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Academy Program

Academy is a new, guided approach to helping newcomers to Final Fantasy Tactics or story-experienced players learn the important steps to fast-track their success in Tactics League PvP.

Headed, in part, by Tactics League member, Mistral, who now goes by The Countess, This program is split into five courses, ranging from basic teambuilding and getting familiar with unique characters and generic jobs, to testing your new team into Practice Mode, refining the team some more to improve it, and eventually working your way into setting up ZeroTier and having your first Melee, which is the PvP mode.

Academy is a Tactics League Discord-exclusive program as it is also entwined with various channels and links to help you throughout your curriculum.

If you have ever been interested in trying out our PvP offerings, join the Tactics League Discord, experience Academy, and be the next competitive challenger!



Boost? Halve? Weak? – A Guide on Elemental Affinities

Elemental affinities play a role in Final Fantasy Tactics’s story and an even more significant role in PvP. This article covers the intricacies of how these affinities work and what each type of bonus does in combat.

Table of Contents
Different Types of Elements
Elemental Modifiers (Boost, Halve, Absorb, Negate, Weak)
Status Effects and Weather
Equipment with Elemental Support

Different Types of Elements

In Final Fantasy Tactics, there are eight elements: fire, lightning, ice, water, wind, earth, holy, and dark. By themselves, they don’t mean much other than the type of damage they are considered, but once you factor gear or if you are going up against a monster things can change quickly.

Most monsters in the game are weak to a particular element and may be resistant to others. This is where elemental affinities can become an advantage in the story. In the Monsters Premade format for PvP, one of the main focuses on the roster is using elemental advantages to deal double damage so you can bring down your opponent twice as fast.

We will explore how you can take elements one step further by going more into modifiers.

Elemental Modifiers

There are five types of modifiers that can either increase or reduce or eliminate elemental damage: boost, halve, absorb, negate, and weak. It is important to know how they function especially in PvP as this can deter or enhance the damage you deal to your opponent’s team! We will cover what each one does below:
Boost – Increases the damage done with the element by 25%.
Halve – Decreases the damage taken from the element by 50%.
Absorb – Restores HP instead of taking damage from the element. Whatever the damage total would be is healed instead.
Negate – Nullifies all damage taken from the element.
Weak – Increases the damage taken from the element by 50%.

These modifiers do not stack with themselves. For example, having 2 Boost: Fire does not mean 50% damage but still only increases your fire damage by 25%. The same applies to halve, absorb, negate, and weak.

Status Effects and Weather

Some status effects and even weather conditions can play a role in elemental affinities. Though we won’t go into too much regarding weather since we published an in-depth weather guide already, we will instead highlight weather interactions as well as how some status effects here below:
● Float status – Immune to earth attacks while also being treated 1 height higher.
● Oil status – Take double the damage from fire attacks. This status is removed once fire damage is taken.
● Thunderstorm – Fire damage dealt decreased by 25% and lightning damage dealt increased by 25%.
● Snowstorm – Ice damage dealt increased by 25%.

Equipment with Elemental Support

Now that we have gone over the types of elements and modifiers that can affect them, let’s go over the gear in the game that either deals its damage as a particular element or has a modifier built-in:

Weapons
● Ice Bow (ice-element)
● Lightning Bow (lightning-element)
● Windslash Bow (wind-element)
● Fell Swords (all are dark-element)
● Flame Mace (fire-element)
● Glacial Gun, Blaster, Blaze Gun (ice/lightning/fire-element)
● Excalibur (holy-element, absorbs holy)
● Durandal (holy-element)
● Air Knife (wind-element)
● Holy Lance (holy-element)
● Gungnir (lightning-element)
● Thunder Rod, Ice Rod, Flame Rod (lightning/ice/fire-element, boosts their respective element)
● Nirvana (holy-element)
● Coral Sword (lightning-element)
● Icebrand (ice-element)
● Ice Shield (absorbs ice, halves fire, weak lightning)
● Flame Shield (absorbs fire, halves ice, weak water)
● Kaiser Shield (boosts fire, lightning, ice)
● Venetian Shield (halves fire, lightning, ice)
● Reverie Shield (halves all elements)
Gear
● Gaia Gear (absorbs earth, boosts earth)
● Minerva Bustier (negates fire, lightning, wind, dark; halves ice, water, earth, holy)
● Rubber Suit (negates lightning)
● Chameleon Robe (absorbs holy)
● White Robe (halves fire, lightning, ice)
● Black Robe (boosts fire, lightning, ice)
● Sage’s Robe (halves all elements)
Accessories
● Rubber Boots (negates lightning)
● Winged Boots (equip: float status causing negate earth)
● Nu Khai Armband (halves dark)
● Japa Mala (boosts all elements)
● Sage’s Ring (absorbs all elements; boosts all elements)
● Cherche (equip: float status causing negate earth)
● Tynar Rouge (boosts holy)

Starter: Essential Tips

Are you looking to get into your first Competitive Starter game? A seasoned Tactics PvP player looking for some tips for your next Starter matchup? This article gives some essential tips to help lead you to your upcoming victory in this fast-paced format.

💊 Buff-Up Early

With the Competitive Starter format being considered an endgame-based PvP mode with access to endgame gear, it is even more important to get your defenses and other beneficial effects early onto your team so they can perform and sustain damage as best as they can. Some of the best ways to go about this are to either:

● Use Iaido’s Kiyomori to provide Protect and Shell (33% damage mitigation from physical and magick attacks).
● Use Iaido’s Masamune to provide Haste and Regen (faster turns and passive healing over time).
● Equip gear that has Protect, Shell, or Haste innately, such as Lordly Robe or Brigand’s Glove.

Kiyomori’s Purifying Breeze applies Protect and Shell instantly in an area.

📑Team Composition and Adjusting to the Map

The overall goal of your 5-unit team and how they synergize is very important, but also don’t forget that the map plays a role in certain picks as well. Small maps, such as Lionel Castle Oratory, are very close-quartered and the opponent is usually in range to strike first turn if they plan to, so bringing slower characters or builds that require set-up time is not ideal. As a suggestion, usually have 1 or 2 extra units set up to swap in quickly into your team concept.

⚔️Know the Meta Abilities

In the current (and likely foreseeable future) metagame, there are 3 commonly used skillsets: Darkness, Iaido, and Throw. Each of these abilities can easily hit hard so knowing how to prepare against them is one part of the battle ahead and we will briefly go over each one and a few counters:

Darkness – Skillset is entirely physical damage so Protect or Defense Boost support ability are the best defensive options.
Iaido – This magick-based skillset’s damage can be mitigated using Shell or Arcane Defense support ability.
Throw – This physical damage ability scales up with the user’s Speed as well as the damage of the thrown weapon. Lowering the target’s Speed is one way such as Rend Speed, but damage can also can be mitigated through Protect, Defense Boost, and the summon Golem. Also to note that Throw is evadable whereas Darkness and Iaido are not, so Shirahadori reaction ability and good evasion stats play a role as well.

⚠️Glass-Cannon is Not Always Best

Sure, in Competitive Starter you can opt for your builds for full damage or stat-stacking well into 30+ Physical or Magick Attack to do some insane damage, but you run the risk of being frail and if your opponent is defensively built or can slow the pace of the game down through status effects, you may quickly become crippled in offensive power and lose your damage-specced units as a result. Here are some tips to consider:

● The map will play a role in how risky you can spec for a glass-cannon-like build.
● Outside of team-comp predictions, it is typically ideal to have at least 2 units be fairly bulky; meaning they have a marginally high amount of HP, elemental or status resistances, and passive recovery methods, such as Manafont + Mana Shield, Soulbind, or even Lifefont to keep them sustaining damage.
● If you are running full damage specs, consider using Ovelia for her Aegis (for reraise specifically), slotting Dragonheart reaction, or using White Magicks to apply Reraise instead.

Hopefully, these tips get you on the road to success in your next Starter match. If looking for more ways to get prepared for the format, also check out the Starter: Abilities for Any Team guide for additional resources.