Tiz = protagonist personality Anges = no personality Mrgrgr= 1 demensinal personality Rigabell = cool guy with memory loss ، ladies gentleman ، the only guy with a plot twist. Yeah well.......
I went out of my way to make this song play constantly with the templars heart strike dealing critical damage each time to active special quickly so the loop never ends.
“I’m gonna use Ringabel’s special attack” Why? The boss is immune to every attack he can dish out? That’s a horrible move! “……..trust me, it’s worth it.” *team wipe* “ I regret nothing”
"Deadly AND sexy! A winning combination, wouldn't you say?!" -Ringabel "Put a sock in it, Ringabel!" -Edea I see some things haven't changed, old buddy. lol
I LOVED his support in that fight. I was thinking "they wouldn't actually make him support us would they?" I was HAPPILY proven wrong. Made that the best damn boss fight in the game honestly. And fittingly enough, that was the kill shot on the boss when this dialogue played xD
Yeah, the guy who is supposed to be a sidekick to the hero Tiz, but eventually ends up becoming way cooler and more attractive to the point overshadowing him. Honestly, the journey would be only 1/4 interesting if there wasn't Ringabel around. Ringable and Edea's constant quarrelings never fail to humor me.
Honestly though. I found Edea to be insufferable without him around. To quote Profiteur "oh again with the mrrring and ze grrring". Verbal ticks/catch phrases like that really grind my gears for some reason, so without the humor of Ringabel around I just turned the sound off for a lot of her dialogue. Same with Yew, but that's an entirely different story... fucking gravy...
Even though the game starts and end with Tiz they all just kinda take center stage at different points during the game like Agnes in Florem, Edea in Eternia and Ringabell in chapter 5 and 6 so really I always just thought of it bieng game with 4 protagonists without anyone necessarily bieng the main one.
This game is much better than BD2 imo. Its more repetitive in its endgame yes, but the characters are so much better. And if this one's remaster does well, they can always remaster BS:EL too
I am not sure if a remaster for the switch with it's current features would be as good: one of the original games features were being able to build the village using streetpass buddies. and that really has a BIG impact during the final boss battle. Since the switch doesn't have the streetpass system or anything similar, that boss battle would not be as impactful.
I love how this theme effectively and economically tells you everything you need to know of Ringabel. He's an elegant and distinguished gentleman, full of conviction and confidence in equal measure; but for all his bravado and unrepentant romanticism, he's a true friend. A person truly striving to live his life how it makes sense to him and giving his all. Amnesia be dammed
As a person who has yet to play the game but has lately gotten into M2U songs, I'm looking forward to these kinds of songs. I never thought the implementation of Revo's "Fly" melodies would be so beautiful off vocals as well. The moment I hear the progression of the chorus you can definitely smell a faint sasageyo chorus sound as well Damn amazing how JRPGS have high chances of making master piece OSTs I think undertale was the worldwide version introduction to the world of iconic RPG OST
I absolutely cannot tell if I've overlistened, but can anyone else hear castanets (?) in the background of the song? They're really faint but you can hear them a bit more in the beginning! And the quieter parts before the big loud awesome part!
Normally I can't stand womanizer types, but Ringabel's an exception. I'll never forget him tearing into Fiore DeRosa for using women as tools--first time I've genuinely gotten pissed at a villain in a game, honestly. But that was also +100 respect points to Ringabel, lol
@@CerulianHimmel Yeah, that's the difference between Ringabel and DeRosa. The latter was so predatory and despicable that even his subordinates hated him. I recall Einheria saying something like "Commanding officer or no, lay one hand on my sisters and I swear I'll remove it!" ...Sounds a little too much like a number of men in the real world, frankly. As a male survivor of trauma and abuse from both men and women, I have a lot of personal appreciation for all the Ringabels out there--and I think women could learn important morals from guys like that, too.
@@seanobrien276 I think of all the womanizing types, I favour the ones that *gain* morals when confronted with their... character. They don't suddenly turn into super good guys instantly, but instead go "ah... shit." And basically go around being like "I don't want you to forgive me, but I still need to apologize" or something along those lines and slowly try to work on it. But by the same token, not everyone should get such treatment. DeRosa for example. He quite literally destroyed entire lives, caused death and despair, and damn near leveled the city in a sense. All to... have a harem? Or at least, that's as much as I heard before I tuned him out and skipped his text when I could.
@@CerulianHimmel I think you tuning DeRosa out as you say you did is proof enough that he doesn't deserve second chances or anything like that. From his dialogue, I don't think he was even interested in a harem, he only wanted to use all the women in Florem to feel...I dunno. Powerful? Accomplished? He was one of those men who wasn't interested in love or things like that, he just wanted to control his victims with that weird pheromone that made women fall for him. But as for your first paragraph, I can relate to that as well. Truth is, I never learned how to connect with other humans; I didn't learn about socialization and boundaries, or about family, friendship, love, and so on--just the dark, ugly side of humanity. Also I was born into those circumstances, and they were my normal for the first 25 years of my life (I'm 32 now). I've survived sexual abuse, domestic violence, psychiatric malpractice, and a society (read: America) that did nothing to intervene and instead branded me a "problem" for acting out. After everything I've been through, it would've been real easy for me to turn out like...DeRosa, for example. I wanted to be stronger than people like that. But to be stronger than the "DeRosas" of the real world meant rising above the greed, apathy, contempt, hatred, and other things that drive people to do the things they did to me, you know? So I've developed my own moral code and value system, mostly using my own hellish past as a foundation (for how NOT to treat others, of course). Ringabel was a character who had a "womanizer" trait--something I find pretty revolting in general, partly due to my own past experiences. At the same time, though, I think he always had good morals, but just needed to learn basic respect and decency, like not making lewd/off-putting/PUA comments to random women he came across, respecting their space, and so on--and he had to learn a lot of this the hard way. Mostly from Edea berating him for his indecency. My own self-development is similar, though my circumstances are certainly different. Like...for one, I never learned to trust people or turn to others for any kind of support, so I've never had mentors, teachers, idols, or any such figures in my life; because of this, I had no one to teach me about human connections. It didn't help that the extremely small handful of people who genuinely tried to reach/teach me couldn't, because of how I was affected by psychiatric lab-rat malpractice. It also didn't help that, again, I was seen as a "problem" by most people, so I was just shunned by everyone. The vast majority of people didn't care to step in and help, not even when I was too young to seek help for myself. So, I learned that there was nobody to turn to except myself. Which meant learning all of these things the hard way, through countless mistakes and things that, sadly, have become "defining traits" in the eyes of many people nowadays. But, in retrospect, taking the high road and falling on my ass over and over has been totally worth it, because I have become stronger than the DeRosas of the world. And, since every individual is a lifelong work in progress, I'll always have a reason to keep bettering myself. All of this said, I think Ringabel is the truest representation of human self-development and improvement of the whole party--whether it's how one interacts with women as a man, or anything else, really. He's also a reminder that there comes a point when you need help from someone else to see your own flaws. I myself have reached the limit of what I can do alone, too.
If by that you mean to say that you can notice the transition here then yes, it is notable here by a slight speedup of the beat due to poor cutting. But it is night imperceptible, so it's acceptable.
Despite my attempts to love them all... BD 1 has the best character themes. All four are top notch awesome themes to hear mid-battle. Bravely Second's kinda blurred together and I don't really remember them, and BD 2 so far they are good, but nowhere near "The Vagrant of Love"
I have never played this game and prob never will and have no idea what this is, but I listen to this track atleast once a day. Its like an addiction lmao
Reminder that if Bravely Default II sells well on the Switch, a third *MOBILE game* might be on the works, (Asano himself said so in an interview) which makes me feel disappointed.
I only play bravely second and this make me want to play all the bravely games only to see the dimension traveler ringabell mary a day edéa ,please someone comment back if it happen some where And if the suppose mariage of Yu will happen a day somewhere or maybe in an other game please 😭😭😭
you mean to tell me edea has never seen him before? that would literally mean that SPOILER: alternis never ever for the life of him took his helmet off near her. what a chad lol.
Doesnt Alternis become disfigured saving Edea in the volcano or something? Its been ages since I played but I remember something with Alty getting badly burned.
@@marcstutsman4861 I dont think so, no. Well to be fair, Bravely has a multiverse that seems to follow branching timelines. I wouldn’t surprised if this happened in the ‘main’ timeline. So in this case, Ringabel from the future was essentially the luckiest of the Alternis. I could be forgetting it though, I don’t remember BD as much sadly as I do Second.
I didn't play default, but I think that Alternis and Ringabel aren't the same person. It could be what @Twenty-Fifth said, or it could be that Ringabel disguises himself as Alternis to hide from Edea.
Bakasura In one of the paintings in the mansion in which you battle Yoko, it shows all six of them fighting. I think we should have all six and you can rotate them in your party. Also the experience can be shared.
damn at first i really hate this guy it gets to my nerves but when the story progress i fell in love with his personality i kinda miss him when he regain his memory then acting wierd
His returning in Bravely Second and forcibly taking over the aux chord for that one boss fight with silly one-liners saved what was otherwise a really disappointing sequel for me. I hope the ending hints that we get a third game focusing more on him specifically.
Bravely Second was an absolute failure in Japan due to all the bad endings of the subquests and that you needed an SQ account to use fort lune, so don't get your hopes high.
Of course it’s an accordeon because Ringabel is from Florem which is inspired by France Évidemment le thème de Ringabel est joué à l’accordéon puisqu’il vient de Florem qui elle-même s’inspire de la France
Spoilers ahead. The moment we first encounter Alternis, my detective sense tingled. It seemed way too convenient but I let it slip anyway. Then when you reach Hartschild and meet the commanders wife, Ringabel weirdly runs off and then the scene moves on to when Victoria attacks Alternis, he gets wounded and then the next cutscene Ringabel comes back hurt the same way Alternis was. I was like, “They totally the same person lmao”. But then, if you complete the Ninja asterisk, it turns out it was the silent Ninja who attacked Ringabel. “U wot” Anyway, that really caught me off. When the big reveal was made, I got bamboozled all over again. Damn I love this game.
You want to know some extra clever foreshadowing that could be easily missed to the point where I only noticed on a 3rd run? One of Ringabel's pre battle animations when you start a fight has him hop in place to hype himself up for a fight. You see it so often you don't even think about it after a while even when you saw it initially. Enough so that one could EASILY not even notice that when you finally fight Alternis, he has the EXACT same pre battle hopping in place animation as the final clue before the reveal.
@@Anon-jr7or here's the video link: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-RXWgRBhRFQY.html The song starts at the 2:00 minute mark in the video
Ringabel is how Japanese people view French people. Actually they see us italians as lazy but with great minds. I think they go crazy about our design choice and culture.