Final Fantasy XIII-2



"Time and Memory, frozen in crystal..."

This article assumes you have played Final Fantasy XIII and will have unmarked spoilers from that game.

The next game in the baby-blendingly popular Final Fantasy series, and the fifth title in the series to be a direct sequel to a main series title. The game was teased on January 27, 2011 at the Square Enix 1st Production Department Premier Conference, and was subsequently released on December 15th, 2011 in Japan, January 31st, 2012 in North America, and February 3rd, 2012 in Europe. Like its predecessor, it is for both the PlayStation 3 and the Xbox 360.

Three years after the end of Final Fantasy XIII, the residents of Cocoon are attempting to rebuild their lives following the loss of the Cocoon fal'Cie. Lightning is missing, assumed to have sacrificed herself in order to stop Cocoon from falling and killing everyone inside. Only one person believes otherwise: Serah Farron, who swears that her sister emerged alive but disappeared into thin air a moment later.

When a mysterious teen called Noel Kreiss drops into Serah's life and promises to take her to Lightning, Serah eagerly accepts this opportunity to discover the truth. Noel reveals that he is a Time Traveller, the last survivor of a ruined future sent to Set Right What Once Went Wrong. Using the Historia Crux gates to travel between the past, present and future of Gran Pulse and Cocoon, Serah and Noel must discover the source of the mysterious distortions that are tearing apart the walls between timelines, track down Lightning and confront an immortal antagonist from Noel's world.

This game has examples of:
"Meanie Miss Farron! Meanie Miss Farron!""
 * 100% Completion: The game requires you to completely fill out every map and monster and obtain all of the Fragments in order to view the Secret Ending. However, in order to do this, you will need to obtain several of the hidden monsters that would help against the Nintendo Hard status of the game.
 * Action Commands:
 * During battle, you'll be asked to input commands via the Cinematic Action system, which allows you to do things like climb on enemies, and other cinematic stuff. Mostly, they do superficial stuff, like buffing the party, staggering the boss or just to take it down in a flashy way. Doing the last on will get you an adornment for each boss; doing them all will get you an achievement.
 * Monster allies' Feral Links require the input of commands in order to increase the synchronization, which increases the chance of obtaining the monster killed by the Feral Link. Makes you wonder why support Feral Links even have synchronization...
 * Adult Fear: Sazh loses Dajh while time traveling during his downloadable episode. He is more than a little worried.
 * An Adventurer Is You: The same roles make a return from the original game; Commando, Ravager, Sentinel, Synergist, Saboteur & Medic.
 * After Combat Recovery: Your characters are healed after every battle, which is carried over from the first game.
 * AI Is a Crapshoot:
 * All There in the Manual:
 * The Datacore system returns, although the main storyline is easier to grasp than 13. Every ending (except the secret ending scene) also grants a fragment that acts as a datacore, expanding on the information granted therein, as well as many fragments dropped from bosses and certain story events, including some surprising ones. For example, the Graviton cores
 * In a more meta sense, the final datacore granted from the final bonus fight of Final Fantasy 13, "Fabula Nova Crystallis", can be interpreted as spelling out 13-2's plot in a very general sense.
 * Alternate Universe: Yaschas Massif and Academia have alternate dimensions that appear as a result of solving paradoxes in other locations, and they are marked with an X in the year name. (Ex. 01X AF) You can still go back to the original version of the area, though.
 * Always Save the Girl:
 * Noel believes in this.
 * Ambiguous Robots: Some of the monsters that look and act organic are upgraded with items like bolts and chips. These are usually the same monsters that were identified as biological weapons in the first game.
 * And I Must Scream:
 * are all walking examples of this trope because of Etro.
 * At least three endings involve this trope. For the record, they are
 * And Your Reward Is Clothes: Well, you aren't rewarded with clothes, but you can get them as downloadable content. The various monster adornments could also count as this in some cases. Most of these are earned by things such as Live Trigger Rewards, Cinematic Action Bonuses, or throwing Mog in obscure areas.
 * Animal-Eared Headband: Half the attendants of Serendipity wear cat ear bands, tails, and cat paw gloves. The other half are Palette Swaps of Chocolina and dressed up like blue chocobos.
 * Another Side Another Story: There are DLC packs where you can play a story segment as Sazh, Lightning, or Snow, and then obtain them as a party member "monster" when you complete it.
 * Anyone Can Die: To where it becomes extremely dark.
 * Noel's backstory is that absolutely everyone can, and has, died. He was the last human ever to be born, and so he's jumping around the timeline trying to prevent his backstory from happening.
 * Arbitrary Headcount Limit/Lazy Backup: No matter how many monsters you've captured, only one can fight in battle at a time and only three can be placed in your Paradigm Pack and used in battle. If that monster dies, all monsters in your Paradigm Pack are dead and must be revived. Thankfully it also works in reverse and just reviving one of the monsters revives all 3: the same applies to healing and buffing as well.
 * Arc Number:
 * Although the number thirteen doesn't appear as often as in the previous game, the Thirteenth Ark appears towards the end of the game. This means that it's now also an Ark Number.
 * Almost all DLC monsters have exactly 12 Crystarium nodes, which means that they max out at, you guessed it, level 13.
 * Snow also says he's going to explore the "13 different ages" in one of the paradox endings.
 * The clock in Valhalla strikes 13, the hardest Hands of Time clock faces have 13 numbers on them, and the face of the clock in one of the card games in Sazh's DLC goes up to 13.
 * After completing the Fragment quests in Augusta Tower 200AF, you are awarded with the key to floor 13.
 * In the original Final Fantasy XIII, a five-star battle rating for a standard battle was 13,000. In Final Fantasy XIII-2, it's 15,000 (13,000 + 2,000 - 13-2.)
 * Arc Words: "A future I could not protect..."
 * Ascended Extra:
 * Serah becomes this after literally being a living prop in the first game.
 * Same with Lieutenant Amodar from the first game, who only appeared as a One-Scene Wonder.
 * Ascended Fridge Horror: How to create a Dungeon Town.
 * Attack of the 50-Foot Whatever:
 * Atlas. Bonus points for being a Reality Warper.
 * One of The Undying is located within Academia 400AF. It can step on you.
 * Long Gui is back. It can step on you.
 * Audible Sharpness: Swinging your sword on the map screen results in a distinctive "sharp sword" sound.
 * Awesome but Impractical: The Infinity+1 Sword for both Serah and Noel is this. The Strength and Magic stats depend on how many Fragments you have, so they can be rather weak when you first get them. By the time you'll power it up to have the highest stats, you'll most likely have almost every Fragment in the game, and there isn't much else to do. It also doesn't have any particularly good skills like other slightly weaker high-end weapons do (such as ATB+1 and ATB+50%) and they have no synth abilities.
 * A Worldwide Punomenon:
 * Bad Future:
 * Noel has come back in time to prevent this from happening.
 * Most of the Paradox Endings lead to this.
 * The Bad Guy Wins:
 * Paradox Ending 3, the one with the Flans.
 * Bag of Spilling: Completely justified, since the party members in this game aren't the same as the last one.
 * Averted with Lightning, who is now more powerful than ever.
 * It would be justified for the rest of the XIII party though, since their l'Cie brands are removed at the end of XIII and they as such lose all their gained powers, no justification for the equipment though.
 * Also averted (in a weird way) with Snow, as he's Brought Down to Normal at the end of XIII along with the others, but at some point he.
 * Bathos:
 * Mog provides levity in many serious scenes by being poked or comically shaking his wand in the background.
 * The player can create this by having monsters with ridiculous accessories on during serious boss fights.
 * The "funny" answers to some of the Live Trigger events can make Serah seem like some kind of fool. At one point you can have her ask Noel how much he thinks a time-warping artefact would sell for, right after a mid-game boss fight with the Big Bad.
 * The Beast Master: Serah and Lightning have the ability to tame monsters and have them fight with them. Of course, some monsters cannot be tamed.
 * Caius has an army of monsters to fight for him in the opening cutscene, but he never makes use of this power again other than that...
 * Beef Gate:
 * In order to unlock the gate in the Archylte Steppe to reach the Vile Peaks, you'll have to defeat three Gigantaurs (one at a time, not all at once), which are very powerful the first time you visit the location.
 * A near-literal one can be found in Academia 400 AF. While you're following Caius, the path you're not supposed to take is blocked off by a large Undying. You know, the Cie'th that were Bonus Bosses in the original game? At this point, your attacks will barely make a dent in it even when Staggered, and all its attacks one-shot you. Yeah, I think the game is reminding you to Continue Your Mission, Dammit!.
 * Long Gui is one if you decide to abandon all common sense and fight it instead of scaring it off with thunder like you're supposed to.
 * Betting Minigame: You can play slots and chocobo racing (and in a DLC, cards) in Serendipity and bet coins.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Serah is very nice and gentle, but if you don't do your homework, cause mischief, or doom humanity, you will be in for quite the scolding!
 * Which is also the case in one of the optional mission areas.
 * Long Gui is one if you decide to abandon all common sense and fight it instead of scaring it off with thunder like you're supposed to.
 * Betting Minigame: You can play slots and chocobo racing (and in a DLC, cards) in Serendipity and bet coins.
 * Beware the Nice Ones: Serah is very nice and gentle, but if you don't do your homework, cause mischief, or doom humanity, you will be in for quite the scolding!
 * Which is also the case in one of the optional mission areas.

"Gilgamesh:"I've been waiting in this Coliseum for so very long now! I was starting to worry that you'd never download this part of the game, and I'd be stuck in digital limbo!" (cue confused expression from Serah and Noel)"
 * BFS: Caius' sword is about as big as he is. He can still swing it pretty fast.
 * Big Damn Heroes:
 * Hope when you first meet him.
 * Snow has one in one of the Paradox Endings:
 * Big No: Noel yells a big one when While Square Enix continues to play inappropriate music.
 * Bitch in Sheep's Clothing:
 * Bittersweet Ending: All Paradox Endings except #3 (the Flan one) and #5 (. The canon endings are
 * The canon ending is made out to be this with Lightning's Episode in consideration.
 * The Blade Always Lands Pointy End In: Lightning's gunblade, apparently, which she then uses as a Stepping Stone Sword to swing herself into the fight. An obvious Shout-Out to her base character.
 * Blackout Basement: Yaschas Massif 10AF is under an eternal "eclipse" due to a paradox bringing the global eclipse of the sun from after Cocoon's fall (in Noel's timeline).
 * Bleak Level: A Dying World 700 AF, New Bodhum 700 AF, and Valhalla. Also, by proxy, the Void Beyond.
 * Blessed with Suck:
 * The Eyes of Etro.
 * It's also the most useless Fragment Ability in the game, allowing you to slightly adjust the camera angle during in-game cutscenes.
 * Boke and Tsukkomi Routine: If you pick the odd or funny answers during Live Triggers, Serah becomes the boke and Noel is the tsukkomi.
 * Booby Trap:
 * Book Ends: The tutorial and final boss fights are against Caius and his Eidolon in Valhalla.
 * Boss in Mook Clothing: Proto-Behemoth, Tonberry...
 * When you first go to Yaschas Massif and people tell you not to get into fights with behemoths in the pitch-black areas, they're not kidding. It is possible to win the fights, but it's not easy, and not exactly super-rewarding either.
 * Boss Rush:
 * Bragging Rights Reward: The Odinblade and Odinbolt don't achieve their full potential until you've acquired every fragment, at which point they receive a large jump in damage output, but then there's nothing to use them on... except the DLC coliseum fights.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: Gilgamesh doesn't even know what a fourth wall is.
 * Bragging Rights Reward: The Odinblade and Odinbolt don't achieve their full potential until you've acquired every fragment, at which point they receive a large jump in damage output, but then there's nothing to use them on... except the DLC coliseum fights.
 * Breaking the Fourth Wall: Gilgamesh doesn't even know what a fourth wall is.

"Noel: If the key we need is something that is in a different time period, don't we already have it?"
 * Break Meter: The same mechanic as the first game makes a return.
 * Brick Joke:
 * An Undying Cie'th was killed by a Tonberry in XIII. The same one shows up in XIII-2 as a boss in Episode 4.
 * The mirror. It played no role, and was practically there as a prop. That same mirror is a euphemism for It was further evidence that everything was bleeding into each other, and where you got your first artefact.
 * Bridal Carry: Caius to Yeul during the opening credits, which was also a familiar sight to some players.
 * Broke Your Arm Punching Out Cthulhu:
 * Also in half of the Paradox Endings. Just to list:
 * Broken Bridge: The time gates themselves serve this purpose, only opening up the next area once you've advanced the plot enough to uncover the various Artefacts. There are also numerous other examples in the form of barricades, fallen rubble, time distortions, and so on. There's even two Broken Bridges that are almost literally broken bridges - they're bridges phased out of spacetime that you can't cross until you get Mog's improved search ability.
 * But Thou Must!:
 * Butt Monkey: Mog. There are parts of the game where advancing the plot involves picking the little guy up and tossing him.
 * Capital City: Academia
 * Cartography Sidequest: An NPC will reward you for filling in most area maps 100%. Doing so is sometimes difficult.
 * Chained by Fashion:
 * Gogmagog and its palette swap, which are described as charms and seals placed upon it.
 * The giant monster you ride in the Sunleth Waterscape has chains on its head for some reason.
 * Character Customization: This game introduces large nodes in the Crystarium, which will give you a stat bonus depending on what role you leveled up. (Ex. Commando raises Attack, Medic raises Health, etc.) This lets you decide whether Serah and Noel will become better spellcasters or physical attackers.
 * Chekhov's Gunman:
 * Chronic Hero Syndrome: A Deconstruction.
 * Cliff Hanger/To Be Continued:
 * Lightning's Episode introduces another cliffhanger:
 * Clock Roaches: Several monsters (the crystal-insect ones) are direct manifestations of paradox.
 * Collection Sidequest: The Fragments, of which there are 160. Some are easier to get than others, naturally.
 * Some of the fragments are actually rewards from collection sidequests, like having fully explored every map or having defeated every monsters.
 * Continuity Nod: Near the beginning of the last game, when the heroes are turned into l'Cie, a short Deliberately Monochrome cinematic shown Ragnarok atop Cocoon. In this game, it's explained that the same cinematic is part of a much longer prophecy:
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience:
 * The various roles are color coded, so you can tell at a glance which character or mon has which. They even color the nodes in the Crystarium when you level up the role.
 * Several of the time labyrinth puzzles use color coding to make the gameplay more obvious. Clock puzzles color code the numbers so you can tell at a glance which number is which. Crystal constellation puzzles color code nodes that can be linked. And falling platform puzzles have red and white platforms to tell you which can be crossed once and which twice.
 * The three stats are color-coded, to make it easier to tell which one gained a bonus when you advance in the Crystarium. Hit points are green, attack is red, and magic power is purple.
 * Colossus Climb: Noel does this via Action Commands. He runs up Atlas's visible arm and takes a flying swing at its (invisible) head.
 * The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: You fight Caius multiple times throughout the game. Notably, you fight him once in Oerba 200 AF, again in the Void Beyond, and again in (this time ). Now, in order to get three of the Paradox Endings, you need to fight him again with the Paradox Scope fragment skill active. With the Paradox Scope active, Caius suddenly gets more health, the ability to apply health regeneration on himself, and his attacks are quick, relentless, and very powerful, leaving very little room for his victim to do much at all until he stops. And the worst part of all? You need to fight him twice in the same battle in all instances. It's Nintendo Hard taken Up to Eleven.
 * The Computer Is Your Friend:
 * Cool Sword:
 * Caius' sword looks amazing. It's huge, improbably shaped, and purple. With a glowing red eye.
 * Lightning's new sword doesn't look too bad either. They gave it a more medieval fantasy look to match her new armor.
 * Noel has a large sword that doubles as a sheath for a smaller one. It's very ornate and can also be transformed into a spear when necessary.
 * Serah's weapon is actually Mog, who can also find objects that are lost in Paradoxes. It also switches between a bow and a sword depending on the distance in combat.
 * Crutch Character:
 * Serah is this in comparison to Noel. Early in the game, she has better stats than him, but Noel begins to outpace her later in the game.
 * Most monsters that are "early peakers". They have fantastic growth and can carry you through a chapter or two of the game, but since they're capped at level 20, they'll soon get outpaced by increasingly stronger enemies and better monsters.
 * Cursed with Awesome: The Heart of Chaos.
 * A Day in the Limelight: The three DLC story packs for Snow, Sazh, and Lightning.
 * Damn You, Muscle Memory!:
 * In this game, spells are ordered in the battle menu by power level (so first all the normal spells, then the '-a's, then the '-ga's) as opposed to the original XIII's ordering by element. (Fire, Fira, Firaga, etc.) For those who played the first game a lot, this can take some getting used to.
 * On a similar note, many enemies from the first game return, but most of their weaknesses have been changed.
 * Darker and Edgier: Compared to its predecessor. It's like Shin Megami Tensei dark. Notable in that a lot of people initially assumed that, like the last Final Fantasy with a direct sequel, it would go the opposite direction. Boy were they wrong.
 * Darkest Hour --> Hope Spot:
 * Decoy Protagonist: Most of the advertising suggests that Lightning is the central hero of the game, even though the true main character is her sister Serah.
 * Degraded Boss: Some monsters have moved up or down between XIII and XIII-2.
 * Malebranche is basically Attacus from XIII, and while Attacus was considered a boss in XIII, Malebranche is a regular enemy here. Same goes for Tonberries, though they're a rare encounter.
 * There are some inversions as well: The Immortal and Ochus were regular, if strong and rare, enemies in the first game, but are unique Bonus Bosses here.
 * Demoted to Extra: The main party in Final Fantasy XIII, save for Hope, is affected by this. There are short DLC episodes for Lightning, Snow, and Sazh, which allow you to recruit them into your party.
 * The Dev Team Thinks of Everything: If you decide to go to Augusta Tower 200AF after going to its 300AF counterpart to get a keycard, Noel will remark that you already have the key.
 * There are some inversions as well: The Immortal and Ochus were regular, if strong and rare, enemies in the first game, but are unique Bonus Bosses here.
 * Demoted to Extra: The main party in Final Fantasy XIII, save for Hope, is affected by this. There are short DLC episodes for Lightning, Snow, and Sazh, which allow you to recruit them into your party.
 * The Dev Team Thinks of Everything: If you decide to go to Augusta Tower 200AF after going to its 300AF counterpart to get a keycard, Noel will remark that you already have the key.

"Worlds collide and people fade Seek against the timelines we've all made Let's fix the past Trade in now to see smiling faces There is hope, heart Chaos cannot take, paradoxes must break This is the path I must take My destiny may change your fate The pain my heart feels is my strength"
 * It is possible to win the Lucky Coin Fragment in Serendipity while playing as Serah only (i.e. - when you get lost in the Void Beyond and Serah is alone without Noel.) If you do, Noel's comment in the cut-scene will be absent.
 * Dialog During Gameplay: Few NPCs in the game are actually able to be talked to; the rest of the NPCs can be heard by walking by them.
 * Died in Your Arms Tonight:
 * Disc One Nuke: If you manage to max level the Dragoon from Augusta Tower 200AF, you will be able to use him through the rest of the game, short of Bonus Bosses. This is because it has ~600 Attack at a time you are at the 250s.
 * The Behemoths you're told to avoid in Yaschas Massif 010 AF. It is possible to beat one as long as you have a Saboteur and a Medic, and its recruit rate is decent enough to make capturing it on your first visit a possibility.
 * A lot of the monsters labeled with "Early Peaker" have a low max level and pretty high stats compared to other choices. However, most of them lose out in the long run.
 * The DLC weapons are really useful up until you start to do sidequests near the endgame.
 * Discount Card:
 * One of the Fragment Skills will reduce the price of items.
 * Played for funny when Serah, Noel, and Mog receive the "reward" for solving Bresha Ruins' paradox: . And you get to keep it in your inventory!
 * Does This Remind You of Anything?: Walking around talking to NPCs in Academia 4XX AF, one little girl will say "Ah! You're a scary adult! Scary adults shouldn't talk to kids they don't know!"
 * Doomed Hometown:
 * Dreaming of Things to Come:
 * Lightning and Serah both have seen Noel in a dream prior to meeting him.
 * It's eventually revealed that Serah has the power to see into the future just like Yeul. Also, like Yeul,
 * Dream World: Serah winds up in one.
 * Dungeon Shop: Chocolina sometimes sets up shop in dungeons, even right before the boss.
 * Earn Your Happy Ending: Despite there being multiple endings, this game has more "It's a Wonderful Failure" endings than any other Square Enix game. Compare this to its predecessor, which had one Crowning Moment of Heartwarming after another And there is only one perfectly happy ending, which is not canon.
 * Eldritch Abomination: Gogmagog and the Undying Cie'th Raspatil.
 * Elevator Action Sequence: In Augusta Tower 200AF, you're forced into several fights in a row while riding the elevator. All while going up one floor, which after the sequence, takes nothing more than a few seconds.
 * Empathic Environment: Bresha Ruins 005 AF starts out sunny. After Atlas begins his rampage across the ruins, it begins to rain. After defeating Atlas and stopping his rampage, the area becomes sunny again. Apparently, the environment cannot make up its mind.
 * It is always dark and raining in Academia 400 AF.
 * It's usually bright and sunny in New Bodhum. The two exceptions are during the intro, when monsters are attacking the town, and in the year 700 AF, when all humans have perished.
 * Emperor Scientist:
 * Endgame Plus: You obtain the Paradox Scope after beating the game, which, after getting it as a skill in Serendipity, will let you access the Paradox Endings that you couldn't access before. Assuming you can even reach them.
 * Eternal English: One of the datalogs lampshades this by noting that the human language has not changed in over a thousand years, although curiously enough, Cocoon and Pulse use different alphabets. The datalog speculates that the reason for the unchanging language is because language was something that the fal'Cie gave humanity.
 * Expy:
 * Gogmagog looks a lot like Anima or Nemesis.
 * Atlas looks like (and has the same model of) a miniature Titan.
 * Noel himself is basically a gender-swapped Fang, which is lampshaded in a conversation between Snow, Serah, and Noel. Others feel Noel is Sora's lost twin brother. Or the lost child of Yuna and Tidus.
 * Failure Is the Only Option:
 * Failure Knight: Caius and Noel to Yeul, which justifies Noel's protectiveness of Serah.
 * Fan Service: One of the members of the game's production team actually stated outright that Mog's presence in the game was intended as a form of fanservice, though this is one instance where it doesn't have anything to do with sex. Of course, one might begin to believe that it's actually intended as a form of a Fan Disservice after about the fifth time of hearing Mog say "I'll be helping in spirit, so good luck, kupo!" after failing at one of the Temporal Rift puzzles.
 * One of the DLC options is to have Serah spend most of the game (excluding certain cutscenes) in a pink bikini.
 * Fashions Never Change: With one or two exceptions, fashion changes very little over the centuries you travel; Academia and military uniforms not at all.
 * Fastball Special:
 * Odin to Lightning in the opening cinematics.
 * Snow to Noel when fighting the giant flan.
 * Noel throws Serah's sword (i.e. Mog) at the Proto Fal'cie Adam during a Cinematic Action sequence. Mog gets paralyzed from electrical shock for a few seconds afterwards.
 * Feather Motif:
 * Lightning gains one to replace her rose motif in the first game.
 * When you buy the Arcus Chronica for Serah and the In Paradisum for Noel from Chocolina, white and black feathers appear respectively every time they attack an enemy.
 * Fetch Quest: Roughly half the sidequests available are you running down an item or two for various NPCs.
 * Final Boss New Dimension: The last two bosses in the game are fought in Valhalla.
 * Final Boss Preview: Caius is the first and last opponent fought in the game. Partially subverted since it's, but the trope counts since
 * You also fight Caius in Oerba once.
 * First Episode Spoiler:
 * At the beginning of the game, Serah has a brief vision of Cocoon falling to the ground. Later on, Hope, Noel, and Serah watch a cinematic of Cocoon's fall. Finding a way to prevent Cocoon's fall and save Fang and Vanille later becomes the central goal of the Academy.
 * Switching the view of the Historia Crux will allow you to see the panorama images for each era.
 * Five Races: Although the first game consciously avoided using this trope to be unique, it returns in full usage in this game, with The Academy functioning as High Men (a society of thinkers who live in isolated enclaves, ruled by an near-immortal man with vast knowledge of the world), the Steppe Hunters being Stouts, and Mog and Chocolina being representative of Cutes. Fal'Cie retain their status as Fairies, and add Yeul to their ranks.
 * Floating Continent:
 * Valhalla has a few surrounding the periphery. Most of them are destroyed in the battle with Caius.
 * The 13th Ark
 * Bhunivelze becomes this.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * The "Worlds Collide" battle theme references several plot points. Interesting how they reference Atlas Shrugged.
 * The 13th Ark
 * Bhunivelze becomes this.
 * Foreshadowing:
 * The "Worlds Collide" battle theme references several plot points. Interesting how they reference Atlas Shrugged.

"Q: What act performed by the comedian Fl-Fl-Flan got him booted off of every TV station? A: Wanna touch my Shaolong Gui? Q: Which model is popular among collectors? A: 1/1 scale Serah Farron"
 * For those who finished XIII's postgame, the datacore you get for the final bonus fight, "Fabula Nova Crystallis", definitely has parallels with the 13-2 storyline...
 * Similarly, the tenth Analect from FFXIII titled "The Menace Beyond", along with the "Mirror of Atropos" fragment from FFXIII-2, suggest that
 * For Doom the Bell Tolls:
 * Four Is Death: "Unseen Abyss" (also known as "Invisible Depths"),, runs for 4 minutes and 44 seconds on the Soundtrack CD.
 * Gameplay and Story Segregation: Averted when it comes to fighting Caius. There are a total of five fights against him in the story. In each fight, he cast reraise on himself and the the first four battles end after it revives him. The next cutscene typically involves him standing up and kicking your ass. The Paradox Scope lets you continue fighting him after Reraise activates and Caius proceeds to use the same strength he demonstrated in cutscenes. Beating Caius in these fights results in a paradox ending.
 * Gameplay Grading: Like the last game, your battles are ranked from one to five stars. This is important since not only do higher ranks increase item drops and the Feral Link gauge, but some achievements/trophies are only awarded for get five stars on certain boss battles.
 * Genre Busting:
 * The soundtrack. Examples: LIMIT BREAK, Colliding Worlds, and Groovy Chocobo. The first two are a few of several tracks vocalized for the game, somewhat like Persona 3.
 * The game too, to an extent. Basically, Final Fantasy XIII and Chrono Trigger/Final Fantasy VIII hopped in a hot-pink convertible together and got in a hit-and-run accident with Pokémon and a Shin Megami Tensei game.
 * Genre Shift: Final Fantasy XIII had Lighter and Softer music with vibrant strings layered onto a common style most often associated with past Final Fantasy titles, which contrasts the "brighter future" theme akin to Final Fantasy X. This game is the exact opposite: Darker and Edgier soundtrack with strong emphasis on individual instruments optionally layered with a subtle rap-like voice-over, which contrasts the apparent theme of how relying on others is extremely helpful.
 * Getting Crap Past the Radar:
 * A close look at Serah's black modesty shorts shows that they fit her REALLY well.
 * Some of the quiz questions in Academia 4XX demonstrate Square-Enix's newfound love of Double Entendres (see also Final Fantasy XIV)

"Right or left?"
 * Ghost Town: Oerba is still this, even after hundreds of years. The game gives it a Hand Wave by explaining that Hope ordered the place to be preserved in honor of Vanille and Fang. Plus, the area is continuously under Paradox Effects, so going there is very dangerous for anyone other than Serah, Noel, Mog, and maybe Chocolina.
 * The Gods Must Be Lazy: Etro.Etro is a very kind goddess. She unfortunately does not know her own limits.
 * Gotta Catch Them All: Of the optional variety. Like many Mons games, the monsters range from the very common to the extremely rare and from the exceptionally easy to catch to the frustratingly difficult, and they are spread out all over the game. Some fall into Guide Dang It due to the fact that you need to know where to throw Mog.
 * One fragment is obtained as a reward for having defeated every single enemy in the game at least once.
 * Gory Discretion Shot: When.
 * Grandfather Paradox:
 * Guest Star Party Member: Snow joins your group as a non-playable character in Sunleth Waterscape 300 AF.
 * Guide Dang It:
 * You most likely can't find all 160 Fragments without consulting a walkthrough at least once. The worst ones are either Fragments related to Paradox Endings, which already have their own Guide Dang It moments, or the ones that are hidden on the map, and require searching everywhere and checking every nook and cranny to find.
 * Nearly every artefact in Academia 4XX AF. Obtaining most of them involve answering a number of inane (and even some luck-based) questions in a row, tracking down Captain Cryptic with infrequent and vague clues from pedestrians, and filling the entire bestiary, which is itself a huge Guide Dang It, especially monsters like
 * You also wouldn't be able to find all Artefacts to open up the mostly-optional Gates.
 * The quiz show is a parody/exaggeration of this trope. It's starts off easy, but then suddenly asks incredulous questions that relies on your luck. Example:

"It's hard to be sheep out here on the plain, Avoiding the hunters is such a terrible strain. Oh, I wish that once I could munch on some grass Without a man coming to pull a tuft from my...side."
 * The hidden monsters that require throwing Mog. Some of them make a little sense, but it's rather annoying to find out that one of the best Commando monsters in the game, Chichu, require this.
 * If you want to collect all of the adornments in the game, be prepared to either throw Mog a lot (about 10 times at every possible place in the game), or consult a guide.
 * Heroic Sacrifice:
 * Hero of Another Story: The rest of the cast of XIII (Lightning, Sazh, Snow, and Hope) are not idle while you are off saving the timeline, and while they dip in and out of the story throughout the game, they remain mostly orbital storylines that we know little about. Their DLC packages explain a little bit more about what they've been up to.
 * How We Got Here: You are shown in the opening sequence in which Lightning is fighting against Caius in the city called Valhalla.
 * Hub Level: The Historia Crux serves as a menu-screen version of this. Each node on the map marks a different era and location. To unlock other nodes, you must activate time gates within those locations.
 * Infinity-1 Sword: Like its sister game, the strongest weapons in the game are not the best (in fact, the actual Infinity Plus One Swords only achieve their full potential once you have achieved One Hundred Percent Completion, and thus have nothing to use them on), and battle strategies are improved by weapons that grant beneficial statuses or speed up the fill rate of the ATB gauge, for instance.
 * Instant Awesome, Just Add Dragons: Bahamut, I'm looking at you. And the faeryl, which indirectly caused the events of Sunleth Waterscape 300AF to happen.
 * Ironic Echo: When you first arrive at Academia 400 AF, you are given a very nice overview of the city. If anything, the city is a Captain Ersatz to Final Fantasy Versus XIII's own city, but that's not the main idea.
 * I Will Find You: Serah towards Lightning and, later on, . Noel towards Yeul, as he believes he will reunite with her in the future.
 * I Will Wait for You:
 * Serah waits for Snow to return in New Bodhum at the beginning of the game.
 * At the start of the game, Lightning is locked in combat with Caius, and neither of them seem to be able to gain the upper hand over the other. When she sends Noel to go find Serah, the implication is that Lightning will be fighting Caius for the entire span of the game.
 * It Got Worse:
 * It's All Upstairs From Here: Augusta Tower, which thankfully uses elevators...
 * Immortality Seeker: Played With. Caius is already immortal, he simply wants to find a way to stop Yeul from dying and being reincarnated over and over again and give her true immortality. And how does he give Yeul a deathless life?
 * Improbable Weapon User: Serah uses a MOOGLE as a weapon. Granted, though, it does change into an actual weapon.
 * Noel's sword is actually two swords attached to each other that can turn into a spear.
 * Infant Immortality: Averted.
 * Yeul isn't exactly an infant, but she never lives to be older than fifteen. And she's constantly reincarnated.
 * One of the sidequests is from a young boy who was sucked into a temporal distortion and killed, and is unable to move on because he never accomplished anything.
 * Infinity+1 Sword: The Odinbolt and Odinblade for Serah and Noel, respectively, is this. However, the Strength and Magic stats rely on how many Fragments you have, so the trouble in obtaining this is not getting it, but rather powering it up into the most powerful weapons in the game.
 * Insurmountable Waist High Fence: This becomes even more obvious from the first game, since characters can now freely jump, yet still can't jump over most fences.
 * The last level is a platforming level, and some of the platforms have these, so that you can't make certain jumps to get through the level faster. The silly thing is that some of the "fences" are about an inch tall...
 * Joke Item: Mog positively quivers with excitement at the idea of scoring a huge amount of gil once the party resolves the paradox at the Bresha Ruins in 200 AF / 300 AF. The reward turns out to be
 * Most of the adornments. Almost any mechanical monster looks funny with a newsboy hat on.
 * Karma Houdini:, except in one Paradox Ending where . Notably, she
 * Killer Rabbit: The Chichu monster, which is essentially a big seed on legs with cute little plant sprouts growing out of it. Raised to its maximum potential, it has arguably the highest damage output of any monster in the entire game.
 * Kill the Cutie:
 * Last Lousy Fragment:
 * You'll also need to fight Long Gui and Yomi for two Fragments, who are considered by some to be even tougher then the final boss.
 * Yet another Fragment requires that you earn tons of coins from the slot machine. And in this game, the slot machines behave like real ones--in other words, your control over the outcome approaches zero.
 * The Travel Guide: Academia fragment requires 100% completion of all Academia maps. Academia 400 has constantly-spawning, mostly inescapable enemies to trip you up. Academia 4XX is by far the most complex map in the game, full of little nooks and crannies that will take hours to explore fully. Academia 500 is a constantly shifting platforming level with multiple switches changing which platforms are accessible. Bring a snack and a stress-ball.
 * At least one of the Paradox Endings Beneath A Timeless Sky and Heart of Chaos will make you rage. Both of them are fights against a really hard version of Caius, who can and will kill you in less than a minute at max stats. The right strategy can make them easier, but you'll probably see a game over at least once.
 * One Fragment requires that you defeat every single enemy in the game. No other Fragment compares to how long this takes, given the number of opponents, the rarity of some opponents (Tezcatlipoca spawns on one platform in Academia 500AF. If you fought anything else on that platform, you have to redo that level from the beginning and hope that this time it spawns), and the difficulty of the opponents, like all the Bonus Boss versions of Caius, Long Gui, Yomi, and Raspatil.
 * Late Arrival Spoiler: In almost every piece of advertising for this game, it shows Serah, revealing that she is revived from her crystallized status.
 * Lightning Can Do Anything: Well, she probably can if the writers feel like it, but here it manifests more accurately by the fact that enemies and event-based item boxes appear in form of a bolt of reddish-purple lightning striking their spawn location.
 * This seems to be how the Proto-Fal'cie instantly converts people into Cie'th.
 * Limit Break:
 * Mons have a Synchronization gauge that fills up as they fight with you. Once it's full, you can unleash their Feral Link.
 * Serah and Noel both can get their Full ATB Attack (Serah's is Ultima Arrow and Noel's in Meteor Javelin), but they're only useable once per fight.
 * The Scourge ability that Commandos can use. It only activates if any enemy is about to recover from Stagger, and does about four times normal damage.
 * Loads and Loads of Loading: The loading screens last much longer then the first game, and it really shows. At worst, it could take a full minute. There's also every time you enter a timeline from the menu. The resulting traveling-through-time animation always takes 25-30 seconds, and it can't be skipped.
 * Lost Forever: Mostly averted. After obtaining the proper seal, you can lock a time gate and go back to the area as it was when you first arrived. Because of this, few things are truly lost, even the Live Trigger rewards, but at the moment some of the gate seals don't work properly and thus don't return you to the very beginning of that location, Archelyte Steppe being a major offender.
 * Unique monster crystals that can only be gotten by throwing Mog at specific spots used to be this in the sense that if you picked the wrong Crystarium upgrades for them or infused another monster with them (which was the only way to pass on the useful Pack Mentality skill), you couldn't get another one, but thanks to Snow's DLC, all versions of Valfodr have 2 of the unique monsters as their drop items and thus you can get as many extras as you want.
 * Lotus Eater Machine:
 * Magikarp Power: A few monsters can fall straight into this trope.
 * The biggest example is Twilight Odin, who is weak when you first get him. With enough sufficient leveling, he can become an absolute monster. Too bad he's overshadowed by other monsters that attack faster than him, do more damage than he does at equal or lower strength values and don't waste time posing after every 4 attacks.
 * The Cait Sith you get as one of your two first Mons can, with time and patience, be one of the best Medics in the game.
 * Noel is this in comparison to Serah. In the beginning, he tends to have lower stats, but towards the end he outpaces her in stat growth.
 * Chichu starts off average and its slow growth in its early levels keeps it average. However, its stat growth in the later levels accelerates like a rocket, and at max level you will have a squeaky wrecking ball. There's a reason why many players have a Chichu in their late- to post-game Paradigm Pack.
 * Marathon Level: Episode 5, which once started, you cannot go back to the Historia Crux until you finish it or get a Paradox Ending (of which the chapter has three, though only two will return you to the Crux.) Technically, you can return to the Crux, but the only locations available to you will be whichever one you were working on, and Serendipity, if you really fancy a break.
 * Masquerade:
 * Master Computer: Augusta Tower is a gigantic computer, complete with little glowing Tron Lines.
 * Mercy Kill:
 * Mind Screw:
 * The Secret Ending.
 * With time and space itself overlapping and blending together, the entire game might qualify.
 * Minigame Zone: Serendipity
 * Min-Maxing: The Crystarium has big nodes that give you a small stat bonus in either HP, ATK, or MAG depending on which role you decide to level up on the big node, which starts adding up if you concentrate on a single stat. As a result, some people opt to have an all-MAG and all-ATK build for Serah and Noel, respectively.
 * Similarly, you level up your Mons with materials that enhance one of the same three stats at each node, or all three to a slightly lesser degree.
 * Mons: Also known as "your third party member". Defeating most monsters will cause them to turn into crystals, and you can then use the crystallized monster in battle alongside Serah and Noel. Paradigm shifts switch monsters and they level up with you and can be customized to an extent. They're pretty much Pokémon. Mog also counts toward this.
 * Monster Arena: The Coliseum allows you to fight optional bosses. All of them are DLC, though.
 * Monster Compendium: With a sidequest for 100% Completion, to boot.
 * Mood Dissonance: Chocolina, who's always cheery no matter where she is (with a few exceptions. In )
 * Mood Whiplash: Do not expect any mood in this game to last for long, especially if you're going for post-game 100% completion.
 * Mr. Exposition: Mog
 * Multiple Endings: Subverted in that the majority of the multiple endings don't actually affect the gameplay, and there is only one true ending.
 * Name's the Same/Dub Induced Plot Hole: Final Fantasy now has two cases for using the word "chaos"/"Chaos". The former refers to an entity; the latter refers to the Final Boss of the original Final Fantasy. Suspiciously, "Heart of Chaos" has a capital 'C', while "chaos" with a lowercase 'c' in the subtitles. This is extremely important when you know the context of the event, and creates massive confusion.
 * Names to Run Away From Really Fast
 * The first boss is named Gogmagog, a Biblical reference.
 * A subtle, maybe unintentional one: Caius sounds a lot like Caiaphas, the Jewish high priest under whom Jesus was crucified.
 * Never Trust a Trailer:
 * Lightning is not the protagonist of this game, although the earliest trailers were basically her and Caius in the opening. Even the logo is just her and Caius facing off. This is pretty much the only thing she gets done before she.
 * Some of the first trailers for this game had one of the members of NORA stating to Serah that Lightning was absolutely dead. Recent trailers, however, have that same character saying to Serah that Lightning "cannot help you anymore" at that same moment in the game.
 * In a remarkable piece of false advertising, the trailer at the end of the playable demo showed Omega in the game. No "Omega Coliseum is DLC" or "Omega Coliseum sold separately" disclaimer, just a hook to get long-time fans to buy the game ... before the soul-crushing realisation that Omega isn't actually in the game and would be released a month later. For more money.
 * New Game+: This can be achieved by closing gates and re-entering them, causing you to play through the area's events again with all of your current stats and items.
 * Nice Job Breaking It, Hero:
 * Nintendo Hard: This game has been attracting attention for its insanely hard bosses.
 * No Sidepaths, No Exploration, No Freedom: Intentionally and deliberately averted with areas more complex and intertwined than before.
 * Now Where Was I Going Again?:
 * The characters will be happy to remind you what's going on nearly every time you enter a gate. This is useful if you've been sidetracked catching Mons, Sidequests, or by Serendipity, but a tad annoying if you've played straight through and just heard similar dialog less than five minutes before.
 * You can see sidequests you've accepted via the menu.
 * When you load your game from the title screen, a brief "Previously On..." will play, reminding you of the story so far.
 * Old Save Bonus: If the player has save data for Final Fantasy XIII on their HD, the success rate of the slots minigame in Xanadu/Serendipity will be higher. They also unlock several in game items, a theme for your Playstation Dashboard (for PlayStation 3) and a gamer picture (for Xbox 360).
 * One-Scene Wonder: Played for funny., while Square-Enix plays inappropriate music.
 * Only Smart People May Pass: The Hands of Time Temporal Rifts veer straight into this trope, with players wasting half an hour on one puzzle being a common sight. Thankfully, IGN made a excel spreadsheet that does it for you here. For those willing to look at Japanese, this page doesn't require Excel. Just input the number at the top of the "clock" into the spot labeled 0 and go clockwise from there.
 * Ominous Latin Chanting: Caius's Theme
 * One-Winged Angel: Of course, this being Final Fantasy,
 * Special mention for
 * Palette Swap:
 * Several bosses are directly re-used from 13, only with a new paint job--for example, Atlas uses the mostly unused Titan character model.
 * On a larger scale, many monsters are "family" monsters which reuse very similar or exactly the same models, with new textures. This is actually useful in some instances, as it's possible to find monsters with the Pack Mentality auto-ability, which makes them stronger if all three monsters in your Paradigm Pack are from the same family.
 * Most of the NPCs are palette swaps of each other, with only clothing and hair color changed.
 * Palmtree Panic: New Bodhum
 * Peninsula of Power Leveling:
 * If one goes to a very tiny spot at AF 400 Academia just before you fight Zenobia, and turn on a turbo fire controller (or mash the X button A LOT), then you can accumulate LOTS of Crystanium points.
 * For monster materials, Archlyte Steppe -Year Unknown- just throws them at you.
 * Painting the Medium:
 * If a particularily strong rare monster appears, it does so in form of a small black hole, which causes horizonal static lines to appear on the screen.
 * Augusta Tower 300 AF is suffering from malfunctions due to the paradoxes; the screen is covered with hazy lines while you're there.
 * In the secret ending,
 * Pink Girl, Blue Boy: Serah wears pink and white, whereas Noel wears blue and black.
 * Pop Quiz: There is a man named Captain Cryptic who asks Serah questions about the world they live in.
 * "Previously On...": Every time you continue the game, some clips are shown of what happened the last time you played. It seems to be a random collection of clips from previous cutscenes, and sometimes doesn't really help the player remember what happened before.
 * Previous Player Character Cameo: Sazh, Vanille, and Fang make only cameo appearances in the game. The other three have slightly larger roles.
 * Ragnarok Proofing:
 * Some of the locations you visit don't change much at all across the timeline, with only a few areas opening up or being closed off, but no major changes even after a century or more.
 * The sporty wristwatch takes a licking, and keeps on ticking. After being lost in a ravine for 100 years, it can be dusted off and returned to its owner in the past still in working condition. Somewhat justified by having one of the fragments mentioning Snow wanting a wristwatch that can take tons of punishment and Maqui coming up with one, which probably was made into its own brand at some point in the past.
 * Random Encounters: Unlike the previous game, which had Preexisting Encounters, here the monsters simply pop straight out of rifts in space and time to attack you with no warning. You can still run away from them beforehand, though, and in fact it's easier to avoid encounters entirely if you wish. Just know what you're doing, otherwise the Moogle Clock will run out and you'll have to deal with the encounter with the Retry option locked.
 * "The Reason You Suck" Speech: Caius does this a couple of times, most notably to
 * Red Oni, Blue Oni: A menu-based variant. When you initially progress through the game, you have a blue menu. Whenever the "Paradox" Fragment is turned on, the menu will become red.
 * Replacement Goldfish: After Snow leaves to find Lightning, Serah adopts a cat and names it Snow.
 * Ret-Gone:
 * Makes seeing snippets of the ending of XIII, only with that particular character missing (and Serah being the only one who notices anything is wrong--something she's considered mildly insane for believing) absolutely horrific. Doubly so since the player presumably remembers the original ending to the game.
 * Ironically, this is Inverted as well in a big way.
 * The Reveal: Turns out, it's the moogle's bobble that allows them to fly. The wings are just for show.
 * Ripple-Effect-Proof Memory:
 * Serah and Noel, alongside a few others.
 * Somewhat averted
 * Scenery Gorn/Scenery Porn : Academia, The Vile Peaks, Sunleth Waterscape, Valhalla...they really went crazy on the visuals.
 * Self-Deprecation: Possibly why "Crazy Chocobo" exists, and it's also similar in style to Hyadain.
 * Self-Fulfilling Prophecy/Tempting Fate: The seeress of Paddra predicted that the city would be destroyed. The resulting anarchy and civil war from this prediction ended up destroying the city.
 * Sequel Hook:
 * Serious Business: Two of Chocolina's chocobo chicks in Sazh's episode involve this. The male chick wants to ask out the female chick, so he gives Sazh a letter to deliver, and then she doesn't like that he can't come himself... After a bit, the two finally get together to some romantic music.
 * Set Right What Once Went Wrong:
 * Shipper on Deck/Ship Tease: Lebreau teases Serah about Noel at the beginning of the game.
 * Shoot the Shaggy Dog: Arguably. Timey-wimey stuff cancels out the seemingly happy ending from XIII. The plot of this game centers around Serah searching for Lightning, who has vanished for no apparent reason. Various time paradoxes destroy progress made by the protagonists.
 * Shout-Out:
 * If you have seen Advent Children, you will immediately recognize Lightning's action when she attempts to break through the meteor by going straight for it. Later on, the camera focuses on a chunk of said meteor and it resembles the Final Fantasy VII logo. Noel repeatedly saying "700 years" just adds fuel to the fire.
 * The way that Caius holds Yeul and lowers her into the water in the opening cinematic is very reminiscent of Cloud and Aerith.
 * The Brain Blast questions in Academia have plenty of these as answers. Amongst them are mentions of Balamb Garden and prisoners who gained their freedom by winning a chocobo race.
 * Amodar's Feral Link is a Shungokusatsu in all but name: this is made even obvious by its QTE command, which is SGS' command in a 4 button layout.
 * Silliness Switch: Half of the Live Trigger rewards are obtained by selecting the weirdest answer. Some of them also make Serah out to be a bit of a Cloudcuckoolander.
 * Skyward Scream:
 * Soundtrack Dissonance:
 * Spiritual Successor: Arguably to the Chrono Trigger series as mentioned below. The time travel is even facilitated by "gates" to different eras.
 * Squat's in a Name: An almost-unheard-of in-universe example:
 * Stable Time Loop: Eventually this chicken-and-egg scenario is resolved:
 * Also causes a bit of Fridge Brilliance:
 * Stat Grinding: Like the first game, the Crystarium works like this.
 * Stepping Stones in the Sky:
 * During the opening battle between Lightning and Caius, this happens twice. First traditionally, and then on pieces of metal frozen in place with a gravity spell.
 * The Very Definitely Final Dungeon is basically this, complete with an out-of-place platforming segment.
 * The Stinger:
 * Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: Found in a Fragment that provides a poem about the sheep of Gran Pulse titled "The Melancholy of the Lambs:"
 * Squat's in a Name: An almost-unheard-of in-universe example:
 * Stable Time Loop: Eventually this chicken-and-egg scenario is resolved:
 * Also causes a bit of Fridge Brilliance:
 * Stat Grinding: Like the first game, the Crystarium works like this.
 * Stepping Stones in the Sky:
 * During the opening battle between Lightning and Caius, this happens twice. First traditionally, and then on pieces of metal frozen in place with a gravity spell.
 * The Very Definitely Final Dungeon is basically this, complete with an out-of-place platforming segment.
 * The Stinger:
 * Subverted Rhyme Every Occasion: Found in a Fragment that provides a poem about the sheep of Gran Pulse titled "The Melancholy of the Lambs:"

"All the boys want to do is play war games. Why can't they grow up? They're so immature."
 * Take That: An Academia 4XX AF NPC girl notes this:


 * Take Your Time: Due to how the Historia Crux works, time will stop flowing in one location once you leave, and will only continue flowing when you return. Because of this, there is no rush to complete an area's objective.
 * Atlas, once he fully materializes, will wait for you in that courtyard for as long as you want while you continue running around the Bresha Ruins doing other stuff.
 * A Taste of Power: In the prologue, you control Lightning, who is very powerful and wins the opening battles with little challenge.
 * Theme Naming:
 * The soundtrack titles fit the descriptions of the characters. Disc 1 is Serah, which has "Paradox," and "Worlds Collide." Disc 2 is Noel, which has "Unseen Intruder", "Eclipse," and "Eyes of Etro." Disc 3 is Caius, which has "Oathbrand," "Chaotic Guardian," and "Augusta Tower." Disc 4 is Lightning, which has "A Fading Miracle," "Etro's Gate," and "Unseen Abyss."
 * In-Universe example: the Blitz Squadron had their call-names after Lightning's, in honor of their once-cooperation before her leave for the Purge. Blitz is even the name of an ability, but names like "Thunder", "Falcon", and "Sarge" come to mind.
 * Both Noel's and Yeul's names have a connection to Christmas, and thus, to each other and hinting at their bond.
 * Thanatos Gambit:
 * These Hands Have Killed:
 * Time Crash:
 * Time Paradox: The theme of the game.
 * Time Travel: The Historia Crux system allows the player to travel through gates that lead to different time periods, akin to Chrono Trigger. It is slightly extended from the CT system, however, in that there are several alternate versions (in some cases up to 4, but a few are just for Paradox Endings) of most time periods.
 * Took a Level In Badass:
 * Serah is an active participant in the storyline instead of a sort of Posthumous Character.
 * Hope. From the whiny and weak kid in the first game to in this one. And he saves Serah and Noel multiple times.
 * Lightning wasn't exactly weak at the end of the last game, but in the opening Caius calls her "warrior goddess." He isn't exaggerating much.
 * Total Eclipse of the Plot: The eclipse that happens at some point in future history is implied to have darkened the entire continent for years. Perhaps Justified by it being caused by a fal'Cie rather than a celestial object. This trope also applies to Yaschas Massif 010AF to a lesser extent.
 * Trailers Always Spoil:
 * Beware the latest PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360 trailers, which are spoiling things way too much. For example, Of course, we know that we should Never Trust a Trailer, or that with the multiple endings the game will have, we only see one of the paths our choices may lead us... Still, it's going a little too far.
 * The latest PS3 trailer (released at the same time as the above) has another (and different!) spoiler:, which seemed to be a little bit too far for trailers 3-4 months before the release.
 * The Unexpected:
 * Available through the DLC is Lightning's former superior, Lieutenant Amodar. He's a Commando-role "monster".
 * Jhil Nabaat is an available combatant.
 * Unexpected Gameplay Change
 * Academia 500 AF is a maze that involves platforming. The developers explained that they wanted to make an area to take advantage of the new jumping ability.
 * A more minor example is in Academia 400 AF. Enemies will randomly appear in random areas, and if you find a monster, you can not run away.
 * Lightning's episode has a different development system: Lightning levels up in a more traditional manner, where she gains stats and abilities once enough Crystogen points are earned.
 * Unusually Uninteresting Sight: Averted. Many people will talk about Mog or will say your clothes look strange. People will also react with fear when you activate Mog Search and you can even draw a crowd to yourself when you throw Mog or make an item appear with Mog Search. Guards and tame chocobos will also attack any monsters that appear out of nowhere.
 * The Very Definitely Final Dungeon:
 * Vine Swing: In the Sunleth Waterscape.
 * Variable Mix: Most of the area themes have an "Aggressive Mix" that kick in when monsters show up.
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential:
 * Using the Moogle Throw will have Mog squirm and panic. It's rather cute though. Actually throwing him can have him bounce off obstacles and fall down cliffs. Good thing he seems to be Made of Iron.
 * This is also made more amusing by the fact that whenever you throw him, all NPCs nearby gather around him regardless of whether they're hardened soldiers or little kids when they just express some casual wonderment when he's flying around.
 * Infusing monsters with others, which apparently destroys the second monster. Even the monster that's been fighting with you for hours is liable to be sacrificed to a better one the moment it shows up.
 * Void Between the Worlds: The Void Beyond, described as the "area between gates," which Serah and Noel use as rest stops upon their first few visits.
 * Wake Up Call Boss:
 * The weakened Atlas you fight in episode 2. This is the first battle where you'll actually have to switch paradigms and be reasonably leveled to beat.
 * Similarly, the full power Atlas hammers home the concept that you are simply not going to be strong enough to pick every path.
 * We Cannot Go on Without You: This was mostly removed from gameplay, presumably as a reaction to complaints against this mechanic in the original game. If the party leader dies in battle, you'll be automatically switched to whomever wasn't the party leader, assuming he or she is alive. You may also switch between leaders at any point within the battle. However, if both Noel and Serah die in battle, it's Game Over, even if your current monster knows Raise. Perhaps the monster takes the opportunity to high tail it before he's infused into another monster?
 * Well-Intentioned Extremist: Ultimately, is not looking to rule/destroy the world (godhood optional).
 * Wham! Episode:
 * After Serah and Noel are sent through a sabotaged time gate, they get separated and both run into Caius.
 * Seconds before that you discover
 * What Happened to the Mouse?: Several major players in the storyline vanish outright and are never mentioned again. Case in point, no mention of after  outside of a Paradox Ending. This is almost acceptable with her, but less understandable when  gets the same treatment.
 * Noel's fate in the canon ending is left dangling, as
 * Whole-Plot Reference:
 * Watch the trailers for Final Fantasy Versus XIII, and then play through this game. Notice any parallels?
 * The Fabula Nova Crystallis mythology is surprisingly accurate.
 * Xanatos Gambit: