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A pointy hat made of felt. Its rabbit fur trim provides warmth, but its brimless design leaves something to be desired on rainy days.
Bravely Default description
Pointy Hat (とんがり帽子, Tongari Bōshi?), also known as Pointed Hat or Steepled Hat, is a recurring hat in the series.
Appearances
Final Fantasy IX
Hats worn by mages.
Description
Steepled Hat is a low-ranked hat that provides 9 Magic Defense, +1 Strength, and teaches the ability Protect. It can be bought for 260 gil at Lindblum (before going to Cleyra), Burmecia, Summit Station, and Black Mage Village (before entering Shimmering Island), or stolen from Black Waltz 2 and Black Waltz 3. It can be equipped by everyone except Steiner and Freya.
Final Fantasy XII
Pointy Hat is a low-ranked mystic armor helmet that requires the Mystic Armor 2 license to equip, and provides 6 Magick Resist, and +2 Magick Power. It can be bought for 300 gil at Rabanastre, Dalmasca Westersand, Barheim Passage, Nalbina Fortress, Bhujerba, and Dreadnought Leviathan, or stolen from Wolf (3% chance) or Alpha Wolf at Dalmasca Estersand (3% chance).
In the Zodiac versions, it now provides 6 Magick Resist, +16 MP, +2 Magick Power, and requires the Mystic Armor 2 license for 15 LP. It can be bought for 300 gil at Rabanastre, Nalbina Fortress, and Barheim Passage, stolen from Wolf (3% chance) and Alpha Wolf (Dalmasca Estersand - 3% chance), or found at Barheim Passage (Op Sector 29 and Op Sector 37) and Phon Coast (The Vaddu Strand). It is also a Diamond Armlet treasure in Trial Mode Stage 4. It can be equipped by the White Mage, Red Battlemage, Black Mage, and Bushi.
Bravely Default
Pointy Hat is a hat that provides 1 M.DEF, 1 M.DEF, and +1 M.ATK. It can be bought for 20 pg at Ancheim.
Final Fantasy Dimensions
Pointy Hat is a low-ranked hat that provides 2 Defense, 3 Magic Defense, 1 Magic Evade, +1 Intelligence, and +1 Mind.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia
Etymology
Pointed hats have been a distinctive item of headgear of a wide range of cultures throughout history. Though often suggesting an ancient Indo-European tradition, they were also traditionally worn by women of Lapland, the Japanese, the Mi'kmaq people of Atlantic Canada, and the Huastecs of Veracruz and Aztec (illustrated e.g. in Codex Mendoza).