Reviews from

in the past


The roster isn't that great, but honestly it took everything I loved about Hyrule Warriors and improved upon it.

Incredibly braindead but I get to see my favorite characters do flashy thing so... eh?

this game was released during that weird era before three houses where intelligent systems seemingly had zero confidence in anything fire emblem-related selling if it didn't involve their two golden geese on the 3ds + marth who gets a legacy pass in (which, given the state the series was in leading up to awakening, it's understandable, but still strange to look back in hindsight). as a result we're left with a rather bland playable roster that only covers 3 different games. two other characters can be unlocked outside of the story that represent two different games but it feels too little too late (also, i have heard that celica plays exactly like marth, which made me not want to bother unlocking her). more characters with different playstyles are available as dlc, which is also massively disappointing tbh
the gameplay is warriors-type gameplay with fire emblem elements, and it's perfectly alright in that front, complete with the repetition that comes with the genre
the story... well at the end of the day it's meant to just be a cute crossover, but there are some parts of the story that just recreate moments from the other games (like, there's a part where rowan falls off a very shallow cliff and the opening cutscene of awakening is recreated when chrom and lissa find him) and it's just..... so awkward, and dare i say it's a bit cringe. maybe some will get a kick out of that type of fanservice, but it was not doing it for me. would not recommend playing for the story lol
if you like warriors games and the cast of 3ds fire emblem you might get something out of this.

Its a Fire Emblem Musou game, what did yall expect. I'm just here for the fan service, also more Tharja.


Definetily inferior compared to Hyrule Warriors but i didn't mind, the gameplay can be and is a bit repetitive but it's a fun game to play the pass the time, not ground breaking and the story is pretty childish and forgettable

As someone who has dabbled in Fire Emblem since the GameCube games I really enjoyed this game for what it was, now obviously this is a Musō or Warriors game, so it's not a Tactical Turn Based JRPG like most the FE franchise.
I found it's length able to keep the gameplay from getting stale by the end, the story was all over the place but the generic theme of friendship prevails over all was good enough that I didn't mind, as someone who played a handful of FE games I didn't know most of the Fates characters but everyone was still fun to play, and the music was good enough.
Overall it's just alright, the problem with it all comes from the repetitive environments, almost useless weapon system, and very poor performance when a character uses a special.
If you are into FE pick this game up on sale or borrow it from someone, otherwise probably don't bother.

This game was my introduction to Fire Emblem in general and honestly had a blast with it during my vacation when i got the game for the first time a couple of years ago

As an introductory game to the Fire Emblem franchise, I was left underwhelmed but for a Musou game, this was one of the most polished experiences I've had for this genre of video games.

After my brother and I LOVED playing through Hyrule Warriors co-op so much, I of course was super psyched when Nintendo announced another Omega Force Musou game. I'm not the biggest Fire Emblem fan in the world, but two of the three games represented in this game are ones I've played through, so I thought why not give it a go. The end result of what I got isn't so much a bad game as a disappointing game. FE Warriors is a neat spin on the FE formula into a Musou game, but has far more of the lazier trappings of Omega Force's other Musou games, spin-off or otherwise, and it ends up feeling like an overall downgrade of the fantastic Hyrule Warriors from years prior. The game took me about 15 hours playing through on hard mode and doing about a dozen challenge missions.

The Good:
We'll start with the good things, and they mostly fall under presentation. The visuals look very pretty, which each of the 18 characters in the main game looking very faithful to their art style present in the most recent rendition of their games. The finishing moves all look very flashy and nice as well, and even though the framerate drags a little in co-op, the performance is never to the point where it impacts gameplay. The music is also very good, with this probably being one of my favorite renditions of the Fire Emblem main theme ever done.

The overall gameplay is very much the kind of flair Musou games have had for a long time. Fairly linear maps choke-pointed with bases that you need to capture, and objectives for missions usually revolving around defeating certain bad guys and/or capturing certain bases. You've got weapons and materials you find in each battle, and weapons have different passives and slots for passives and star-rankings that you can fuse weapons together just like in other Musou games. Very familiar to Hyrule Warriors, materials can also be used to perform passive upgrades on each character as well as give them more combos to use.

The Fire Emblem spin on things is how the weapon triangle is used. Just like in FE, there is a weapon triangle where axes beat spears, spears beat swords, and swords beat axes. The three other weapon types present in the game are bows, manatekes, and magic, but they don't really have any particular rock-paper-scissors elements to their uses as magic's weapon triangle is not used in this game, so they act more like an "other" that isn't really good or better (other than magic being bad against pegasus knights and bows like 2-shotting them). Using a superior weapon means you can do a LOT more damage as well as you enemy being unable to block, so it's worth keeping track of.

You also have the ability to pick 4 (of a possible 8 friendly) units per battle that you can use the D-pad to switch between on the fly using the D-pad. You can also pair up units as supports of one another just like in Awakening or Fates for a stat boost as well as being able to toggle between your partner unit if they're one of the playable 4. You can also bring up a big map of the battle field and order units around to do specific tasks like healing a friendly unit, attacking an enemy unit, or guarding a location. This means you can strategically put your 4 playable characters around the map in a way that makes best sense for the strategy you're using to approach that level. That character changing mechanic is probably the best and most significant innovation that this Musou game brings to the table.

The mission design is a mixed bag with a few quite cool and unique missions but a lot of really standard ones. The one that sticks out for me is when you have to keep Xandar and Ryoma from killing one another by taking a fort from each of their teams in quick succession. Past that, there really aren't many missions that make the character-swapping mechanic anything more than a neat convenience or gimmick. No outright bad missions or annoying platforming sections in them like in Dragon Quest Musou, but really nothing to write home about.


The Bad:
This brings us on to what I really didn't like about this game, and that's a fair bit. We'll start with the characters. Despite the large roster of 18 (+3 unlockable through challenge mode) compared to Hyrule Warriors' 9 (+4 through the challenge mode), the weapon triangle seems to have brought with it a real stagnation in character design. Characters like the twin characters that are part of the story of this game are more or less direct clones of one another, along with Chrom and Lucina obviously being near clones of one another. But beyond that, every character's combo list looks nearly identical. While Hyrule Warriors didn't exactly have the most diverse combo system in the world, most characters/weapons felt and played very differently from one another and even often had different dodge timings. Characters of the same class (i.e. weapon and mounted/unmounted) play very very similarly, and that really makes the large roster feel a lot less meaningful.

Without spending AGES In history mode (tons of super repetitive challenge missions that take ages) to unlock a couple more characters, you have 8 sword users (one mounted), 3 axe users (One wyvern mounted, one horse mounted), 3 spear users (all pegasus knights), 3 magic users (one mounted), 2 archers, and one Manakete. This makes it feel more like there are 10 or 11 characters rather than 18 just because so many play so similarly to one another (the pegasus knights are SUPER similar to one another). There are very few direct clones, but if you don't like the weird floaty way the pegasus knights handle, for example, then you're SOL, because there are no other spear users in this game. While the combat is very satisfyingly flashy, this reduction in the variety is a textbook Omega Force tactic to give the impression of more content without actually providing it in a meaningful sense.

The same goes for the way this game's story missions handle its maps. There are 20 missions in the main story, but just about all of them use the Omega Force tactic of using each map twice, but your starting point is different or you can only access half of the map this time. The maps are similar enough in design just by gameplay necessity (compared to say, Dynasty Warriors 3 where each map was so open and non-linear that they felt VERY different) that the small variety isn't a huge problem, but it's something worth mentioning either way.

Next up on the Omega Force nonsense list is "NPC" characters. There are 4 friendly NPC characters (Navarre from OG FE, Owain from Awakening, and Niles and Oboro from Fates) who are completely finished and in the game but arbitrarily not playable at all. Where Hyrule Warriors put characters like this behind its adventure mode to unlock, FE Warriors decides to sell you these characters in its DLC packs. Not a huge problem, but something pretty cynical and shitty on the part of Omega Force to dangle characters you can't have in front of you just to demand more cash if you want to play them.

There are then 4 boss characters that are totally unplayable by any means (3 mages and a sword user). That's not to say that there won't be a patch like Hyrule Warriors got to just make the boss characters playable for free, but it's really weird that something like that STILL hasn't happened where it was one of the first big patches that HW got, while we still haven't seen anything like that for FEW that has released the last of its DLC packs a good few months ago.

The story is pretty standard fare for a Musou crossover game, but at the same time pretty bad for a Fire Emblem game. It's really dull and I almost always wanted to skip it, although I never did. SO much dialogue realestate is spent just repeating the same stuff you already know or reaffirming the same things. The "plot twist" was one I saw coming immediately, but one they never actually quite explain how it happened, in retrospect. Again, the story isn't very interesting, so I didn't really care too much. The English voice acting is absolutely dire (and not 90's fun dire, just modern really bland and boring dire), but the Japanese voice acting is a free download on the eShop and is far, far better.

The last thing I'll mention is the pretty rough difficulty curve. It is one of the smoother ones than other Musou games I've played (it's nowhere near as all over the place as Dragon Quest Musou, for example), but it does have a few missions that really stand out as being far harder than others. The game still has a problem of being a bit too easy overall with most "harder" sections mostly being down to the enemies you need to kill using a weapon you can't get leverage over and/or being insanely fat and taking ages to kill.


Verdict: Not Recommended. Omega Force and Nintendo really dropped the ball on this one. Honestly, given that it has co-op, it isn't quite as hard to recommend as Dragon Quest Musou, but nonetheless I still have a very hard time recommending this when there are so many better Musou games out there, especially Hyrule Warriors that now has a port on both systems this game is available on for about the same price. It isn't a bad game by any means, but it is such a mediocre Musou game that I really can't recommend it to anyone but the staunchest fans of the genre and Fire Emblem or for someone who is just manically hungry for more Musou on their Switch or 3DS after playing Hyrule Warriors to absolute completion.

This review contains spoilers

It's extremely goofy. The gameplay's simple and fun and the music's nice, but you absolutely have to unplug your brain playing this. The two main characters kill thousands of enemies without a sweat but absolutely refuse harming the main villain-- even after he kills his own father and attempts to murder their mother-- and everyone in the cast goes "Yeah, friendship guys! We will save your homicidal friend!" while standing on the corpse of countless soldiers probably forced into a war against their will.
Oh, and you know what? The protags hesitate for so long it just drags the war even further ahead-- every passing second there's probably a hundred soldiers dying in this game.
Don't overthink it like me-- or, point and laugh with a friend. It's fun.

this game's base roster is very bad. even within its self imposed limiations of three games, some choices are very strange. for how important the weapon triangle is in fire emblem it's not represented very well here, lances are limited to one moveset copied through 3 pegasus knight characters. this could've been alleviated by the original lord characters using a lance and an axe, but for some reason they're just added to the sword unit pile. the story's not good.
what does bring this game up is that it is cool seeing a bunch of fire emblem characters beat up hundreds of enemies, the remixed songs are good, and the dlc does bring some glaring base roster omissions like azura and tharja into the game.

started today and ik this gets a lot of hate and no one gaf ab it but it's cute so far i love my son rowan :( it can always get worse tho so i will check back in a month or so

better than 3hopes change my mind

would have been so much cooler if they just recreated fates/awakening battles and didn't have the annoying twin OCs

The game actually seems to care about incorporating Fire Emblem's mechanics into a Warriors style game, which I respect. Unfortunately the blonde dickheads annoy me and I hate that of all the characters they pretty much only use Awakening/Fates. Oh also I think the game is completely unenjoyable to play which is probably more important

I didn't care much for this. Coming off of Hyrule Warriors, I thought it'd be great, but it disappointed me. I don't know if it was just relatively uninteresting or samey characters(in this context, I do enjoy fire emblem's characters in the games), or what but it had a lot of great ideas that just didn't seem to click for me in translating FE mechanics to a mosou.

Pretty lackluster main characters
Couldn't finish the game because I am not a fan of most musou games

Yes I understand I am cringe, but I'm not gonna lie one playthrough of this while on vacation in another state went so hard for absolutely no reason. Plus is the only warriors game I've played that justifies the ability to command the other units on the battlefield without making it too focused on management

does its job for a warriors game but the story/core twins are BADDDDD, i dont get what it is with them unable to make good characters for the FE warrior games


My first Warriors game, and it was fun to hack and slash with characters I liked. The story was pretty non-existent and it wasn't easy to figure out what to do on the map sometimes, but I had fun playing it in co-op.

Honestly pretty good. Story is cartoonishly barebones, all the mechanics are better done in Three Hopes, but a fun lowkey time, neat skill system, and the support conversations are great. Good for chilling with a friend.