Australia and Fire Emblem: Difference between pages

(Difference between pages)
Content deleted Content added
+Largest city
 
 
Line 1:
{{Unreferencedsect|date=February 2007}}
'''Australia''' is both the name of the world's smallest [[continent]], and the short form of the ''Commonwealth of Australia''.
 
[[Image:Fire_emblem_noken.jpg|thumb|250px|Eliwood, Hector and Lyn from ''Fire Emblem (Game Boy Advance)'', the first ''Fire Emblem'' to be released internationally.]]
The '''Commonwealth of Australia''' is the sixth largest country in the world (geographically), the only one to occupy an entire continent, and the largest in [[Australasia]]. [[New Zealand]] is to to the southeast; [[Papua New Guinea]], [[West Irian|West Papua]] and [[East Timor]] to its north, and [[Indonesia]] northwest. The name 'Australia' comes from the [[Latin language|Latin]] phrase ''terra australis incognita'' ("unknown southern land", see [[Terra Australis]]).
 
{{nihongo|'''''Fire Emblem'''''|ファイアーエムブレム|Faiā Emuburemu}} is a popular [[strategy game|strategy]]/[[computer role-playing games|role-playing]] [[video game]] franchise developed by [[Intelligent Systems|Intelligent Systems Co., Ltd.]] (specifically [[Shouzou Kaga]]), the makers of [[Nintendo Wars#Advance Wars|Advance Wars]], and published by [[Nintendo Co., Ltd.]]. The ''Fire Emblem'' games are known to be the first of their genre, the [[strategic role-playing game]], with a very strong emphasis on western forms of medieval folklore.
<table align="right" width="350px"><tr><td>
<table border="1" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<caption><font size="+1">'''Commonwealth of Australia'''</font></caption>
<tr><td style="background:#efefef;" align="center" colspan=2>
<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0">
<tr><td align="center" width="140px">[[Image:Australia_flag_medium.png|Flag of Australia]]</td>
<td align="center" width="140px" rowspan="2" height="110px">[[Image:Australia_coa.png|Australia: coat of arms]]</tr>
<tr><td align="center" width="140px">([[Flag of Australia|In Detail]])</td>
</table></td></tr>
<tr><td align="center" colspan=2 style="border-bottom:3px solid gray;"><font size="-1">''National [[motto]]: None''</font></td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Official language]] </td><td>[[English language|English]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Capital]] </td><td>[[Canberra, Australian Capital Territory]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>Largest City </td><td>[[Sydney, New South Wales]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Monarch|Queen]]</td><td>[[Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom|Elizabeth II]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Governor-General of Australia|Governor-General]]</td><td>[[Michael Jeffery]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Prime Minister of Australia|Prime Minister]]</td><td>[[John Howard]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Area]]<br>&nbsp;- Total <br>&nbsp;- % water</td><td>[[List of countries by area|Ranked 6th]] <br> [[1 E12 m²|7,686,850 km²]] <br> 1%
<tr><td>[[Population]]
<br>&nbsp;- Total ([[2003]])
<br>&nbsp;- [[Density]] </td><td>[[List of countries by population|Ranked 53rd]]
<br> 19,834,248
<br> 3/km2 </td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Independence]]<br> - Date</td><td>From the [[United Kingdom|UK]]<br>[[January 1]], [[1901]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Currency]] </td><td>[[Australian dollar]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Time zone]] </td><td>[[UTC]] +8 to +11</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[National anthem]] </td><td>[[Advance Australia Fair]]</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[Top-level ___domain|Internet TLD]]</td><td>.AU</td></tr>
<tr><td>[[List_of_country_calling_codes|Calling Code]]</td><td>61</td></tr>
</table></td></tr>
 
The series currently spans ten games, and has graced the [[Famicom]], [[Super Famicom]], [[Game Boy Advance]], [[GameCube]] and [[Wii]]. [[Fire Emblem: The Goddess of Dawn|The most recent title in the series]] was first released in Japan on February 22, 2007. A North American release is expected to follow at an undisclosed date in 2007.
<tr><td align="right">[[Image:Austmap.png|Map of Australia with main cities]]<br>&nbsp;</tr>
<tr><td align="right">[[image:AustraliaSatelliteImageSmall.jpg|Satellite image of Australia]]</tr>
<tr><td align="center"><small>Satellite image - [http://www.wikipedia.org/upload/b/bf/AustraliaSatelliteImage.jpg Large version]</small></td></tr>
</td></tr>
</table>
 
==International release==
== History ==
Since its inception in 1990, the ''Fire Emblem'' series was formerly confined to Japan. In 2001, Nintendo released ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'', a fighting game starring characters from games produced throughout the company's history. The Japanese release of the game contained two characters from the ''Fire Emblem'' series; Marth, the original protagonist in the series, starred in ''Fire Emblem: Ankoku no Ryū to Hikari no Tsurugi'', and ''Fire Emblem: Monshō no Nazo'', and Roy starred in the then-unreleased sixth game, ''Fire Emblem: Fūin no Tsurugi''. According to Nintendo's official Japanese website, Marth was put in ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'' upon the request of Japanese gamers. Marth's design and playability earned him extra attention while the game underwent debug testing in North America, and it was by the decision of Nintendo of America that he was included in the North American version. Roy had been included in Japan to promote the upcoming release of ''Fūin no Tsurugi'', and was likewise included in the North American version. It was due in part to Marth and Roy's popularity from their appearance in ''SSBM'' that Nintendo eventually decided to localize and market ''Fire Emblem'' games for North American and European release.
''Main article:'' [[History of Australia]]
 
''[[Fire Emblem: Rekka no Ken]]'', the seventh title in the series, became the first to see an international release in 2003. Released outside of Japan simply as ''Fire Emblem'', the game was designed specifically with newcomers to the series in mind, and the first ten chapters were structured in a manner that eased newcomers into the gameplay. All ''Fire Emblem'' titles produced since have also seen international release.
Australia has been inhabited for at least 50,000 years, since the remote ancestors of the current [[Australian Aborigine]]s arrived from present-day [[Southeast Asia]]. The land was not discovered by [[Europe]]ans until the [[17th century]], when it was sighted and visited by several expeditions. It was claimed for the [[United Kingdom]] in [[1770]], and first colonised in New South Wales in [[1788]] as an English [[penal colony]]. Most of the states that later federalised to form Australia were not [[penal colony|penal colonies]].
 
==Gameplay==
In [[1901]], Australia adopted the Federal system of government and became a [[commonwealth]], or [[dominion]], within the [[British Empire]], thereby becoming independent (though full formal independence took a considerable time after that). Australia is a [[Constitutional monarchy]], with the 'Queen of Australia' reigning as head of state. Under Australian law, the monarch of the [[United Kingdom]] reigns also as Australian monarch. A referendum to [[Australian Constitutional History|introduce a republic]], with a president replacing the queen, in 1999 was defeated.
===Basics===
[[Image:Thracia776Screencap.png|thumb|right|Game-play map screen from ''Fire Emblem: Thracia 776''.]]
''Fire Emblem'' is a series of [[turn-based]] strategy games that involve moving units through a map grid in order to defeat the opposition and eventually complete a mission objective, such as seizing a base, surviving for a number of turns, or defeating a boss. The combat system bases itself on a [[rock-paper-scissors]] method of fighting, as each weapon type has both an advantage and a disadvantage against other types. From ''Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu'' to the most recent game ''[[Fire Emblem: Akatsuki no Megami]]'', the weapon triangle has been [[lance]] beats [[sword]], sword beats [[axe]], and axe beats lance. Bows are unaffected by the triangle and can do higher amounts of damage against flying units, but this is offset by the bow-wielder's inability to counter-attack direct melee strikes.
 
A similar [[Magic in the Fire Emblem series|triangle for magic]], that varies from game to game, has also existed. The basic triangles of magic are light beats dark, dark beats anima, and anima beats light. In other games, fire beats wind, wind beats thunder and thunder beats fire. Magic is also unique in that magical attacks can be used from either a distance or in melee range.
''See also:'' [[Australian Constitutional History]]
 
===Units and relationships===
== Politics ==
Unlike ''Advance Wars'' and other tactical RPGs such as ''[[Final Fantasy Tactics]]'', player-generated units are absent. Instead, ''Fire Emblem'' utilizes a distinct cast of characters, each belonging to one of many [[character classes]]. Unlike most strategy games, each unit has a personality and past of its own. Money is used to buy better weapons and various items, and using units in battle will allow them to gain [[experience points]]; a character's level will increase upon gaining one hundred experience points. Leveling party members up can be a challenge, as many newly recruited units arrive with inferior levels and statistics, but because the amount of experience earned from defeating an enemy is determined by the level discrepancy between the battling units, a characters at lower levels earn more experience than more experienced characters when defeating enemies of comparable level.
''Main article:'' [[Politics of Australia]]
 
Depending on the mechanics of the particular game, characters may change classes upon reaching a certain level, or through the use of a special item that will force a unit's promotion. Characters that change class receive a one-time statistics upgrade that is higher than the average leveling upgrade and additional abilities that are standards of the higher-tier classes. For instance, a cavalier in ''Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'' will change classes automatically after earning enough experience to advance to level 21, becoming a level 1 paladin, will become capable of moving greaters distances in a single turn, and will become able to wield two kinds of weapons.
The ''Commonwealth of Australia'' is a [[constitutional monarchy]]: the Queen of Australia is the official [[head of state]] and is represented by the [[Governor-General_of_Australia|Governor General]]. In practice the role of the Crown (and thus that of the Governor General) is largely ceremonial. The executive power theoretically vested in the Crown is exercised by an elected [[cabinet (government)|cabinet]] headed by a [[Australian Prime Ministers|prime minister]]. The prime minister is almost always the leader of the majority party in the House of Representatives.
 
Typically, the size of the player's character roster is very small at the beginning of each game, but as progress is made, other units may join the player's party through story events or through actions taken. The latter games in the series typically contain playable rosters between thirty and fifty characters deep.
The House of Representatives (150 seats) is one of the two chambers of the federal [[parliament]], the other being the Senate (76 seats). Elections for both chambers are held every three years.
 
[[Romantic love|Romance]] and friendship are prevalent themes throughout the ''Fire Emblem'' series. Starting from the sixth game, ''Fuuin no Tsurugi'', this characteristic has been further emphasized in the gameplay itself through the use of support conversations. In the GBA ''Fire Emblem'' titles, these conversations could be triggered by having specific pairs of characters end their turns standing next to each other. After a specific number of turns have accumulated, the player is given the option to view a support conversation between the two characters. ''Path of Radiance'' simplified the approach by requiring characters to be in a certain number of battles together and not necessarily adjacent to one another. Each time a pair of characters engage in a support conversation, their affinity towards each other will increase, giving them statistical bonuses that activate any time the characters are next to each other on the battlefield. If two characters with a mutual romantic attraction, strong friendship, or other form of mutual connection engage in three Supports throughout the game, the result will often affect the game's ending. Depending on the characters involved, such results could include marriage, a deepening of friendship, or a continued pursuit of their continuing relationship.
''See also:'' [[Republic Advisory Committee]]
 
===Death===
== States and Territories==
''Fire Emblem'' characters that run out of hit points and die cannot be brought back to life in game. This also affects recruitable NPC and enemy units. If a player wishes to continue using a character or recruit a unit that has been killed, then the chapter must be restarted from the beginning. In addition, a "Game Over" occurs whenever one of the main characters (Lords) falls, or in other situations depending on a mission's requirements. Only under special circumstances, such as being significantly related to the story, will characters who have fallen in battle not actually die. In extremely rare situations, such as in ''Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu'', ''Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones'', and ''Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'', characters that fall in battle can become playable at a later point in the game. Exceptions aside, there is normally no method for restoring a fallen character's life, such as a particular spell or scroll. When there is one, it rarely occurs and breaks with only one use.
''Main article:'' [[Australian States and Territories]]
 
{{Fire Emblem characters}}
Australia is divided into six states and several territories. The states are [[Western Australia]], [[Queensland]], [[South Australia]], [[New South Wales]], [[Victoria (Australia)|Victoria]] and [[Tasmania]]: the territories, the [[Australian Capital Territory]] and the [[Northern Territory]].
 
==Naming of the series==
Australia also has an additional minor internal territory, [[Jervis Bay Territory]] (a naval base in New South Wales), several inhabitated external territories ([[Norfolk Island]], [[Christmas Island]], [[Cocos Islands|Cocos (Keeling) Islands]] and several largely uninhabited external territories: [[Coral Sea Islands Territory]], [[Heard Island and McDonald Islands]] and the [[Australian Antarctic Territory]].
The "Fire Emblem" to which the games' title refers is a plot device or item that has taken multiple forms throughout the series, changing with the setting. The original Fire Emblem was a [[shield]] which allowed the wielder, [[Marth (Fire Emblem)|Marth]], to use the [[Falchion]] sword. In the remake of the original game in ''Monshō no Nazo'', the Fire Emblem can be used by Marth to open chests and can be upgraded with five orbs to turn it into the [[Shield of Seals]] in Book two. In ''Rekka no Ken'' and ''Fūin no Tsurugi'', the Fire Emblem is a gemstone required for a ceremony to recognize the heir to the throne of Bern. It is also used to unlock the Sword of Seals. In ''The Sacred Stones'', the Fire Emblem is the Sacred Stone of Grado, which holds the Demon King's spirit, but it is split in two (the other half forms the Dark Stone), and the Fire Emblem is crushed. In ''Path of Radiance'', it was another name for Lehran's Medallion, an artifact containing the imprisoned spirit of an evil god. In ''Seisen no Keifu'', it does not appear, but it is mentioned as the family crest of the Velthomer house by the person succeeding it. But, it was also hinted to be one of the twelve holy weapons in the game.
 
==Games==
The [[Australian Capital Territory]] was created at the chosen site of the capital city [[Canberra]]. Canberra was founded as a compromise between the two largest cities, [[Melbourne]] and [[Sydney]].
 
The following is a list of games released in the series.
== Geography ==
''Main article:'' [[Geography of Australia]]
 
:''Games predating ''Rekka no Ken'' were released only in Japan. Due to this, there are no official English language titles for these games. An official English language title may be given if Nintendo of America elects to localize any of these games to North America.''
By far the largest part of Australia is [[desert]] or [[semi-desert]]&#8212;40% of the landmass is covered by [[sand dune]]s&#8212. Only the south-east and south-west corners have a temperate climate and moderately fertile soil. The northern part of the country has a tropical climate: part is tropical [[rainforest]]s, part grasslands, and part desert. The [[Great Barrier Reef]], by far the world's largest [[coral]] [[reef]], lies a short distance off the north-east coast.
 
{| width="100%" class="wikitable"
''See also:'' [[Protected areas of Australia]]
|-
!Cover !! Official Western title !! Japanese title !! Japanese Title Translation !!Platform !! Year !!Notes
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fe1box.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム 暗黒竜と光の剣 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem: Ankoku Ryū to Hikari no Tsurugi]]'')
|''The Dark Dragon and Sword of Light''
|[[Famicom]]
|[[1990]]
|The first ''Fire Emblem'' title.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fe2box.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム外伝 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem Gaiden]]'')
|''Sidestory''
|[[Famicom]]
|[[1991]]
|Side story of the first title.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fe3box.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム 紋章の謎 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem: Monshō no Nazo]]'')
|''Mystery of the Emblem''
|[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|Super Famicom]]
|[[1993]]
|Enhanced remake of the ''Dark Dragon and Sword of Light'' along with sequel. It was adapted into a 2-part [[OVA]] series. In the English translated credits it says the show was based on "Fire Emblem: Secret of Crest" instead of "Mystery of the Emblem".
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Seisen no Keifu.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム 聖戦の系譜 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu]]'')
|''Genealogy of <br />the Holy War''
|[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|Super Famicom]]
|[[1996]]
|The first ''Fire Emblem'' title set in a separate universe. Deviates from standard ''Fire Emblem'' gameplay mechanisms.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fe5box.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム トラキア776 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem: Thracia 776]]'')
|''Fire Emblem: Thracia 776''
|[[Super Nintendo Entertainment System|Super Famicom]]
|[[Nintendo Power (cartridge)|Nintendo Power]]: [[1999]] <p> Commercial release: [[2000]]
|A sidestory of ''Seisen no Keifu''. The last commercial release of the Super Famicom.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fuuin no Tsurugi.jpg|100px]]
|
|ファイアーエムブレム 封印の剣 <p>(''[[Fire Emblem: Fūin no Tsurugi]]'')
|''Sword of Seals''
|[[Game Boy Advance]]
|[[2002]]
|The first ''Fire Emblem'' title to appear on a Nintendo [[handheld]].
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:GBA Fire Emblem Box.jpg|100px]]
|''[[Fire Emblem (Game Boy Advance)|Fire Emblem]]''
|ファイアーエムブレム 烈火の剣 <p>(''Fire Emblem: Rekka no Ken'')
|''Sword of Fire''
|[[Game Boy Advance]]
|[[2003]]
|The first ''Fire Emblem'' title to be released in the West and the prequel to ''Sword of Seals''.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fire Emblem The Sacred Stones.JPG|100px]]
|''[[Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones]]''
|ファイアーエムブレム 聖魔の光石 <p>(''Fire Emblem: Seima no Kōseki'')
|''The Stones of Saintly and Demonic Light''
|[[Game Boy Advance]]
|Japan: [[2004]] US: [[2005]]
|First title to incorporate several play mechanics not seen since ''Fire Emblem Gaiden''.
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fire Emblem PoR Boxart.JPG|100px]]
|''[[Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance]]''
|ファイアーエムブレム 蒼炎の軌跡<p> (''Fire Emblem: Sōen no Kiseki'')
|''Trail of the Blue Flame''
|[[Nintendo Gamecube]]
|[[2005]]
|The first title in the series to be rendered in [[3D computer graphics|three-dimensions]] and to incorporate [[full motion video]].
|-
|style="align:center"|[[Image:Fire Emblem Goddess of the Dawn Japanese Boxart.jpg|100px]]
|''(Has yet to be officially titled worldwide)
|ファイアーエムブレム 暁の女神 <p> (''Fire Emblem: Akatsuki no Megami'')
|''[[Fire Emblem: The Goddess of Dawn|Goddess of Dawn]]'' <ref>{{cite web|title=Fire Emblem: The Goddess of Dawn (Wii)|url=http://www.1up.com/do/previewPage?cId=3153633|accessdate=2007-02-26|last=Kennedy|first=Sam|date=[[2006-09-14]]|publisher=[[1UP.com]]}}</ref>
|[[Wii]]
|[[2007]]
|The sequel to ''Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance''.
|}
 
==Music==
== Flora and Fauna ==
The musical scores for ''Fire Emblem'' have been composed by [[Yuka Tsujiyoko]] for most of the series' history. ''Fire Emblem: The Sacred Stones'' was scored by Saki Haruyama, Yoshihiko Kitamura, and Yoshito Hirano, under Tsujiyoko's supervision. The first eight games in the series all featured soundtracks composed entirely of instrumental music. However, ''[[Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance]]'' broke from this trend with the end credit theme "Life Returns", a lyrical piece sung in the language of the fictional heron laguz tribe.
''Main articles:'' [[Australian fauna]], [[Australian flora]]
 
There are also recurring tracks in the Fire Emblem series. The most frequently used is the "Fire Emblem Main Theme" which is played at some point during each game. Its use is particularly varied, as it is sometimes used as the title screen theme, while in ''Path of Radiance'', the song isn't heard until the very end of the game, when each character's performance is ranked. Another track that is frequently remixed is a character recruitment theme entitled "Together We Ride," although it is not used in every game. Since ''[[Fire Emblem: Seisen no Keifu]]'', battle themes of previous Fire Emblem games have been remixed as arena battle themes. Similar rearranging appears in other circumstances, as well; for example, the musical score for the trial maps in ''Path of Radiance'' was originally the music score for Chapter 10 of ''Seisen no Keifu''.
Although most of the continent is [[desert]] or [[semi-desert]], Australia nevertheless includes a diverse range of habitats, from alpine heaths to tropical rainforests. Because of the great age of the continent, its very variable weather patterns, and its long-term geographic isolation, much of Australia's biota is unique.
 
==Other media==
''See also:'' [[Australian birds]]
 
*In [[1995]], an [[anime]] [[OVA]] (co-produced with [[KSS (company)|KSS]]) was produced and released; it was closely based on the first three acts of the very first game in the series or more specifically, the remake contained in ''Monshō no Nazo''. See also ''[[Fire Emblem (anime)]]''.
== Economy ==
''Main article:'' [[Economy of Australia]]
 
*Fire Emblem The Best Volume One was a video game music sound-track released on April 25, 1997 by Nintendo corporation (serial# PSCN-5058~9).
Australia has a prosperous Western-style mixed economy, with a per capita [[GDP]] on par with the four dominant Western European economies. In recent years, the Australian economy has been resilient in the face of global economic downturn, with steady growth.
 
==Trivia==
''See also:'' [[Australian dollar]]
*A title listed as "AKANEIA" in the debug mode of ''Super Smash Bros. Melee'' suggests that an arena based upon ''Fire Emblem'' was under development, but no real map data exists and players often end up fighting against Marth and Roy in Hyrule Temple. If Marth is unlocked and all human players hold either L or R while selecting Hyrule Temple, a remixed version of Fire Emblem's main theme and the recruiting theme will play instead of its original music. The song may also play randomly if Marth is unlocked.
 
*In another Intelligent Systems game, ''[[Paper Mario: The Thousand-Year Door]]'', there is a minor character in Petalburg that raves about his favorite video games when spoken to. The first game he talks about is ''[[Fire Emblem: Rekka no Ken|Fire Emblem]]''.
== Demographics ==
''Main article:'' [[Demographics of Australia]]
 
*''[[Fire Emblem: Monshou no Nazo]]'' is the only Fire Emblem game to appear in [[Famitsu]]'s 2006 Top one hundred games list. Famitsu readers voted it the number sixty-eighth game of all time. It was also among the first titles released as a Virtual Console title at the launch of the Japanese region Wii Shop Channel.
 
*The Nintendo DS game ''[[Daigasso! Band-Brothers]]'' features the Fire Emblem theme as a song.
Most of the Australian population descends from 19th and 20th century immigrants, most from the [[United Kingdom]] to begin with, but from other sources in later years. Many inhabitants are of [[Greece|Greek]], [[Italy|Italian]] or [[Asia]]n descent. Descendants of the original population, the [[Australian Aborigine]]s, make up less than 1% of the population. In common with many other developed countries, Australia is currently experiencing a demographic shift towards an older population, with more retired people and fewer of working age.
 
*Fire Emblem characters are usually [[right-handed]]. One exception is that Sothe from ''Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance'' and ''Fire Emblem: The Goddess of Dawn'' is [[left-handed]], according to the official artwork.{{Fact|date=February 2007}}
[[English language|English]] is the spoken language in Australia, although some of the surviving Aboriginal communities maintain their native languages, and a considerable number of first and sometimes second-generation migrants are bi-lingual. Although the nation is broadly secular and few are church-goers, three-quarters of Australians are nominally Christian, mostly [[Catholic Church|Catholic]] or [[Anglican Church|Anglican]]. A diverse range of other religions is practised.
 
*A red-headed girl named Anna makes appearances in numerous games in the series. Although she isn't an actual member of any ''Fire Emblem'' cast, she generally appears in games when the player is about to suspend game data or serves as the tutorial narratress.
''See also:'' [[List of cities in Australia]]
 
==See Culture also==
''Main article:'' [[Culture of Australia]]
 
*[[List of character classes#Fire Emblem|List of character classes]]
''Related topics:''
*[[CinemaTable of AustraliaFire Emblem characters]]
*[[MusicFan of Australiatranslation]]
*[[Nintendo Wars]]
*[[Tear Ring Saga]]
 
==References==
See also: [[Australian public holidays]]
{{Reflist}}
 
==MiscellaneousExternal topicslinks==
<!---Please don't add your own links without first discussion it on the talk page. Thanks.--->
*[[List of Australians]]
{{portal|Nintendo|Wikitendo2.svg}}
*[[Communications in Australia]]
{{wikiquote}}
*[[Transportation in Australia]]
*[http://www.fire-emblem.com Official US ''Fire Emblem'' website]
*[[Foreign relations of Australia]]
*[http://www.intsys.co.jp/game/fe/index.html Intelligent Systems' official ''Fire Emblem'' website (Japanese)]
*[[Military of Australia]]
*[http://www.nintendo.co.jp/fe/index.html Nintendo of Japan's official ''Fire Emblem'' website (Japanese)]
*[http://eg.nttpub.co.jp/fe/ Official Trading Card Game website (Japanese)]
*{{moby game|id=-group/fire-emblem-series|name=The ''Fire Emblem'' series}}
*[http://eaichu250.superbusnet.com/ English Fire Emblem Documentary]
 
{{Fire Emblem}}
== External links ==
* [http://www.australia.com Australian Tourist Commission]
* [http://www.austemb.org/history.htm Australian History] -- from the Washington Embassy
* [http://www.countryofaustralia.info Country of Australia] -- [[Sunnybank, Queensland|Sunnybank]] web directory
* [http://www.rsf.fr/article.php3?id_article=4116 Worldwide press freedom index] - Ranked 12 out of 139 countries (2 way tie)
* [http://www.synaptic.bc.ca/gallery/lcatntoc.htm#Australi Gallery of Australia Photographs] Attractions primarily in [[Queensland]] and the [[Northern Territory]]
* [http://www.csu.edu.au/australia Guide to Australia] Provides essential information about Australia
 
[[Category:Fire Emblem|*]]
<hr align="center" noshade size="4" width="100%">
[[Category:Video game franchises]]
 
[[de:Fire Emblem]]
<center>[[Countries of the world]] &nbsp;|&nbsp; [[Oceania]]</center>
[[es:Fire Emblem]]
 
[[defr:AustralienFire Emblem]]
[[eoit:AuxstralioFire Emblem]]
[[frnl:AustralieFire Emblem]]
[[ja:ファイアーエムブレム]]
[[ja:&#12458;&#12540;&#12473;&#12488;&#12521;&#12522;&#12450;]]
[[nlpt:AustraliëFire Emblem]]
[[plro:AustraliaFire Emblem]]
[[svfi:AustralienFire Emblem]]
[[zh:火焰之纹章]]
[[zh:&#28595;&#22823;&#21033;&#20122;]]