Nintendo Wars

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
(Redirected from Advance Wars)

The Advance Wars series, known in Japan as the Famicom Wars series, is a series of Turn-Based Strategy video games produced by Nintendo. The original Famicom Wars was developed in-house by Nintendo's R&D1 staff (the same team behind Metroid and Kid Icarus), while the sequels were all made by Nintendo subsidiary Intelligent Systems (of Fire Emblem fame), with Hudson Soft behind later parts of the Game Boy Wars series and Kuju involved with the Battalion Wars series. The series is comprised of the following games, with most of the titles being named after the platform they were released on:

  • Famicom Wars (1988)
  • Game Boy Wars (1990)
  • Game Boy Wars Turbo (1997, made by Hudson Soft)
  • Game Boy Wars 2 (1998, the second one made by Hudson Soft)
  • Super Famicom Wars (1998)
  • Game Boy Wars 3 (2001, the third and last one by Hudson Soft)
  • Advance Wars (2001, known as Game Boy Wars Advance in Japan)
  • Advance Wars 2: Black Hole Rising (2003, Game Boy Wars Advance 2 in Japan)
  • Advance Wars: Dual Strike (2005, Famicom Wars DS in Japan)
  • Battalion Wars for Nintendo GameCube (2005, Totsugeki!! Famicom Wars in Japan)
  • Advance Wars: Days of Ruin (2008, Advance Wars: Dark Conflict in Europe/Australia)
  • Battalion Wars II, officially abbreviated BWii (2008, Totsugeki!! Famicom Wars VS in Japan)
  • Advance Wars 1+2 Re-Boot Camp (2023 by WarForward)

The original Famicom Wars had no plot at all. You would choose to control one of two rival armies, Red Star or Blue Moon, and fight off the other until completing all the maps. Super Famicom Wars is essentially a remake/sequel, featuring all the maps from the original, as well as brand new ones. It was also the first game to feature 4-player maps, with the Green Earth and Yellow Comet armies joining the battle, as well as selectable commanding officers (COs), each with their own specialty and weakness that affect the whole army.

The original Game Boy Wars follows the same premise as the original Famicom Wars, but uses hexagonal maps instead of square-based maps in a bit of a departure from the rest of the series. The Hudson Soft developed sequels, Game Boy Wars Turbo and Game Boy Wars 2, were essentially expansions to the original Game Boy Wars, featuring new maps and a sped-up decision-making process for the CPU. The third and last of the Hudson-produced sequels, Game Boy Wars 3, is a complete departure from the rest of the series, being modeled more after Hudson's own Nectaris series of war sims than the rest of the Wars series. The third game may also have supported a link cable for Japanese cell phones for online play purposes.

The Advance Wars games for, obviously, the Game Boy Advance, were the first games to be released internationally, as well as the first to have an actual plot. It and the two after it make up a trilogy involving the Black Hole army. Oddly enough, the first Advance Wars was for a couple of years not released in Japan, only showing up in a compilation pack with its sequel. The Advance Wars name has stuck in America even as the series moved to the DS, while Japan reverted to the name Famicom Wars for the DS and Wii installments. The Advance Wars series expanded upon the CO system from Super Famicom Wars, giving each CO their own ability which they can summon during the brink of a battle in order to change the odds in their favor.

Advance Wars: Days of Ruin is a completely new continuity, set in a Darker and Edgier After the End world which actually works. It manages to have a level of character and plot development and story depth easily rivaling any Final Fantasy or Dragon Quest game, though some elements differ significantly between regions. With the new story comes a massive overhaul of the CO system as well as the units themselves.

The Battalion Wars games (which have their own page) are for the Game Cube and Wii and are Real Time Strategy games with a view and style more reminiscent of a Third-Person Shooter than an overhead game like Warcraft. They form their own separate continuity and story. In addition to commanding your forces in real time, all gameplay is from the point of view of a single unit that the player can switch between at any time, while at the same time actively controlling the viewpoint unit itself.

Advance Wars 1+2 Re-Boot Camp is a remake of the 2 original games, released on the Nintendo Switch.

There is a wiki for the turn-based games, of course. Battalion Wars also has its own wiki.

Nintendo Wars is the Trope Namer for:
  • Commanding Officer Powers: As units under a character's command damage units or are damaged themselves, their CO Meter fills up. Once the CO Meter is filled enough (each character needs a different amount) they can unleash a CO Power that increases the attack and defense of all units under their control on the map till the start of their next turn in addition to other, character specific, benefits.
Tropes used in Nintendo Wars include:
  • Ace Pilot: Eagle; According to his Backstory, his father was much the same.
    • If you think Eagle's bad, you've never met Waylon/Finn, who manages to be a complete Jerkass at the same time.
    • And Tasha/Zadia, whose Image Song sums her up perfectly: "Goddess of Revenge".
  • After the End: Days of Ruin
  • And This Is For: in the ending of the first Battalion Wars, Nova punches Ubel for Tundra, then throws a KOing punch for his father.
  • And Your Reward Is Clothes: In Dual Strike, leveling a character past 10 unlocks an alternate costume.
  • Anti-Air: a few examples:
    • The Anti-Air Tanks, which also deal very good damage to infantry and unarmored vehicles like Humvees in Game Boy Wars 3.
    • Anti-Air Missile Launchers along with Anti-Air Artillery in Super Famicom Wars.
    • Cruisers, which also tear apart Submarines.
    • Aircraft Carriers, which also ferry an air force overseas. [1]
    • Mechs in Game Boy Wars 1/2/Turbo can attack air units for cost-effective damage.
    • Most ships in Game Boy Wars 3, including the Lander, can hit air units for at least decent damage.
  • Anti-Villain: Forsythe/Carter in Days of Ruin. Also, most of the characters in Advance Wars bar the protagonists and Sturm.
  • Art Evolution: The CO portraits went from being rather cartoonish in the first Advance Wars to fairly realistic by Dual Strike. Olaf and Kanbei by far went through the most dramatic evolution, though the other characters got a fair bit of visual upgrading as well.
  • Artificial Stupidity: The APC fetish in the first Advance Wars, as well as the Battlestation's method of attacking the destruction objective in the last mission of Battalion Wars 2.
    • The AI also seems to have a pathological fear of sending units to the second front in DS, even when it would be extraordinarily useful to it.
    • The first two Advance Wars games, the AI will always move unit types in a particular order. This normally works OK, but putting transports last in priority means they will frequently block themselves with units that move earlier and means transports will move away from any escorting units at the end of a turn, leaving themselves vulnerable.
    • Also in the first two games, the AI will always make sure it has a lander if it has a port and units it could carry, even if there's no value to a lander in that port. It will constantly blow funds and waste a port to keep that lander healthy, and even replacing it if destroyed.
    • The AI will generally only capture properties outward from their bases. This means a player can easily grab properties in the center with transports before the enemy even tries. If this includes a base, the player can easily dominate the match through just this early advantage.
    • In Advance Wars 2 units created by a factory are assigned one of seven random AI types. This means artillery (which can't move and shoot, and struggles with terrain) could be ordered to escort infantry (who can move through otherwise impassable terrain), expensive units can be ordered to do nothing but guard the HQ (the player's objective in factory missions is to disable the factory, not capture the enemy HQ) or fighters (who can only attack air units) can be ordered to attack the player's HQ which has no air units nearby among other useless behavior. Unfortunately this means there's also a chance the AI will select patterns that are flat out impossible to counter at the start of a map.
    • Super Famicom Wars has an AI that reserves funds for naval units if it has a harbor. It will keep these funds even if all its harbors are blocked, meaning it will only build cheap units to conserve funds and be unable to remove the block on their harbor.
  • Avoid The Dreaded E Rating: In order to solidify itself as a Darker and Edgier Retool, Days of Ruin has some mild gratuitous swearing in it, earning it a E10+ rating from the ESRB for Language and Mild Violence.
  • Awesome but Impractical: Earth and Sky, the Eagle/Sami tag-team power in Dual Strike. Yes, being able to take three turns in a row -- with instant captures on the third turn -- is very awesome. However, a combined total of seventeen stars' worth of charging (and the very real prospect of an opponent countering with Sasha's Market Crash) ruins this somewhat.
  • Badass Grandpa: Sensei and Hachi, even without their ridonkulously overpowered abilities.
  • Big Damn Heroes: Will/Ed in Days of Ruin, Pierce in Battalion Wars 2.
  • Blood Knight: General Herman and Tsar Gorgi in Battalion Wars.
  • Boring but Practical: Infantry spams, especially mixed with indirects -- thankfully, not a problem in Game Boy Wars 3 despite the Mech being able to move and blast armored stuff from two spaces away on the same turn.
    • COs with short power bars also stand out - such as Colin, Sensei, Adder, and Sasha with their two-star regular CO powers, and Sonja, Adder, Hachi, and Koal with five-star Super CO Powers. Borders on Awesome Yet Practical with Colin, Sensei, and Hachi. Note that Adder appears on both lists.
  • Born Lucky: Nell, and to a lesser extent, her little sister Rachel.
  • Bowdlerise: The North American release of Days of Ruin replaces the "DAMN!" text bubble when units get ambushed in Fog Of War with "NO!".
  • Bragging Rights Reward: Dual Strike only provides a wallpaper for obtaining all 300 medals; some of those 300 medals have borderline ridiculous conditions to obtain.
    • Days of Ruin is even worse. Getting all the medals doesn't get you anything.
  • Brother-Sister Team: Colin and Sasha in Dual Strike. And their abilities really mesh: Sasha can rack up tons of money and deplete her foe's CO bar, while Colin gets discounts on his units. Can anyone say Zerg Rush?
    • And that's not counting their Dual Strike (Trust Fund), where Sasha gets money for every enemy unit destroyed and Colin gets more power based on how much money he has. How's that for synergy?
  • Brutal Bonus Level: For the first three Advance Wars games, beating the main campaign unlocks the Hard Campaign. Usually these are just the same levels, slightly modified to give the computer an advantage.
    • The degree of brutality goes down as the games go on, though. Advance Campaign from Advance Wars is hellishly difficult and unfair. Hard Campaign from Black Hole Rising is tougher, but still a balanced challenge. Hard campaign from Dual Strike tends to be easier than the normal campaign, as you are allowed to choose any pair of COs.
    • On top of the Advance Campaign, there is a bonus mission in the first Advance Wars called Rivals!, where Eagle challenges Andy to a battle. On normal mode, it's already pretty tough, with Eagle having more cities on his side to build an army from. Advance Campaign Rivals! is incredibly unfair, since Eagle starts with a MASSIVE army, and you only have the same three infantry you would in normal mode.
    • Bonus Mission 3 in the first Battalion Wars.
  • Bunny Ears Lawyer: Most of the COs in the Advance Wars series before the Days of Ruin Retool.
  • Butt Monkey: Davis/Cole in Days of Ruin, who is treated as a loser in love to the point of not having his name remembered well, and also can't stand up to Greyfield killing soldiers along with Brenner, and later ends up dying from the Creeper virus. Of course, the only indication of the latter in the European version is his lack of later appearances after the equivalent scene.
  • The Caligula: Greyfield. There's a reason why his theme is called "Madman's Reign".
  • Card-Carrying Villain: Sturm, Caulder, Von Bolt, Flak, Adder, Lash, Kindle, Koal, AW1 Olaf, Waylon, the Beast, and Tabitha.
  • Cerebus Syndrome: The plot got somewhat more serious between the original Advance Wars and Black Hole Rising, the plot between Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike was even more so, and the Days of Ruin was as serious as ever.
  • Character Select Forcing: In the first GBA game, if the player selects Sami or Max and loses on the first battle against Drake, Nell will outright tell the player: "How about using Andy next time?" This makes sense since Drake's power damages units and Andy's power repairs them, but a Bonus Boss can only be unlocked if the player uses only Sami for the next few missions.
  • Chuck Cunningham Syndrome: While they're still playable outside of Campaign mode, Flak and Adder mysteriously disappear from Black Hole for the duration of Dual Strike's campaign. Possibly justified in that their abilities were too similar to Black Hole newcomers Jugger and Koal/Zak, and the newbies were more integral to the new Big Bad.
  • Climax Boss: In Dual Strike, Koal and Lash in the mission where you destroy your first Black Crystal, and Kindle and Koal in mission 22 where you destroy a Black Obelisk for the first time. Days of Ruin has The Beast, Forsythe, and Greyfield, all of which counts as Disc One Final Bosses. Each of these serve to end some plot points, wrap up an act, introduce more questions, and the victory music that plays when you win is more upbeat and triumphant.
  • Cloning Blues: Barely touched upon in the first 3 Advance Wars games, but a huge part of Days of Ruin.
    • To clarify, the main characters were all cloned by the enemy in the first 3 games to lead enemy troops, but the issues with that were never discussed.
  • Cold Sniper: Gage/Trak from Days of Ruin.
  • A Commander Is You
  • Companion Cube: Penny with her Mr. Bear. One case where an European renaming is not necessary, as the European translation didn't add that particular Woolseyism.
  • The Computer Is a Cheating Bastard: there's a case that helps the player in Beachhead in Battalion Wars 1; the CPU-controlled Artillery can snipe off the infantry climbing up the hilly terrain that makes seeing them difficult, from inside the fort on top of the hills. However, in Battalion Wars 2, while there is another case that involves a playable unit in the last mission, it does not help the player whatsoever: the Battlestation attacks the guns that fire the weak green lasers coming from the Mining Spider before attacking the blasted digging machine itself, but you don't get to aim at these guns whatsoever. This makes no sense because the Fighters you get are harder, albeit generally more rewarding, to control than the no-brainer Battlestation, but at least the Heavy Tanks fire at the guns too if commanded to attack the Spider.
    • As a more conventional example, in AW1 and AW2, the CPU-controlled armies were not affected by vision ranges in fog of war and could attack your unit even if none of their units could technically see it (although they did have to uncover your units hiding in forests before they could attack it - the computer acts as if they don't exist otherwise).
    • Ever notice how the computer will rarely leave its battleship within range of that sub you've had submerged for the past three turns?
    • The AI knows the result of luck damage ahead of time, and will determine engagements based on this. This is mainly meaningful when fighting Flak or Nell, who have more extreme luck damage spread.
  • Cool Bike: The Bike unit in Days of Ruin
  • Cool Old Guy: Sensei and Hachi in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike; Forsythe/Carter in Days of Ruin
  • Cool Train: The Train unit in Super Famicom Wars.
  • Crippling Overspecialization: Played straight in Advance, averted in Battalion.
  • Crutch Character: Game Boy Wars 3 in particular has some, although units are generic.
  • Cue the Sun: The epilogue of Days of Ruin.
  • Cutscene Incompetence: Colin in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike: Always portrayed as under confident, put upon by his big sister Sasha -- yet in game terms he's one of the most powerful COs, to the point of being a problem in terms of game balance.
    • Kanbei as well. His troops are extremely strong, despite being more expensive, and yet, Kanbei is constantly lectured by his daughter Sonja, and in one scene, when Sonja runs in with important news, Kanbei's first response is to ask if she's seen his sock. Oh, and being extremely overprotective of his daughter (although that is mostly positive). This could just be Crippling Overspecialization: Kanbei is a master commander...who's an airhead with anything that isn't war.
  • Cutscene Power to the Max: played straight with Black Hole in Dual Strike.
  • Darker and Edgier: Days of Ruin/Dark Conflict. Done reasonably well. The ads even used this trope as a selling point!
    • Could be argued Black Hole Rising did it as well; the graphic style became less cartoony.
  • Death of a Thousand Cuts: Played straight in the Advance Wars series, averted in the Battalion Wars series. It's possible to destroy a gunship with a tank round, but a bunch of grunts firing on it will only serve to be a mild annoyance until they're blown to smithereens. Unless, of course, you only have one anti-air unit left and need all the help/distraction you can get.
    • Played straight in Battalion Wars by the combat roll (essentially a third-person circle strafe).
  • Disproportionate Retribution: Rachel and Koal have the worst tagging firepower penalty in the game. Olaf and Lash get a 20% penalty to firepower when tagging because Lash used some weird invention to rearrange and destroy his hometown. Eagle and Hawke get a 30% penalty when tagging because Hawke knocked Green Earth around quite a bit. What did Koal do to Rachel for a 35% penalty? He DISSED HER FACE. Sure, she's going to need some lotion for that burn, but it's nothing compared to the previous two penalties mentioned.
    • Olad and Eagle are older and have tougher skin. Rachel may very well be MORE mad, it's just horribly unjustified.
  • Do Well, But Not Perfect: Dual Strike and Days of Ruin rewards medals for A, B, and C ranks.
  • Doomed Moral Victor: Brenner/O'Brian in Days of Ruin.
  • The Dragon: Hawke in Black Hole Rising (subverted once you get to fight Sturm, who is considerably more powerful than his second-in-command; Kindle/Candy in Dual Strike; Ubel in Battalion Wars; Tabitha/Larisa in Days of Ruin/Dark Conflict.)
  • Dronejam: Even when the units are at completely different altitudes -- yeah, that's right, air units can be 'ambushed' and stopped by running into infantry hiding in woods, or dived submarines. Best not to think about that one too much (world's tallest periscopes?. Of course, the "real" reason for all that is for the sake of balance. If Air units could just go anywhere no matter what...
    • Also applies (reversed) to naval and land units attempting to pass under air units.
    • The AI always moving their transports last means they will frequently subject themselves to this.
  • Easy Amnesia: Isabella, who remembers tons of useful information right when it is needed.
    • Justified in that she was basically designed to be a walking, breathing database of military information. Other than what she picks up after Will finds her, that's all she knows.
  • Easy Logistics: Partially averted, as ground vehicles, aircraft, and seagoing vessels all run on fuel, and ground vehicles at least have ammunition, so you'll need to either bring them back to your own airports and ports every now and then, or top them off using your APCs. On the other hand, while they resupply only one unit adjacent to them at a time when on the move, at the start of a player's turn before any actions are taken they automatically resupply any unit adjacent to them. Also, these benefits apply to aircraft without the APC having to make any sort of adjustments other than being adjacent.
  • Enemy Mine: Hawke and Lash join up with the Allied Nations to take out Von Bolt after the latter tries to off them for outliving their usefulness (and discovering him in the first place).
  • Enigmatic Minion: Hawke in Dual Strike. Performs a Heel Face Turn, helps defeat the Big Bad, and then fakes his own death and takes the Big Bad's ultimate doomsday weapon for himself, which he then uses to undo the damage it did during the events of the game.
  • Escort Mission: The Advance Wars series has some, and there's quite a few in Battalion Wars 2.
  • Everyone Calls Him "Barkeep": Sensei and Days of Ruin/Dark Conflict's "Mayor".
  • Evil Albino: Caulder/Stolos from Days of Ruin.
  • Evil Counterpart: Flak, Lash, Adder, and Hawke from Black Hole Rising seem to be evil counterparts of Max, Sonja, Grit, and Eagle.
  • Evil Old Folks: Von Bolt. Caulder may or may not be old, but he's certainly too old to be a White-Haired Pretty Boy. Kaiser Vlad is allegedly 100 years old.
  • Experience Points: in Super Famicom Wars, Game Boy Wars 3, and Days of Ruin.
    • No Experience Points for Medic: in Super Famicom Wars and especially Days of Ruin. Subverted, however, in Game Boy Wars 3, as units gain experience by performing tasks besides combat.
  • Expy: Several of the Days of Ruin COs have similarities -- rather jarring ones -- with the earlier Advance Wars ones.
    • Also, Nell (aka Catherine) from Advance Wars is an expy of Caroline from Super Famicom Wars.
    • Green Earth CO are Air combat specialist that constantly bickers with his friend who is a Ground specialist and a fat guy that specializes in Naval combat. They are basically the crew of Getter Robo.
  • Eyes of Gold: All of Caulder's female "children".
  • Faceless Goons: Black Hole infantry and mechs in the Advance Wars series. Xylvanian Rifle Grunts just wear bags and gas masks over their heads.
    • In their "conversation" portraits, the distortion of their helmets makes them appear vaguely alien. Not that this helps...
  • Fake Balance: plenty of it, listed below.
    • Skill Underestimated/Overestimated: infantry/indirect flooding.
      • Infantry/direct rushing in the third game.
    • Impossible Weakness: high costs for expensive units.
    • Pointless Weakness: Rachel's extra costs for extra repairs, Max's indirect issues in the first and third Advance Wars, and Eagle and Drake's sea/air weakness on maps where that doesn't exist. Air units try to avert this issue with themselves with fuel upkeep, with varying results for each installment of the entire series.
    • Unbalanced skillset: COs who favor one unit type over another.
    • Luck-based balance: some in the Advance Wars games and even in Super Famicom Wars. One-Hit Kill attacks generally rely on luck in both.
    • Skill based balance: Mech flooding. Enough said.
    • Unfair/situational advantage: quite a few.
    • Everybody's cheap: started in Dual Strike, but Days of Ruin gets really bad. You know something is wrong when an overpowered character is the only character with an actual weakness, no matter how pointless.
      • And Game Boy Wars 3 has a debatable example in the units, which are generally Glass Cannon ones. The game's attempt to balance this, the price gaps, ends up backfiring.
  • Fantasy Counterpart Culture
  • Five-Bad Band in Black Hole Rising
  • Five-Man Band in Days of Ruin/Dark Conflict
  • Fog of War
  • For Science!!: Caulder/Stolos's motivation.
  • Fragile Speedster: the Buggy in Game Boy Wars 3; cheap and fast, but its defense is right in between that of the Infantry and the Mech, if you can believe it.
    • And Recon units in the Advance Wars series, although the higher than normal movement cost for tires over plains makes them less on the "speedy" side and more on the "fragile" side.
      • Bikes as well. They have the most move points of any infantry unit, but have no way to counter vehicles.
  • Freudian Trio: Particularly in Black Hole Rising, each good guy team seems to have one
    • Orange Star: more of a power quartet, but...
      • Id: Andy/Max
      • Ego: Nell
      • Superego: Sami
    • Blue Moon
      • Id with a dash of Superego: Olaf
      • Ego with a dash of Superego: Colin
      • Superego with a dash of Id: Grit
    • Yellow Comet
      • Id: Kanbei
      • Ego: Sensei
      • Superego: Sonja
    • Green Earth
      • Id: Eagle
      • Ego: Drake
      • Superego: Jess
    • Also Black Hole.
      • Id: Flak
      • Ego: Lash
      • Superego: Adder
    • Also in Battalion Wars, although not all factions are trios. (Note that these also fall under Two Guys and a Girl)
      • Western Frontier - General Herman (Superego), Colonel Austin (Ego?), Brigadier Betty (Id)
      • Tundran Territories - Major Nelly (Id), Tsar Gorgi until his death at least and Marshal Nova (Ego/Superego interchangeably)
      • Xylvania - Kaiser Vlad (Superego), Countess Ingrid (Id), Kommander Ubel (Ego)
  • Gameplay and Story Segregation: some cases, but the mission Omens and Signs in Dual Strike makes a later story event seriously over the top about it.
    • Notably averted at the end of Black Hole Rising, where Hawke uses his CO power outside of a battle.
  • General Ripper: Greyfield/Sigismundo.
  • Genre Savvy: Sami shows Genre Savviness if you team her up with Eagle for the final mission of Advance Wars: Dual Strike.

Eagle: "I want you to promise me something, Sami. Promise that if we both return from this battle alive..."
Sami: "Oh no you don't! Stop it right there! If two people make a promise like that, one of them is going to end up dead! You may as well tell me that you're two days away from retirement! Save the promises for later, OK? We'll talk when we get back in one piece."

  • Geo Effects
  • Giant Space Flea From Nowhere: Sturm in the first Advance Wars. After fighting the various countries with hints of an enemy that can clone COs, the final boss is revealed to be an alien general that drops meteors on people. No attempt is made to explain where he comes from, or why he has no fellow aliens with him in the first game, or why he is able to recruit human generals in the second game. He just... is. Not that anyone minds, given his badassery.
  • Giggling Villain: Lash, in keeping with her role as a Psychopathic Manchild. "Tee hee hee!"
  • Glass Cannon: In Advance Wars, Mechs have the attack power of Tanks, but the armor of Infantry.
    • Ironically, Mechs and Infantry often get used to defend frontlines, because their defensive power per unit cost is better than most units and no unit is capable of destroying more than one unit per turn regardless of how weak. Other, more traditional examples of Glass Cannons include Artillery, Rockets, and Missiles.
    • Game Boy Wars 3 has quite a few examples:
      • The Mech, of course. They get to snipe armored stuff from a small distance too.
      • The Humvee, sometimes known as the Battle Car. It has the same armor class as the infantry (although more defense too), since any vehicles that don't look like ones designed primarily for war do; this results in the Anti-Air Tanks being able to shred it with a first attack. But it's also armed with an anti-tank weapon as its primary. Its promoted form also has a miniature anti-air machine gun.
      • Any land indirect, of course. The Humvee can One-Hit Kill any of them. Of course, in this game, they get to move and attack on the same turn.
      • The Tank Destroyer isn't this power-wise, but it is when it comes to Initiative, a stat used to determine attack order. If it moves anywhere far, kiss the first attack advantage goodbye.
      • Air units in general. If they're attacked up close and right away (or can't deal any damage anyway), expect at least 6 HPs of damage to be taken, unless it's the Attacker S, which would be this game's standard Bomber anyway if not for being a promoted unit. Attackers are the example in this group because they can attack anything but Submarines for good damage, but have lower defense than Fighters.
      • The Aegis Warship is an odd case of making itself this; its defense ratings are among the highest in the game, but it has a powerful weapon that has massive attack power against ships: 7 HPs of damage in its own matchup, even and can fire away from a whopping seven spaces.
    • Submarines, although in Japan-only installments and when submerged in the Advance Wars games, they're Nigh Invulnerable.
  • Gosh Dang It to Heck: Windsor's "Dash it all" in Battalion Wars 2.
    • Averted in Days of Ruin.
  • Gotta Catch Em All: Hacking suggests that the All Unit Medal in Game Boy Wars 3 is obtained this way -- and it's gold plated.
  • Guide Dang It: in Battalion Wars, how to have your other units attack more actively.
    • Also, a meta-game based example in Days of Ruin: the Anti-Tank's cost ineffectiveness against infantry.
    • And Game Boy Wars 3 has a few Medals as this. Check the Guide Dang It page for more details.
  • He Knows About Timed Hits: Advance Wars series
    • And Battalion Wars too, resulting in the hilarious impression that your character is some sort of bodyjacking ghost whom the Western frontier have tricked into helping them and kept from leaving the battlefield using some kind of magical Invisible Wall.
  • Heel Face Turn: Olaf at the end of Advance Wars, Hawke and Lash during Dual Strike, Penny/Lili and Cyrus during Days of Ruin.
  • Hero Unit: CO usage in Days of Ruin, as well as an interesting twist in the Battalion Wars games.
  • Heroic Albino: Cyrus in Days of Ruin
  • Heroic BSOD: Will/Ed after Brenner/O'Brian dies in Days of Ruin. Followed by...
  • He's Back
  • Hypercompetent Sidekick: Sonja, Grit, and Drake in Advance Wars and Black Hole Rising and Lin in Days of Ruin.
  • I Am Legion: Countess Ingrid in Battalion Wars.
  • I Was Just Passing Through: In Black Hole Rising, Hawke describes turning up after faking his own death, killing Sturm and saving everyone else's lives as "a test of his power".
  • Idiot Ball: One sentence: "What's an airport?"
    • Also, Olaf in the field training mode of Advance Wars. He places units in locations making them useless, leaves his HQ totally unprotected, forgets to fuel his air units, and leaves his units hanging out right in the line of fire, among other things.
      • This is especially jarring after Olaf is fleshed out more in "Black Hole Rising", where he is shown as a competent commander who leads his country to oust the Black Hole invaders, and helps save the entire world.
  • Improbable Hairstyle: Days of Ruin suffers from this -- After the End it may be, but Will/Ed's Spiky Shonen Hairdo™ is always impeccable, crippling lack of supplies be damned. Maybe he managed to make away with the entire military academy's supply of hair lotion...
  • In Soviet Russia, Trope Mocks You: Blue Moon, which also resembles Canada. The Tundran Territories in Battalion Wars really takes this and runs away with it (Their leader is an Expy of Ivan Drago.)
  • Instant Win Condition: HQ Captures in all the games, but also factories, Black Cannons, and so on from Black Hole Rising onwards.
    • Want to piss off your opponent in Dual Strike? Sami and Eagle. Load infantry into T-copter, move it. Use Tag power with Eagle, move again, drop infantry near enemy HQ. Switch to Sami, insta-capture (perhaps literally) out of left field. Note: doing so only works once and may result in bodily injury to you.
  • Insurmountable Waist-Height Fence: Pipes in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike. Air units can't travel over them (long-range units like Artillery and Rockets can fire over them, however. Particularly egregious in Dual Strike with the Piperunner unit - not only does it run along pipes, but in the battle animations involving the Piperunner, the pipe looks little more daunting than a steep humpback bridge
    • Speaking of ships, bridges of the first Advance Wars continuity cannot be sailed under by ships, even submarines. Pre-battle unit placement ignores this, leading to the 'battleship in a lake' meme.
  • Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Olaf and Eagle in Advance Wars.
  • Justified Tutorial: Game Boy Wars 3 to an extent.
  • Karma Houdini: the civilians in Days of Ruin--while literally Dying Like Animals would have been too extreme, they should still have been gutted for being reindeer
  • Kill Sat: Shows up a few times in Advance, and is the super weapon everybody's looking for in Battalion.
  • Lightning Bruiser: Sturm, who levels forests instead of walking through them. For units, there are Neotanks and Bombers.
  • Lost Forever: the Excellence Medal in Game Boy Wars 3 requires you to clear all 45 maps in 54 battles
  • Luck-Based Mission: While the AI of the Advance Wars games is largely deterministic (meaning that they'll always respond the same way to the player's moves if the player makes the exact same moves between games if luck damage isn't a factor), factory missions in 2 are a notable exception. Each unit produced by the enemy factory is randomly assigned a certain behavior (such as guarding a particular unit type), and each behavior can make the level trivial or very difficult.
    • 100% Power in any Battalion Wars 2 mission where the final objective is to capture a facility capable of making units respawn fast
    • The final mission of Days Of Ruin is nearly impossible unless you follow a day-to-day guide, and even if you follow the walkthrough for every single move you make, you can still lose.
  • Mad Scientist: Caulder/Stolos in Days of Ruin.
  • The Man Behind the Man: Sturm in the first Advance Wars game, Kaiser Vlad in both Battalion Wars games, and Caulder/Stolos in Days of Ruin.
    • The latter shows up fairly early on though, but his real role doesn't get revealed until much later.
  • Man in a Kilt In Battalion Wars 2, the Anglo Empire veteran soldiers all wear kilts(and have fancy handlebar mustaches).
  • The Mario: Andy. As far as units go, tanks are pretty average.
  • Master of None: Playing without a CO in Days of Ruin.
  • Meganekko: Sonja in the non-american releases for the first game and Dual Strike. Her alt costume in the American version of Dual Strike retains this.
  • The Messiah: Jake in Dual Strike; Brenner/O'Brian and Will/Ed in Days of Ruin
  • Mighty Glacier: MD Tanks, Mega Tanks, War Tanks, Anti Tanks, Battleships, Carriers, and Oozium. Stealth Planes and Seaplanes also fit, not because they move slow, but because they constantly have to head back to be resupplied.
      • Seaplanes can be made Awesome but Practical by using four of them and rotating them in and out of an aircraft carrier. Essentially, they work in pairs: one pair attacks while the other pair sits in the carrier.
    • Constructors in Game Boy Wars 3 are this in a sense, not so much being decent in combat as they are more expensive than the Humvee and have only 5 Movement Power in combination with the worst Movement Type out of land units, but they can build up properties to improve repair jobs and funding, and also alter the terrain to speed up the arrival of reinforcements. Of course, they get five Beginner Mode maps dedicated to their usage for this--not exactly a beginner's unit.
    • And let's not forget the Train in Super Famicom Wars. Even though it has the highest Movement Power amount out of any unit in the series (even beating out the Fighter S in Game Boy Wars 3), it can only move on railroads and Train Stations. To make up for this, however, the Train has a powerful cannon with the same range as the Battleship, as well as the ability to transport 2 land units.
  • Mildly Military: The COs in Advance Wars seem to treat the various conflicts more like a wargame than an actual war. Grit doesn't really take it seriously at all, Drake brushes off an invasion to sunbathe, Sensei spends most of his fights with Adder teasing him with interesting facts about unit production, and in general the COs seem to downplay the fighting into being something like contests between them rather than actual warfare. The few that take things seriously are treated as humorously straight-laced.
  • Military Maverick: Grit regularly backchats to Olaf, while Drake's response to an impending invasion in Advance Wars is to continue sunbathing. Most of the COs have a bit of this.
    • Grit should be obvious though, he wears a cowboy hat.
  • Mission Control: COs in Advance Wars that aren't actively fighting take this role
  • Moral Dissonance: It's unclear whether or not people actually die when units are destroyed during the game's battles. Sometimes the characters care, and sometimes they don't.
    • Several times in Dual Strike, you meet up with allied CO's who demand that you fight them to prove your own worth. Though these could be handwaved as friendly practice wargames, it's possible that the characters treat their soldiers as chess pieces. Which is about as well as players treat their units.
      • Most likely the worst example is Mission 12 where you fight two friendly COs because one of them wants to test you a bit. What makes this case noteworthy is that it's also the mission that introduces Missile Silos.
    • In Days of Ruin, the dissonance is removed. The bad COs treat soldiers like expendables and toys. The good COs agonize over the losses, recognizing the sheer pointlessness of several conflicts.
  • Mysterious Waif: Isabella/Catleia in Days of Ruin
  • Name's the Same - Yamamoto may refer to Mr. Yamamoto from Super Famicom Wars or Sensei's name in the Japanese versions of the Advance Wars games.
    • Although it is strongly suggested that Sensei was once an unbeatable CO, so it's not that much of a stretch to assume it was an intentional Shout-Out.
  • No Campaign for the Wicked: all games in the Advance Wars series, including Days of Ruin. In the first Battalion Wars, however, you could play as other countries including Xylvania and Iron Legion in certain bonus missions. There's also an entire campaign (albeit with 3 missions in the sequel where you play as the Iron Legion.)
  • No Celebrities Were Harmed: In Super Famicom Wars, two of the COs are named Billy Gates and Hetler.
  • No Export for You: Every game prior to Advance Wars were released exclusively in Japan. Inverted with the Japanese version of Days of Ruin/Dark Conflict, which was canceled after many delays.
  • Non Indicative Difficulty: Hard Campaign in Dual Strike allows you to use all of the COs at the start as opposed to regular campaign
  • Nostalgia Level - The Advance Wars games recycled many of the maps from the earlier Famicom Wars games. Notably Bean Island, the very first map in the original Famicom Wars, appears in all four games.
  • Not So Different and If You Kill Him You Will Be Just Like Him: Von Bolt to Jake, in the ending to Dual Strike; also, Greyfield/Sigismundo to Lin in Days of Ruin (unfortunately for the latter, Lin is an Anti-Hero and shoots him anyway
  • The Obi-Wan: Captain Brenner/O'Brian in Days of Ruin
  • Obviously Evil In Battalion Wars Xylvania and its predecessor, the Iron Legion
  • Old Master: Sensei in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike
  • Patriotic Fervor: Olaf is a true blue patriot through and through, even singing his country's national anthem in one of his Dual Strike winquotes. Which is strange when you remember that, during the first game's tutorial, Nell mentions he used to work for Orange Star...
  • Perky Goth: Lash.
  • The Player Is the Most Important Resource: In Advance Wars, you, as the tactician, get frequently commended by the Commanding Officers you play as for allowing them to win.
  • Polluted Wasteland: Xylvania in Battalion Wars is revealed to be like this, due to Vlad's abuse of the environment for military resources. In fact, one of his primary reasons for expansion is to gain more resources.
    • Although, oddly enough, Old Xylvania looks just about the same in Battalion Wars 2, except everything's on fire instead of poisonous and green.
    • Bizarrely, it looks like this 200 years before Vlad's stuff, and had steampunk orcs.
    • Similarly, the Black Crystals in Dual Strike turn all of the land around them into desert.
      • It gets worse. If this goes on too long, you get Wasteland. The water turns green(Red on the map), the trees die, the ground is dry and hard all the bases look abandoned when we see them in battles. Yes, all this just because some old guy wants to live forever.
  • Pre-Ass-Kicking One-Liner: Happens whenever a CO uses their CO or Super Power.
  • Prestige Class: sort of, for various units in Game Boy Wars 3
  • The Quiet One: Hawke in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike. Gage/Trak in Days of Ruin
  • Quirky Miniboss Squad: Adder, Lash and Flak in Black Hole Rising; Koal, Lash and Jugger in Dual Strike, Caulder/Stolos' children in Days of Ruin also count, although you only actually fight two of them.
  • Red Oni, Blue Oni: Tasha/Zadia and Gage/Trak from Days of Ruin.
  • Retool: Days of Ruin; also applies somewhat to Game Boy Wars 3, which involves various stuff inspired by Nectaris
  • RPG Elements: Game Boy Wars 3 in particular
  • Schizo-Tech: mostly in the first three Advance Wars games. You have no shortage of missile units and even stealth aircraft, but once you get to the naval combat it goes right back to WWII - big guns and bombers. Fixed, to some extent, with missile boats in Days of Ruin.
  • Scissors Cuts Rock: Many COs' specialities can be used to, if not turn around the Rock-Paper-Scissors triangles, then at least even them out (witness Sami and Sensei's mechs against AAs). Missions like this are also used to challenge the player: most of Max's missions against Grit in Advance Wars take this form, and from Advance Wars 2 we have Sea Fortress for Eagle (the air specialist fighting through an AA-heavy defence) and Navy Vs. Air for Drake (the naval specialist fighting against a heavy air force, when air tends to beat naval normally).
  • Screw the Rules, I Have Money!: Sasha, who uses her vast wealth to... get even MORE wealth.
    • Colin, who uses his money to do things like One Hit KO Megatanks with Mechs.
  • Selective Condemnation: In Dual Strike, the Big Bad Von Bolt dares you to shoot him in order to stop his evil scheme, claiming it would make you as bad as he is. This in spite of the hundreds, possibly thousands, of enemy units you've killed and allied units destroyed under your command to get this far. Not to mention the deaths that would be caused if he did succeed.
  • Self-Deprecation: Drake, particularly after the "Navy vs. Air" mission in Black Hole Rising
  • Sheathe Your Sword / Revive Kills Zombie: In Black Hole Rising, you can win "Two Week Test" by doing absolutely nothing except ending your turn. It works, without fail, and it's a magnificent display of the AI's ability to screw itself over, but of course your ranking at the end will suck.
  • Ship Sinking: In the very game that introducted the pair, the Jake & Rachel ship is sunk if you choose them in the final mission.
  • Shoot the Dog: In one of the endings of Dual Strike, Hawke shoots Von Bolt's life-support system because Jake can't bring himself to. Given he also kills Sturm at the end of Advance Wars 2, he seems to be making rather a habit of this. Note that this is averted if Jake chooses to shoot Von Bolt. (Also in Days of Ruin, when Lin leads the final battle against Greyfield/Sigismundo and executes him rather than leave it up to Will/Ed.)
  • Shout-Out: A possibly inadvertant one to the Doom Patrol: Dr. Caulder. It's hardly a common name...
    • Another perhaps accidental one to the Bible: Rachel and Jake are the names of the first two COs you have access to in Dual Strike.
  • Single Palette Town: Used in Advance Wars to distinguish between nations
  • The Smurfette Principle: Most of the factions in the Advance Wars series have more male COs than female ones
    • Although this is somewhat justified, real life armies don't have that many female officers either. Also averted in Days of Ruin, exactly half of the COs are female.
      • The female COs also tend to be Closer to Earth (with the exception of the female villains). And Orange Star's commander-in-chief (Nell) is female.
    • Lampshaded in Battalion Wars, where Nova's promotion of Mjr. Nelly to CO is a Really Big Deal to the traditionalist Tundrans.
  • SNK Boss: Sturm in both of his appearances, giving all of his units a free offense boast, though lowering their defense, and having a CO-power that drops in a huge meteor on your highest concentration of units, though the playable version of him is much weaker. In Black Hole Rising, he gives all of his units a major offense and defense boast with no drawbacks (no weakening other units or raising their price like other COs) and only has his Super-CO power, no normal one, but that one is all he needs. He calls in meteor again, which like before hits the highest concentration of his enemies units, knocking 8/10 of their max health, doesn't hurt his units while also giving them even more an power and defense boost. Unlike in his first appearance, the playable version is just as strong as one from the campaign. Subverted with Dual Strike, Von Bolt is no wimp, but not as powerful as Sturm. Played straight with Clauder in Days of Ruin, however. He has a 3 by 3 CO-zone that gives all of his units, regardless of type, the highest boost their power and defense in the game, and repairs them by 50% of their max health each turn. His zone never increases and he has no CO-power, but what he was is more than enough. He and Sturm are both banned from tournaments involving their respective games.
  • Soundtrack Dissonance: Isabella's CO theme in Days of Ruin.
    • Also, Olaf's theme (which really only fits him in Advance Wars 1 due to his redemption in said game's sequels) and Hawke's theme (which makes him sound like the most evil Black Hole CO even though he is probably the least evil one).
    • Not to mention Flak's theme, which might actually be the most intimidating theme in the entire franchise despite Flak himself being an utterly pathetic joke character...
  • Stock Subtitle: Advance Wars 2: Black Hole Rising.
  • Stone Wall: the MB Tank, particularly in Game Boy Wars 3, a game virtually full of Glass Cannon units no less
  • Super Soldiers: Days of Ruin has a twist on this. Caulder's "children" are super commanders, meant for command room action.
  • Suspiciously Small Army: Very guilty of this. No more than 50 units under your control ever. Note however that every unit in the Advance Wars games except for Megatanks/Wartanks is a literal unit composed of no fewer than ten of whatever you're specifically talking about.
  • Tactical Rock-Paper-Scissors: Several triangles exist in unit interactions, though how useful they are varies. If a map has viable airports, Battle Copters beat Tanks, which beat Anti-air, which beat Light Tanks. Naval units try to be a case, with Cruisers beating Submarines, Submarines beating Battleships, and Battleships beating Cruisers. Unfortunately, Cruisers (despite nominally being anti-air units) and Battleships fold to Battle Copters and Bombers, and Battleships are overly expensive so this one rarely gets used in practice.
  • Theme Music Power-Up: Whenever a CO Power is activated in any of the Advance Wars games, it's time to RAWK! Evil characters even get their own version that's a bit darker and heavier.
  • The Theme Park Version: Every nation in Battalion Wars is this, with the Western Frontier as the US, the Tundran Territories as Soviet Russia, the Solar Empire as a combination of China and Japan, the Anglo Isles as Britain, and Xylvania as WWII-era Germany... but kinda sorta vampires!
    • Advance Wars pre-Days of Ruin had trappings of this as well, though not as strong as in Battalion Wars. Orange Star is America, although they suffer the least from this, since they were the sole protagonist country of the first game. Blue Moon is Russia and Canada, while Yellow Comet is Japan. Oddly enough, Green Earth is an amalgam of all of WWII Europe, despite that including opposing forces in real life. Since Green Earth turn out to be good guys, the only influences from Nazi Germany come from military tactics; Eagle has a strong air force and a power that allows his units to take another turn to represent blitzkrieg.
      • And, in a minor example, Green Earth infantrymen wear German bucket helmets.
  • This Is Unforgivable!: the Andy clone's death in Dual Strike
  • Those Wacky Nazis: While not technically Nazis, the Xylvanian commanders from Battalion Wars cover most of the character types.
    • And a few Black Hole COs at the very least dress in a manner clearly meant to suggest Nazis, Flak (grunt soldier), Adder (officer), and Sturm (general) most obviously
      • Green Earth is also EXTREMLY German in their dresscode. Long coats, Stahlhelme and the like. Also, Jess fom Green Earth is especially good with tanks who both shoot harder and go faster, making it very easy to blitz.
    • One of Sturm's Colors in Advance Wars 2 give him a Nazi hat.
    • Don't tell me you didn't think "HITLER!" the first time you saw Admiral Greyfield from Days of Ruin...
  • Timed Mission: all missions in Game Boy Wars 3, and a few in Advance Wars series; most cases in terms of turns, not actual time
    • Dual Strike is the only installment with an actual timer in normal game play, although Days of Ruin also uses a timer in wifi-play to prevent stalling.
      • Although in Dual Strike the timer is set for such a long time you can basically start the battle, have a shower, walk the dog, go to work, have an extended summer vacation and the timer still wont run out.
        • That's only true of the first timed mission, though. The second one, Crystal Calamity, is one of the hardest in the game (although admittedly the time limit only plays a small part in that difficulty).
    • Dual Strike and Days of Ruin also feature missions that are must be completed within a set number of turns/days. Both this and the more typical timed mission are the subject of one of Dual Strike's Survival campaigns. Time Survival is much harder than Turn Survival.
  • Too Dumb to Live The civilians from Days of Ruin. Although understandable that they don't want to get involved in conflict, they keep forgetting that the Battalion is just about the only thing standing between them and oblivion. In particular, the "Mayor" turns the civilians against the Battalion primarily due to his fear that they will usurp his authority. Near the end, he makes a deal with Caulder/Stolos for the cure to the Creeper and to be left alone. Caulder/Stolos, being the Complete Monster that he is, reneges on his deal and kills the Mayor with the supposed "cure".
  • Totally Radical: Due to another Woolseyism (see below, Jake from Dual Strike speaks in a somewhat grating 90's slang dialect, using "words" such as "sup?" and "dude" when they're not especially appropriate. His Japanese counterpart, John, is extremely serious and uses his headphones for military communications.)
    • Waylon in Days of Ruin pulls a pretty similar "Why are these Lazurians all up in my business?" Somewhat ironically, he's otherwise a total Jive Turkey whose slang is stuck in the 50s. Granted, Waylon was clearly intended to be an annoying jerk, unlike Jake, who is somehow supposed to be a likable protagonist.
  • Turned Against Their Masters: Caulder was on both ends of this: he reveals himself to have been a clone who killed his own creator, the real Caulder; and Cyrus turns on him for being immoral
  • Unexpected Gameplay Change: Combat mode in Dual Strike
  • Unstable Equilibrium: in Campaign in Game Boy Wars 3, you must build up a good army of units or you'll never stand a chance of even reaching Bissum Desert or the Zone E maps
  • Vaporware: Did you know that a 64 Wars was planned for, you guessed it, the Nintendo 64?
  • The Very Definitely Final Dungeon: The last missions of each game (excluding the first) in the Advance Wars series all revolve around the Big Bad's Doomsday Device or secret fortress hideout, which is usually guarded by numerous canons and/or giant laser guns.
  • Video Game Caring Potential: several examples, not counting the way the soldiers themselves are or any No Casualties Run
    • Technique scoring in the Advance Wars and Battalion Wars games (Days of Ruin attempts to be a shining example of this but ends up merely a revamped one)
    • Leveling up units in Super Famicom Wars, Game Boy Wars 3, and Days of Ruin
    • Materials in Game Boy Wars 3 makes lesser unit losses more punishing
    • Arrangement in Game Boy Wars 3's Campaign mode
    • COs that can heal units with their powers encourage the player to safeguard wounded units, instead of using them for suicide attacks or cannon fodder.
  • Villain Decay: Hawke, the same person that marched his troops by an erupting volcano for a strategic advantage, who basically crushed an entire country, and abandoned his army as they fell at the liberation of Green Earth. At the end of Black Hole Rising, just when the allies are about to win, Hawke kills Sturm personally and basically regards the whole of the game as a 'test of his skills'. Cut to the start of Dual Strike, and suddenly not only is Hawke NOT in charge of Black Hole, he's barely even an important member whom is deposed of when he stumbles upon the truth.
  • Villain Exit Stage Left: Justified; the commanders presumably use radio to communicate and can therefore run away long before they're actually in any danger. Usually averted sooner or later, as the villains run out of territories to run to when defeated.
    • Played totally straight at the end of Dual Strike, where Jugger, Koal, and Kindle realize they're beat and set off in a tank to start anew elsewhere.
  • War for Fun and Profit: Sturm in the first Advance Wars. Caulder/Stolos in Days of Ruin does War For Fun And For Science!!, but explicitly not profit
    • Seeing as how in Days of Ruin, Caulder's company IDS sold to both sides of the conflict, he has already profited.
  • War Has Never Been So Much Fun: Until Days of Ruin, anyway.
  • We Have Reserves: Rachel: "These troops are on loan from Blue Moon!" On loan? Don't they DIE? Although this is pretty much a given, see War Has Never Been So Much Fun.
    • Also, Lightning Strikes in Dual Strike. Two allied factions are essentially wasting lives and resources by "testing each other".
    • Admittedly, such cases could be them playing "war games" without actual casualties. Then again, the battle animation remains unchanged...
  • Weather of War: rain and snow. Drake and Olaf's CO Powers involve those conditions respectively. Penny is immune to the effects.
  • Worthy Opponent: Eagle in the first game. Hawke in Black Hole Rising and Dual Strike. Forsythe/Carter in Days of Ruin
  • You Fail Physics Forever: Plasma? Arcing between two or more fallen meteors?
  • You Have Outlived Your Usefulness: Von Bolt towards Hawke and Lash in the middle of Dual Strike, which prompts their Heel Face Turn.
  • Zero Effort Boss: Two Week Test in Advance Wars 2 is an accidental example where the only way to fail is to forfeit. Due to what is presumed to be a glitch, losing all units on this map doesn't result in a loss and due to AI weirdness the AI will refuse to capture the player's HQ.
  • Zettai Ryouiki: Tasha from Day of Ruin.
  1. Aircraft carriers work quite differently between Dual Strike and Days of Ruin. They can carry two aircraft in both games, but other than that, they're very different. In Dual Strike, aircraft carriers are powerful indirect attackers with a range of 3-8 squares. In Days of Ruin, aircraft carriers themselves can only attack at close range with rather weak machine guns, but the aircraft they're carrying can launch from it, move, and attack in the same action, assuming that the carrier itself hasn't moved any distance. Aircraft carriers in Days of Ruin can also produce seaplanes, which are capable of attacking any unit in the game for decent damage. To top it off, they repair the aircraft they're carrying every turn, just like an airport.