Fairy Battle

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.

So, you're walking around on the world map, and there comes that flash you've come to know and loathe. Get ready for another random encounter! Except, what's this? Seems you're not in any danger after all. Congratulations, you've just run into a Fairy Battle.

Occasionally showing up in role playing games, the Fairy Battle is something that makes itself look like a battle, but turns out to be, well, something else.

Compare Pop Quiz, Helpful Mook.

Not to be confused with a Fairey Battle, a Fairy Bottle, Shin Megami Tensei (where the title can be taken literally), or a battle with The Fair Folk.

Examples of Fairy Battle include:

Action Game

  • The boss fight with Mysterio in Spider-Man 2. After the appearance of his abnormally large health bar filling up three times, he can do nothing but throw increasingly desperate threats until being one-hit KO'd.

Action Adventure

  • You'd be forgiven for thinking this trope was named for Zelda II: The Adventure of Link, where fairies would occasionally pop up on the World Map alongside normal Wandering Monsters, and touching one sent Link to a "battle" screen with nothing but a healing fairy hovering in midair.
    • An easy way to avoid random encounters when low on health in the same game would be to move onto a road tile after the Random Encounters popped up. Being touched by an enemy while standing on a road would take you to a one-screen wide sideview area with no enemies that could be left by simply walking off-screen.
    • The Legend of Zelda: Phantom Hourglass has Jellyfish that ocassionaly pop out of the water, but do not attack, and can be shot for free Rupees.
    • They return in the Ocean sector map of Spirit Tracks.

Adventure Game

  • If you are wandering out in the grasslands in Quest for Glory III and are hungry enough, you will encounter the Awful Waffle Walker, which is basically a giant waffle covered in butter and syrup. It has its own theme music, and will follow you relentlessly until you eat it.

Card Game

  • In the game Yu-Gi-Oh! GX Spirit Caller, selecting a person (all represented by a triangle with a circle on top) talks to them. Usually this challenges that person to a duel... unless it is the Dark Magician Girl, who will instead give you a rare card.
    • Something similar occurs in Yu-Gi-Oh! World Tournament 2008. Usually, clicking on a character on the World Map starts a duel with that character, but some of them are other features, like puzzles. For instance, clicking on the Unhappy Maiden causes her to appear and tell you she feels sick; if you give her a card like Red Medicine or Dian Keto the Cure Master, she feels better and leaves. Do it enough times, and she is unlocked in Tournament Mode.

MMORPGs

  • Atlantica Online has treasure chests that spawn for players that use a treasure map. The chest appears as an enemy... but goes down in one hit.
  • Kingdom of Loathing: The "Rampaging Adding Machine" borders on this. It's also an enemy, but it mainly exists to combine scrolls.

Role-Playing Game

  • The Final Fantasy series has this trope in spades:
    • Final Fantasy IV had something like this. If you walk around in the developers' room you'll run into random encounters with monsters named after developers. You can fight them, but they don't do much to you besides talk.
    • "Magic Pots" first appeared in Final Fantasy V, where they asked the player to Give Me Your Inventory Item, and variations of them appear in most subsequent games. This entry also had a Hidden Elf Village that was randomly encountered in a certain patch of forest, with the usual Fight Woosh.
    • Final Fantasy VI's Magic Pots simply ask for Elixirs ... while using Elixirs on you.
    • Final Fantasy VIII had the first Pop Quiz encounter, plus later encounters with PuPu.
    • Final Fantasy IX is the Trope Namer, whose theme song for such encounters is aptly named "Fairy Battle". The monsters in question appear similar to ordinary monsters, but with slight differences, and they do not attack you. Some just ask for a specific type of gem, and there's even one that just gives you a Pop Quiz! The "Fairy Battles" were a requirement to be able to physically attack a side quest boss.
    • Final Fantasy XI: Wings of the Goddess has Sprites appearing in the past. They spawn like normal mobs, but actually use spells helpful to players. Even Raise!
    • Final Fantasy XII's Magic Pots just want to be given Elixirs ... assuming you can actually find them first. And assuming you switch off your party's Gambits so you don't accidentally attack them, because you will really regret it if you do.
    • Final Fantasy Tactics A2 has some encounters that don't involve any fighting at all, especially the Bonga Bungle reports that task you with digging for treasure or making interviews. The repeatable airship cleaning missions may or may not have enemies.
  • Kingdom Hearts has White Mushrooms, which reward you for hitting them with whatever spell corresponds to their miming act; and blue mushrooms called Rare Truffles that reward you for juggling them in mid-air, without them touching the ground.
    • There's also the Bulky Vendor in the sequel, whose HP goes down all by itself after it appears. By using a Reaction Command on it, depending on how low its HP is (the lower the better), it'll drop an assortment of munny, health/magic/drive replenishing items, and an item or two that can be used for synthesis.
    • And Birth By Sleep has a special rare encounter where sometimes, in certain preset locations, you might encounter an enemy variant that does nothing but drop ice cream components for you. These can be traded in for ice cream, which only have tangental use.
  • The Pig Noise in The World Ends With You have distinctive green scan symbols and don't attack, instead trying to simply escape by running offscreen. You are guaranteed an item drop if you defeat them before they get away, although the means of defeating them vary from pig to pig.
  • In Torneko's chapter of Dragon Quest IV, he occasionally runs into traveling merchants on the world map, or even a traveling innkeeper.
  • In Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door, in the ruins near Petalburg, there is a Thwomp who, despite appearing to be a mini-boss, actually just gives you a pop quiz. If you lose, however, he does make you fight a handful of enemies.
  • In the Fallout series, it's quite common for random encounters to set you up against...a travelling merchant? A rave party in the wilderness? Doctor Who? How dangerous random encounters are depends on your "Luck" stat and, to a lesser degree, the Survival skill.[1]
  • One random encounter in Neverwinter Nights 2 is a literal Fairy Battle. With fairies. You can still kill them if you want to, but they are just pranksters and will reward you if you play along.
    • To be specific, they want your pants...
  • Chrono Trigger had Save Point Chest Monsters in Magus's Castle... which fluttered around doing nothing in particular until you killed them. They're evidently there just for the free experience and tech points...
  • In Mother 3, there's an enemy called the "Walking Bushie" that casts Lifeup on the main characters in battle and never attacks. After a few rounds of healing, the bush walks away, ending battle. If you attack the bush, it runs away without healing you.
    • The original MOTHER 1 featured an enemy called Groucho. While it could attack you, if you let it live, it would say "Hello" and then leave, giving a random party member a fair experience bonus.
  • In some dungeons in Xenogears, you encounter repair bots that will simply heal your HP, and can't attack you. You can still kill them, though, and get some cash.
  • Legend of Dragoon has a "boss fight" in an early dungeon (the Shrine of Shirley) which is actually just a series of questions about your party's motivations and so forth. Just Guard in between each question to heal all the damage you took during the normal boss fight right beforehand.
  • In Dragon Age: Origins you can occasionally encounter a dwarven vendor as a "random battle" when travelling on the map.
    • Since all the Random Encounters are actually scripted, as you finish sidequests he effectively becomes the only "random battle" near the end of the game. Which wouldn't be so bad if he wasn't accompanied by Audible Sharpness and the crossed-swords icon appearing.
  • Lost Odyssey features NPCs that challenge you to play music by hitting cubes in the battle interface.
  • The first Atelier Iris game has the "Ware Cat", I mean, "Were Cat", who befriends Norn and will often appear to offer her items or healing in the first battle upon entering Poto's Forest.
  • In Phantasy Star Zero, you may occasionally come across a group of Rappies, who are much less aggressive than most monsters. They also come with their own, more upbeat battle theme.
  • Pokémon now has Audino and Alomaloma, pokémon that have attacks that can heal your pokémon and yield a crapton of experience points.
  1. The Luck stat affects probabilities for which encounter is encountered, while Survival affects which random encounters you get the option to avoid or enter at your discretion