rank Inflation: As usual, the highest is S, and the lowest goes as low as you want.
 * Relationship Values: Present in the game as well. The higher the relationship value, the stronger the next generation protagonist will be.
 * Relationship Voice Actor: Natsuru is now truly a full fledged stoic chick? And Mikoto shrank down to half her size?
 * Rescue Romance: The final scene before you finally make Ignis and Cynthia be close to each other is  The other men in the party even poke fun of him for that.
 * Restart At Level One: What happens to Weiss after he gets blown off from the territory of the gods.
 * The Reveal: Oh boy,.
 * Selective Obliviousness: The flashbacks have a lot of fun with this, like remember that blood on the screen?
 * Shout-Out: Ignis' 2nd EX Skill looks like a certain Gundam attack.
 * The final animation of Annihilate Circle really looks like Cybuster's Akashic Buster.
 * Spell My Name with an "S": Even though one of the first few official trailers has Eva's name in English language, some still refer to her as Iva for some weird reason.
 * Spoiler Opening / Foreshadowing: During the opening, you see Weiss holding a sword with someone ominous at the background who is pretty much Chaos. At first since Weiss kills Chaos, you get to assume that it is a set up for an epic rivalry between Chaos and Weiss himself.
 * Another nice piece of Foreshadowing would be the 2nd generation Hot Springs Episode. You'd think this was just a little Shout-Out to Ladius having a deja vu that Winfield will get beaten up for peeping on the girls even though Ladius never saw it. In Schwartz's case however,
 * Sword of Plot Advancement: The significance of Veldafard is pretty big in this story? Do you get the sword itself just like how you got Leo's Sword/Treasure Sword of Oath in Agarest Senki if you can obtain the True End? Nope, off to Item Crafting for you.
 * There Is No Kill Like Overkill: Aside from the fact that overkilling will give you items, this game takes it Up to Eleven with an Ultimate Strike where your selected party (enemy must be in "Break" state, and you choose whether you attack an enemy with everyone or with just a certain number of people) will attack the enemy with all they've got, and finish them off with a Finishing Move where two or more people will do their EX Combo provided there's one.
 * Thunder Equals Downpour: At the start of the game no less.
 * Trailers Always Spoil: Remember the gag trailer where they're showing off the exclusive CGs of each heroine, and that there's a brief shot of one hotspring?
 * The Voiceless: Averted; everyone gets voiced in this game. Including the blacksmith, the item store owner, the guild attendant, and the fortune teller.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential: Attacking a fairy. She'll keep apologising until she's either dead or the combo stops.
 * We Help the Helpless: The party is after all, a group of Hired Guns helping the various NPCs of Flens Berge.
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Exactly what happened to Chloe after . Or Cynthia after marrying Ignis? Both women (except Chloe for one scene only) never appeared to the party in the third generation.
 * Wham! Episode: Happens successively with a one hour cutscene! Starting from  to
 * You Fail Biology Forever: In cutscenes, you see characters talking while they're breathing heavily. Talking in real life does not work that way.
 * You Gotta Have Blue Hair: Let's see, we've got violet, aqua blue, pink, red, gray-ish violet, green, and dark blue just to name a few.
 * You Lose At Zero Trust: If your love rate with the girl in Agarest Senki 2 is low, your character will force himself on her to have a kid as part of the sacrifice.
 * You Lose At Zero Trust: If your love rate with the girl in Agarest Senki 2 is low, your character will force himself on her to have a kid as part of the sacrifice.

Record of Agarest War Mariage
The newest and seemingly final Agarest game of Compile Heart, however this time they're teaming up with the former staff who worked on the Summon Night games. The artwork is now done instead by someone named "Blade" instead of the usual artwork by Hirano Katsuyuki.

The story goes that the first generation protagonist will fail to kill the demon king so his three choices of wives will have to carry his soul to pass on to his descendants so that one day, they get to kill the demon king.

Oh and this game is for the PlayStation Portable, a departure from the PlayStation 3.

Record of Agarest War Mariage contains the following tropes:

 * Accidental Pervert: Rain a few times in the first generation. Subverted in the second generation: Ciela regularly gets into these situations, but as they're both girls the other girl ignores or encourages it.
 * Anti-Frustration Features: Random encounters will stop if you are sufficiently powerful and you can manually enter fights on demand (instead of running back and forth) by holding both shoulder buttons. Unfortunately the first part only applies on the world map, not in dungeons.
 * Anti-Grinding: In contrast to the very grind heavy previous games, you stop gaining level or job points if you are too powerful for the enemies you are fighting or your jobs are a high enough level compared to current enemies (respectively), eventually reaching the point you will only gain a single point for each kill.
 * Bokukko: Geolette.
 * Clothing Damage: A first for the series as a gameplay mechanic. The less clothing a heroine has, the more powerful she becomes.
 * Dating Sim: Gains a lot more precedence compared to the first three games.
 * Does This Remind You of Anything: To release the full power of a heroine's magic clothes, the current lead character must pour sticky liquid on them as they sit in bed and groan while directing the lead to specific parts of her body.
 * Fundamentally Female Cast: The second generation if the MC is female.
 * Goofy Print Underwear: Several of Pi's equipable underwear are stripped panties with a bear on them
 * Gratuitous French: The title uses the French spelling of Mar(r)iage, though it might just be a mistake.
 * Harem Cast: Both generations.
 * Infinity Plus One Panties: The ぶーめらんぱんつ　("speedo", for Rain) and セクシィなしたぎ ("sexy underwear", for the first generation heroines) in the first generation as well as the しょうぶぱんつ ("Lucky Underwear", for Ciela), きわどいしたぎ ("Risky Underwear", for the other three second generation heroines) all completely nullify all elemental attacks.
 * Job System: There are only 4 jobs and no two members of the four person party may have the same job at a time, but each character gets different abilities from each job.
 * Marry Them All: Possible in the second generation, even if party is all female.
 * Patchwork Kids: Ciela's mom's can be any of 3 wildly different girls. The only change this has on her is her eye color.
 * Power Floats: Pi. Also each supporting girls's Sacred Treasure floats behind them.
 * Red Eyes, Take Warning: Averted with Rain. The only special feature of his red eyes seem to be them being super recessive, ensuring Ciela gets her mom's eyes.
 * Sarashi: Saika's default underwear, but none of her further equips.
 * Tech Tree + Item Crafting: While the armor of each character is unique and can't be changed, it can be upgraded by sacrificing crafting items. There's 70 upgrades per character. While several are mere stats increases, many branches unlock new abilities entirely. There's also the normal kind of item crafting, including underwear crafting.
 * Third Person Person: Pi.
 * Token Loli: Kunka in the first generation, Pi in the second.
 * Underwear of Power: Literal example. The only non-cosmetic equipable item is underwear. As a result this underwear significantly changes stats and elemental resistance.
 * White Magician Girl: Falcia. Averted with the second generation's staff wielder, the tomboyish Geolette.