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Battle results ffix

Final Fantasy IX battle results.

Battle Results is the set of screens that appears after the battle event, which displays the gained Experience Points, Ability Points, gil and Item drops. In the early games in the series there was no separate screen, but the gained EXP and other bonuses were displayed in the same screen as where the battle took place, while the characters are doing their victory pose.

Appearances

Final Fantasy II

While increases to gil, stats, and skills are shown on the battle screen after the party has done their victory poses and have started walking away, if any items were dropped by enemies, a separate screen will open showing all of the items dropped and the player's inventory. The player is given the option to take as many of the items dropped as they wish, as well as leave behind any items if their inventory is full. The later remakes do not have an inventory limit.

Final Fantasy IV

In the 3D remake, a battle results screen is present for the very first time for this game. This page shows the player the progress bar for the experience of each party members available, gil found, and their new total of gil along with if they have acquired item(s).

Final Fantasy IV: The After Years

The battle results screen appears in the smartphone remake, done in similar style as the 3D remake of Final Fantasy IV. It shows the battle party's victory poses along with the obtained spoils.

Final Fantasy V

In the smartphone remake, the battle results screen appears that uses the same layout from Final Fantasy Dimensions. It consists how much gil, experience and ABP received, as well with experience points and ABP remaining for the party members' next level and job level respectively.

Final Fantasy VII

After the battle's end, a screen comes up that displays the gained EXP which fills up a gauge with the character's menu portrait next to it. When full, the character levels up. Gained Limit Breaks are also displayed on the screen. The Materia gain AP, and if a Materia gains a new ability or masters and a new Materia is born, it is displayed. The player also receives gil from battles.

This is the only game in the series where the player can reject item drops even when their inventory is not full; all the items the opponents have dropped appear in a list, and the player can choose which ones to take, or take all of them. In Final Fantasy VII reserve party members also receive EXP, but only the active party's EXP gain is displayed. The battle results screen is not displayed when fighting battles at the Battle Square, or after the final battle.

If the player defeats Emerald Weapon when there are eight seconds left on the timer, the Battle Results screen will overlap with the Game Over screen, resulting in the Emerald Weapon countdown glitch.

In an early build for Final Fantasy VII the battle results screen was different as instead of character portraits the characters were represented by miniature versions of themselves resembling sprite models used for 2D games.

Final Fantasy VIII

Gained AP and EXP is shown after battle, as well as whether any party members or Guardian Forces level up or learn a new ability. The player can receive items and cards from enemies. The character's name is grayed out in the battle results screen if they are afflicted with a status effect that doesn't expire after battle.

The player was originally intended to get 40 AP for defeating Adel. However, since there is no battle results screen after the battle, the player never receives it. Samantha Soul would have also been dropped, but instead it can only be mugged from the battle.

Final Fantasy IX

The battle results screens display gained EXP and AP, and whether any of the party members levels up or learns a new ability. The player can receive items, cards and gil from opponents. If a party member is afflicted with a status effect that doesn't expire after battle, its icon is shown in the menu.

Final Fantasy X

Gained AP is displayed after battle, as well as how many sphere levels each character already has and how many they gain after battle, if any. The player can receive items, weapons, armor and gil after battle.

Final Fantasy X-2

The gained EXP, gil and items are displayed after battle, as well if anyone levels up. Unlike in the other games in the series, gained items and received EXP is displayed on the same screen. However, due to some storyline and side-storyline events a second screen can additionally pop-up showing acquisition of a new Garment Grid and/or dressphere.

Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings

The gained EXP, gil and items are displayed after battle, as well as if anyone levels up. Even characters that were KO'd during the battle come back in full health and gain EXP.

Final Fantasy XIII

The battle results screen displays target time, elapsed time, the star rating, gained CP and spoils.

The player gets a star rating after every battle, which is displayed in the Battle Results screen. The rating is between 0 and 5 stars and is based on the score the player receives at the end of battle. The star rating determines the player's TP recovery and item drop chances.

The score is calculated as:

[1]
Rank Score TP Recovery Rate Rare Drop Rate Shroud Drop Rate
5 Stars 13,000+ 8x 5x Normal
4 Stars 12,000 - 12,999 3x 3x Normal
3 Stars 9,000 - 11,999 Normal Normal Normal
2 Stars 8,000 - 8,999 1/2x None 2x
1 Star 7,000 - 7,999 1/4x None 4x
0 Stars 0 - 6,999 1/8x None 8x

[1]

Hitting the Target Time achieves a score of 10,000. Defeating the enemy either faster or slower than the Target Time yields a higher or lower score.

[1]

Target Time has a max limit of 10 hours. The Gold Watch accessory equipped on a character who did not die in battle multiplies the Target Time by 1.1.

Enemy Strength is calculated using:

[1]
  • Note: if the enemy's level is greater than 50, it is treated as being 50 lower for this formula. Example: a level 82 enemy would use 32 in this formula.

Enemy Strength is calculated separately for each enemy.

Party Member Strength is calculated as the following:

[1]

Attack Power is the higher of the character's Strength or Magic stat. Party Member strength is calculated for each party member separately.

Battle duration is simply the time spent in battle. Time spent during a preemptive strike animation or a summon animation is excluded.

Points per second is calculated as the following:

[1]

In the case of a preemptive strike, the final score will be multiplied by 1.2.

The battle time is calculated in seconds and always rounded down.

In order to gain a higher battle rating, the player can equip the Gold Watch accessory to increase the Target Time. Sometimes it works better not to equip the ultimate weapons, because lower attack power gives more time, and the party has less ATB gauge to gain even more allotted time. Any support characters don't necessarily need high attack power; anyone who does not mainly attack the opponents can be equipped with low attack power to get more allotted time. Accessories/Shrouds that cast Bravery, Faith or Haste in the beginning of battle don't decrease target time.

The demo had a different Battle Results screen, which also displayed the highest accumulated chain. As a curiosity, an 3E Preview Disc for the game includes an earlier version of the music that plays during the battle results screen as dummied content.

The music that plays on the results screen is called "Battle Results".

Final Fantasy XIII-2

The battle results screen differs from the one seen in the first installment. It now additionally shows the amount of gil won after a battle, the difficulty mode, the sum of score points from the last twenty battles, enemy points, preemptive bonus, and percentage raise in drops for gil and rare items.

As opposed to Final Fantasy XIII, the target time for each enemy group isn't recalculated with each battle, but predefined.

Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII

Depending on the faced enemy two different Battle Results windows will pop up.

When fighting a non-boss enemy, a single-screen Battle Results window mentions the currently set difficulty mode, Energy Points, gil, and drops, and similarly to Final Fantasy XIII and Final Fantasy XIII-2, the battle HUD at the bottom of the screen. Only boss battles give a star rating and points. The high scores are restored on a console in the Ark where the player can re-take the battles to try and earn a higher score. Scores could be posted to social networking services via the Outerworld Services unless the Limit Break option was enabled.

The battle score for boss battles is calculated thusly:

where:

  • – Percentage of remaining HP.
  • – Used EP.
  • – Used items.
  • – Difficulty Mode value:
    • 1 for Easy and Normal Modes.
    • 3 for Hard Mode.
  • – Enemy Rank; a hidden value from 1 to 43 depending on the faced enemy.

Battle Score is then calculated:

where:

  • – Basic Score.
  • – Battle Time (in seconds).
  • – Enemy Rank; a hidden value from 1 to 43 depending on the faced enemy.

Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift

The battle results screen shows the amount of EXP earned by each character, as well their current level.

Vagrant Story

Impresario-ffvi-iosThis section in Vagrant Story is empty or needs to be expanded. You can help the Final Fantasy Wiki by expanding it.

Final Fantasy Type-0

After a mission the player gets a report card that grades the mission playthrough time, harvested phantoma, casualties, number of completed special orders and earned special bounties. Time elapsed, harvested phantoma and casualties determine the overall grade for the mission, which in turn determines the mission bounty (gil).

Theatrhythm Final Fantasy

At the battle results screen the game displays the player's achieved score, highest accumulated chain, the number of Critical Hits, number of "great" hits, number of "good" hits, the number of "bad" hits and the misses. Based on these data the game gives player a rank.

Bravely Default

The Battle Results screen appears upon winning battles. It shows the amount of money (pg) earned, as well as the total obtained EXP and Job Points, and the EXP/JP progress for each character. It also shows the achieved Combat Bonuses.

Combat Bonus Condition Bonus
1-turn Victor Defeat all enemies on the first turn. Earn a little more experience.
1-turn Ace Earn the 1-turn Victor combat bonus at least 5 times in a row. Earn more experience.
1-turn Hero Earn the 1-turn Victor combat bonus at least 10 times in a row. Earn a lot more experience.
Unscathed Win a battle without taking any damage. Earn a few more job points.
Unscathed Ace Earn the Unscathed combat bonus at least 5 times in a row. Earn more job points.
Unscathed Hero Earn the Unscathed combat bonus at least 10 times in a row. Earn many more job points.
Sweeper Defeat an enemy party of two or more with one attack. Earn a little more money.
Sweeper Ace Earn the Sweeper combat bonus at least 5 times in a row. Earn more money.
Sweeper Hero Earn the Sweeper combat bonus at least 10 times in a row. Earn a lot more money.

Gallery

Relm-ffvi-snes-battleThis gallery is incomplete and requires Final Fantasy X HD Remaster (PSV), Final Fantasy X-2 HD Remaster (PSV), Theatrhythm Final Fantasy and Bravely Default added. You can help the Final Fantasy Wiki by uploading images.

References

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