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Blog entry by Carl Corley

Triangle Strategy: Chapter 3 - How To Win The Vote

  • Carl Corley
  • Friday, 5 December 2025, 11:42 AM
  • 5 min read

The only Fire Emblem game to utilize map elevation is Radiant Dawn , and it mostly amounts to additional terrain bonuses. All Fire Emblem games use their maps to create spaces where only certain units can move, or to apply certain stat bonuses, like a forest tile increasing a unit’s chance of avoiding attacks. While these map elements add a lot of strategy to the gameplay - with the map design itself being a crucial factor in the overall balance of the game - there aren’t many ways the player can interact with the environment itself. In Fates , certain units can interact with tiles dubbed "Dragon Veins" to alter the map, but they are very control

Another aspect of Triangle Strategy that isn’t explained until a few chapters in are the recommended units. There is no strategic value that the game takes into consideration when highlighting these charact

It doesn’t make much sense, but from a gameplay perspective it presents an enthralling moral conundrum that had me scratching my head on several occasions. Before making your stance clear there will always be a chance to talk with allies, engaging in dialogue and presenting evidence to sway their position on certain matters. Some will be steadfast in where they stand, while others might be open to persuasion with the right approach. Serenoa will often be free to walk into town and speak with NPCs, all of whom have a perspective to offer on current affairs and monopoly derby edition small hints towards what the right path might be.

With Triangle Strategy ’s game mechanics , however, players can not only take advantage of elevation, but they can interact a lot more with the map itself. Certain spells and items can turn tiles wet, which can then conduct electricity. Some tiles can be set ablaze, and wind-based skills can spread the fire further. Any character can take advantage of these terrain interactions, either through their spells or with items, unlike in Fates where only royal characters could interact with Dragon Ve

JRPGs are often juvenile in some manner while trying to push forward a serious narrative, so it’s nice to see something that is mature in its outlook and expects us to come along for the adventure or leave it behind. I was on board from the opening moments and never looked back.

In this walkthrough, Conviction choices will be presented in a table with the answers arranged as they are in the game . We will also tell you which Conviction each answer relates to, though you will not be able to see this information in the game itself until much la

While chatting with all the NPCs in the Holy City and looking for items to use and equip in Triangle Strategy 's Chapter 10, players will come across a Rebel who is nervous and upset. He can't get back to his house because a guard is standing by it, waiting to arrest

Because players won’t be at risk of losing a character in battle, units in Triangle Strategy are a lot more different than each other. Although characters may die due to story reasons, that’s a controlled factor that allows each unit to have its own mechanical purpose and decreases the need for multiple units that do the same things. But it also means Fire Emblem games tend to have larger playable casts. Fire Emblem Gaiden has the smallest number of playable characters in the series at 32, and its remake, Echoes: Shadows of Valentia , added two more through normal play and four through DLC, similar to the four characters exclusive to Fire Emblem: Three Houses ’ Cindered Shadows DLC . Sacred Stones features the next fewest playable characters in the Fire Emblem series at 34, although its special Creature Campaign adds 10 m

Fire Emblem titles have dabbled in "branching paths" in the past. In Thracia 776 - a "midquel" to Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War - and Sacred Stones , players can choose between two different "paths," or sets of chapters to complete, which change the maps they visit and characters they can recruit. But in both these games, the deviating paths eventually merge, and the games thus feature a singular ending regardless of which path they chose. Games like Fire Emblem Fates and Three Houses feature drastic story splits, but they’re each treated as their own game - to the point where players must buy the different "routes" of Fates separately - and don’t have major deviations within them or different endings to unl

This political melodrama is all well and good, but if the game played like garbage none of it would matter. Fortunately, Triangle Strategy is a tactical darling. While the camera is a smidge fickle and there aren't nearly enough opportunities for grinding unless you’re willing to replay the same optional missions over and over again, the core tenets of combat are immaculate. I grew up with Final Fantasy Tactics and Advance Wars, so this feels like a robust expansion of what those games accomplished while making the genre more approachable than I’ve ever seen before. It’s still a tough bastard, and making even a single rash move on normal difficulty will see units utterly decimated. But a handful of new ideas mean conclusions like this are much less common if you’re careful about things.

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