Soul Calibur 6 Low Level Fatal Error
- "For better or worse, this sword is my fate..."
- — Ivy
Isabella "Ivy" Valentine (Japanese: イザベラ・バレンタイン - アイヴィー, Izabera Barentain - Aivī) is a character in the Soul series of fighting games. She appears in every game since Soulcalibur.
Physical Appearance
Since her offset advent, she has become one of the most recognizable and iconic characters in the franchise, mainly due to her snake sword, large breasts, revealing habiliment, and silvery pilus.
Personality
Ivy is considered evil by many due to her Machiavellian philosophy and her advent. She only wanted to acquire Soul Calibur by whatsoever means to sever her bond with Soul Edge. When facing her opponents, she spites them with dramatic words and she takes advantage of her unique weapon, which she invented. Beneath her common cold demeanor is a heart that wants liberty from a cursed life that will practise whatever it takes to exist free. Overall, she is a neutrally-aligned character. This is further explored when Ivy doesn't kill for pleasure but those deserving such penalty and judgment.
However, she exhibits sophistication, conviction, and beingness a bookworm — as she spent most of her time researching on how to counter Soul Border. She is also considered one of the most avant-garde character's in the series' timeline.
Costumes
The overall recurring theme in Ivy's costumes is that of a dominatrix. Starting with Soulcalibur, she is the showtime grapheme in the series to be wearing a very revealing costume, with a massive amount cleavage and her thighs and hips exposed, despite wearing loftier boots and long gloves. In the following games, night purple and aureate are a recurring color scheme in her outfits, still the designers include white in her Soulcalibur Three costume. The overall silhouette of her costume remains the same throughout the series, aside from her Soulcalibur IV costume, where little is left to cover her torso. In contrast, Ivy'southward Soulcalibur V outfit is the most conservative up to appointment, using a colour scheme similar to that from Soulcalibur Iii. Throughout the series, Ivy'south hairstyle in her 1P costumes doesn't change, remaining the same short haircut with bangs roofing her left center. She ever wears armor on her left shoulder, arm and paw in her 1P outfits.
In her 2P costumes, Ivy is often seen wearing masculine clothes (mainly uniforms or compatible inspired, mayhap with a bifauxnen image in heed) or very elegant, yet sexy and provocative, dresses. (Excludes Ivy'south Soulcalibur V 2P costume).
In Soulcalibur V, Ivy's secondary costume was designed by Mari Shimazaki. It is a golden, low cut snakeskin suit revealing her navel. In this outfit, Ivy wears a golden choker in the shape of a serpent. Information technology likewise has various cuffs and bands of white fur, with matching white gloves and brusk boots. This costume is somewhat reminiscent of Anna Williams' zebra suit, and Nina Williams' leopard arrange from Tekken 5/DR.
In the reboot timeline of Soulcalibur VI her costume is very similar to the revealing one she wore in the 4th title with minor changes to her costume being the darker royal and more stripes around her navel. In her story-mode, Ivy, wears a cleavage baring purple dress with a bedazzling gold necklace in her cutscenes.
Cultural impact
Promotion and merchandising
Ivy was featured among other characters for Soulcalibur II'due south arcade flyer, and has been featured in other printed advertisements for games in the series. She has also appeared on the cover on every Sony-based console game in the serial, as well as Soulcalibur Legends for the Nintendo Wii. She is also visible on the white Xbox 360 Soulcalibur Four arcade joystick aslope Hilde and Siegfried, and the box fine art for Korean distributions of the lilac-colored PSP. In add-on, the character has been used to demonstrate the graphical features of both Soulcalibur IV and its followup championship, Broken Destiny in a tech demo and promotional flyer respectively. Ivy was also featured alongside Siegfried in a manga adaptation of Soulcalibur Legends printed in the Japanese shōnen Kerokero Ace; the manga, written in a humorous tone, used a running gag of Siegfried's annoyance that Ivy was significantly taller than he was.
Several action figures and figurines have been made begetting Ivy'due south likeness. Following the release of Soulcalibur, a resin kit by Kurushima was released, aslope a figurine by Kyosho. Epoch C-Works released a 1/12 calibration Ivy activity figure of in a set of three for the championship equally well, featuring equipable weapons. In August 2003, Todd McFarlane Productions released an Ivy sculpture amongst a set of five based on Soulcalibur II. The immobile figure was modeled after her master outfit and stood vi inches tall with a base and retracted sword. Yujin released a 4 inch tall figurine based upon her Soulcalibur 2 artwork as office of their "Namco Girls Serial #5" line of gashapon figurines. A twelve inch tall immobile PVC figurine modeled after her Soulcalibur Three appearance was released by Enterbrain in September 2008, using a white version of her outfit and extended sword; a nighttime blue outfit for an "international color" version of the sculpture was besides produced. In Oct 2011, Hobby Japan Co., which publishes the monthly Hobby Nippon mag in Japan, released a limited exclusive past mail club Queen'southward Gate Entwining Ivy 1/viii scale PVC figure. This figure was based on Ivy in her very revealing Soulcalibur 4 outfit. The figure was released following a gamebook series and videogame entitled Queen's Gate Spiral Anarchy which featured Ivy as a guest character alongside other well known female video game characters from other franchises.
Ivy's cleavage shot in her secondary costume is used as a promotional picture on the Japanese Soulcalibur V posters.
Critical reception
Although unremarkably cited as one of the almost difficult characters to play as in the Soul series, Ivy has received a great bargain of positive reception and has been described as one of the series' nigh "staple" and "stalwart" characters. From her Soulcalibur Two advent, Ivy was nominated in G4's 2004 G-Phoria awards bear witness under "Hottest Character", alongside Vanessa Z. Schneider and Rikku; she was besides a character in their 2005 "Video Game Vixens" awards testify, winning in the category of "Kinkiest Accessory". Several other "Acme Ten" lists have also featured Ivy in similar context, including those by Squad Xbox, Machinima.com, and Fasten TV. In 2009, she was featured on the cover of French magazine Ig aslope other female video game characters equally one of the pinnacle heroines of gaming.
Ivy was cited in the book "Asunder America" as an instance of Soulcalibur II's contrast to titles like Mortal Kombat and Street Fighter in terms of a comparable real-earth experience. Play magazine called her one of the "finest females in all of 3D fighting", calculation of the characters in the series she was the ane they enjoyed playing as the most. She placed second in IGN'southward "Soulcalibur: The Meridian Ten Fighters" article, which stated "Few, if any, Soul fighters and then aptly sum up what the series is about as Ivy Valentine." IGN likewise included her in their list of guest characters they would have liked to have seen for Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and in their "Top fifty Chicks Behaving Badly" list, describing her as "a pain in the ass, just she'southward got a tight 1, so she's okay by us". Gamespy named her ane of the "25 Extremely Rough Brawlers" in video gaming, praising the brutality of her fighting style and weapon. Tom's Games named her 1 of the fifty greatest female person characters in video game history, stating that as "an anti-hero who oftentimes clashes with other Souls, Ivy is a fascinating character for a fighting game". UGO.com placed her sixteenth on their list of the "Height 50 Evil Women", noting her role equally an antagonist in the first Soulcalibur while adding that it could be "difficult to truly appreciate [her] villainy" due to her attractiveness, and adding that her advent and mental attitude fabricated her "a feared competitor".
Ivy appeared several times in GameDaily'south "Babe of the Week" series of articles, including as a stand lone article and at eleventh place in their "Top 50 Hottest Game Babes" article. They later named her amongst other female characters in the Soul series as an example of a potent and iconic female person character in video gaming. New York Times felt her advent came from the aforementioned "Goth cyberaesthetic [...] that gave us 'The Matrix'", 1 they felt was already becoming outdated. UGO.com ranked her eighteenth in their "Top fifty Videogame Hotties" commodity, stating "However much she instills fearfulness in our hearts, we revel in the opportunity to stare at her from the safety of our telly sets." In subsequently articles, they named her i of the top xi girls of gaming at number ten and one of the top 11 video game heroines at number eight, stating "What can you say most a chick that carries a whip? If you're talking about Ivy from the Soul Calibur series, y'all could say she's pretty intimidating."
Sex symbol
In a promotional flyer for Soulcalibur: Broken Destiny, the developers admitted they felt they had overdone the size of her breasts. Ivy'south appearance and demeanor have been a focus of discussions, with her ordinarily compared to or described as a dominatrix, and has been noted both as the series' sexiest female and 1 of the "most beautiful women in gaming". She is used as a sex symbol in various third-party media, her likeness appearing in fabric including magazine swimsuit issue pin-ups, such every bit Play's annual "Girls of Gaming" series, and pornographic dojinshi. Advertisements have also focused on her visual appeal, such every bit Sega's commercial for Soulcalibur'southward Dreamcast port. Other media facets accept made comparisons between her and Lara Croft in terms of attractiveness, or depicted them as rivals alongside other female characters in a similar context. Other sources have used her as a standard for a character archetype], comparing later created female characters to her design and appearance. Studies on video games have noted Ivy in the subject of games "growing upward", discussing the increasing popularity of "video game babes" and the reactions of men and women towards them.
The book Game On: The History and Civilization of Videogames cited Ivy as an example of realistic graphic symbol design affected past "the Japanese deformed aesthetic and the global influence of drawing animation", noting she made characters such as Lara Croft expect "positively monastic" by comparison. Race, Gender, Media: Considering Diverseness Across Audiences, Content, and Producers used her as an example of almost female characters in video games, describing her body and article of clothing as beingness created solely for the viewing pleasance of players, often males. Rachael Hutchinson, Assistant Professor of Japanese Studies at the University of Delaware, described her sexualizing advent and beliefs equally devices used by the developers to emphasize her above-average elevation compared to other female characters in the title as "deviant", justifying "social and cultural expectation regarding the female grade" in the process. In an article on Gamasutra's Leigh Alexander used Ivy as a chief instance of video game representations of the platonic male and female versus the real world and the concept that "sex activity sells", noting the unconscious entreatment of such a character to represent oneself as in a game.
Reception of the graphic symbol'due south sexual activity entreatment has been mostly positive, though with a share of criticism also as her design evolved through the series. Joystiq bemoaned her appearance in Soulcalibur 4, describing it as an extreme in lieu of games such every bit Expressionless or Alive Xtreme Embankment Volleyball and noting that while a full redesign was unnecessary, "At least [Expressionless or Alive] keeps its breasts in context." MSNBC described her attire as "the pinnacle of preposterous", noting that while it revolved around her femme fatale blueprint, it appeared physically painful and fabricated little sense to wear into combat. Sometime GameSpot Jeff Gerstmann described the alterations to her appearance for Soulcalibur IV as unnecessary, stating "boobs are awesome, but there's a line. Ivy is over this line. GamesRadar content editor David Houghton described her alongside similar characters every bit "festering adolescent wank-fantasies", calculation directly regarding Ivy "[t]his is not female empowerment". The subject was later brought up once again at the 2011 PAX East convention, in which an all-female periodical panel led by The Escapist's Susan Arendt agreed that while the character was strong and difficult but rewarding to master in the original Soulcalibur, she was reduced to "a nice donkey bouncing around the room" in later games.
In contrast, British mag CVG cited her advent in Soulcalibur Iv as appealing, stating "Ivy...nosotros similar because she barely wears annihilation. Aye, we like videogame girls." IGN in their "Babes of Soulcalibur" article noted that while her outfit pushed the line even by game standards, they had no actual complaint towards that aspect of the character. Team Xbox emphasized that while her appearance played a cistron in her allure, her fighting skills and unique weapon were significant likewise, calculation that "Ivy never disappoints in a swordfight". Leigh Alexander in an article for GameSetWatch noted that while characters similar Samus Aran served as "bastions of dignity", characters such as Ivy filled an important office in video games besides, stating "[i]t looks similar Ivy'southward back is set up to snap – merely she's a game character; she'll be fine. Why not just relish it?" The Escapist noted that the graphic symbol'due south behavior and sex activity appeal defined the character rather than serving as an extraneous aspect, stating "Ivy's oversexed dominatrix demeanor perfectly compliments her confident, punishing motion set." UGO.com repeated the sentiment, noting in their "Girls of Gaming" article "Soul Calibur'due south mega-flatulent whip-wielding hottie isn't the only babe in the game, or even the best-endowed...simply her combination of sultry moves and revealing outfits shoots her upward the charts."
Weapons
- Valentine
- Proxy
- Mirage Blade
- Wiseman Mace
- Dream Blade
- Chained Flail
- Viper Edge
- Alraune
- Black Widow
- Koragashi
- Demon Tail
- Soul Edge (Complete) Ivy
- Kaleidoscope
- Soul Calibur (Snake Sword)
- Prototype Ivy Blade
- Magical Sausage
- Fish Bones
- The Ancient (Ivy)
- The Master (Ivy)
Stages
- Valentine Mansion (SC)
- Egyptian Crypt (SC2)
- Valentine Mansion (SC3)
- Ice Coffin of the Sleeping Ancient (SC4)
- Tower of Remembrance - Screw of Time (SCBD)
- House of Valentine'south Prague Residence (SC5)
Theme Music
Soulcalibur
- "Unblessed Soul"
Soulcalibur II
- "Maze of the Blade"
Soulcalibur III
- "Face Your Fate"
Soulcalibur V
- "Without the Blessing of Fate"
Etymology
Ivy is a name of an evergreen climbing forest plant that looks like a whip, a reference from her weapon of choice. It is likewise possible that information technology is made upwardly from her initials; I for Isabella and V for Valentine, plus the addition of the letter of the alphabet Y. Her real name, Isabella is of Hebrew origin meaning "My God is a vow." The surname Valentine is (appropriately) of English language and Scottish origin, and comes from a medieval given proper noun, derived from the Latin "Valentinus", a derivative of "valere", to exist strong, healthy. The personal name was never common in England until the end of the 12th Century.
Series Appearances
- Soulcalibur
- Soulcalibur (Chinese Manhua)
- Soulcalibur: Spirit Sword
- Soulcalibur Two
- Soulcalibur III
- Soulcalibur Legends
- Soulcalibur 4
- Soulcalibur: Cleaved Destiny
- Soulcalibur Mobile
- Soulcalibur 5
- Soulcalibur: Lost Swords
- Soulcalibur: Unbreakable Soul
- Soulcalibur Half-dozen
Appearances in Other Media
- Ivy appeared as a Limited time carte du jour in Outcast Odyssey. She has her costumes from Soulcalibur II, III, IV, and Five.
- Ivy appears in DEATH Boxing where she fights Black Orchid and loses.
Trivia
General
- Ivy, at 179 cm (5' 10½"), is the tallest female grapheme in the series; she'south too taller than some male characters also.
- In the Soulcalibur serial many characters have blueish or red colors and sometimes white; with blueish symbolizing trust and loyalty, red symbolizing strength and conviction, and white symbolizing purity and innocence. With Ivy's colour existence Purple it's a mix between red and blue which can relate to her neutral alignment and her inner struggles with her moral sense, purple symbolizes mystery and spirituality, which further relates to her character.
- Ivy is the bustiest woman in the franchise.
- Ivy is nicknamed "Twisting Blade of Confinement".
- Ivy and Cervantes share the feature of using a ii-in-one weapon; Ivy'southward sword turns into a whip and back again into a sword; ane of Cervantes' swords is too a gun.
- Upwardly until Soulcalibur 5, Ivy's adoptive father was said to have the title of 'Count' in English versions. This was an error, as he should accept been called an 'Earl'.
- And then far, all of her Destined Boxing'due south have been with Cervantes. (In Soulcalibur, she volition fight Taki until Cervantes becomes playable). She and Maxi are the only returning characters then far to have had one graphic symbol remain their Destined Battle throughout the series.
- Given Ivy's knowledge of abracadabra, it is possible she is one of the more than intelligent characters in the series.
- Her costumes are dominatrix themed and thus quite revealing. Despite criticism of these attires, she still has one of the largest fanbases.
- Ivy is the second fighting game grapheme to use a whip sword (the first beingness Janne de Arc from SNK Playmore'due south Globe Heroes series).
- Her fighting mode with the uncurled whip version of her weapon, are very probable inspired the real-life Urumi sword, or Kalaripayattu sword techniques, originating from South Republic of india. Being English during Colonial India, might accept given Ivy a chance to option upward the style during travels across the British Empire.
- Ivy appears in the crossover visual combat video game Queen's Gate: Spiral Chaos aslope other fighting game characters such as Tekken's Lili Rochefort, Guilty Gear's Dizzy, and BlazBlue's Noel Vermillion.
- Ivy's artful seems to include many snake-inspired motifs, including her armor, Weapons (Snake Sword), some of her moves (EX: Ivy Lick, Ophidian's Comprehend, Ringlet, etc.). Some of her vesture is fifty-fifty textured like snake scales.
- Although Ivy is British, she pronounces "imbecile" and "futile" the American mode.
- Ivy's current English vox actress, Lani Minella is known for voicing Sindel and Sheeva from Mortal Kombat (2011) and Rouge the Bat from Sonic Adventure 2 and Sonic Heroes. Coincidentally, all three share similar traits in terms of their color schemes; regal, white and black can be seen on all three.
- Fellow Namco grapheme Rita Mordio of Tales of Vesperia can wield a snake sword called "Ivy Blade", a likely reference to Ivy.
- She is quite similar to Elwyn and Enimia from Blades of Fury, every bit they all have revealing vesture, somewhat like weapons, and extremely similar fighting styles.
- Ivy's input for her command throw, Calamity Symphony, makes the shape of a cross. Given her quote "Now sing for these sinners", which occurs while performing the move, it may be intentional.
- The weapon Kaleidoscope resembles that of a Seven Branch Sword (a weapon believed to originate from the Jin Dynasty of China).
Soulcalibur
- Ivy is the reason that Soulcalibur ended upwards on the Dreamcast rather than the PlayStation as originally planned considering the latter couldn't cope with the animation of Ivy's sword.
- Within the Schwarzstrom group, Ivy is referred to every bit "Dexter Purpure".[1]
Soulcalibur Iii
- The "Soul of Ivy" discipline is available to created characters of the Pirate class.
- Ivy and Nightmare are the merely characters in the Soul series that have their ain portraits featured in a fighting stage.
Soulcalibur Four
- At 1 point, Ivy's artwork was touched upward to comprehend up the lesser of her hanging breasts.
- Ivy's left shoulder pauldron and earrings incorporate the Tudor Rose, a traditional heraldic symbol of England.
Soulcalibur V
- Ivy is considered to be a motherly effigy to the younger fighters.
- An Ivy bobble bud is confirmed to be an exclusive Gamestop pre-order bonus for the Collectors Edition.[2]
- Ivy's revealing costume and large chest size has been cited by many sources as a heavy factor towards the game's rating. This is heavily ironic, as Ivy's costume is more conservative than it has been in whatever other game in the Soul serial.
- Ivy's 1P costume in was designed past Takuji Kawano, and her 2P costume was designed by Mari Shimazaki.
- Soulcalibur New Legends of Projection Soul explains why Ivy stopped aging. When Ivy used Valentine to defeat Cervantes 17 years agone, her serpent sword absorbed all of the souls Cervantes had harvested, granting Ivy's weapon a terrifying amount of power. These souls were then used to fill Ivy'southward soul vessel, which granted Ivy the very matter her father had died trying to achieve: immortality.
- Ivy is the merely female from Soulcalibur I and II to be playable in Soulcalibur 5.
Soulcalibur Half-dozen
- In Libra of Soul, Ivy states that she personally designed her own outfit, deliberately crafting information technology in such a manner to maximize the communication with her sword.
- The background of Ivy, an alchemist, features motifs reminiscent of abracadabra. The stinging vine twining around the central caduceus is a symbol of herself, but also of the cursed bloodline that binds her.
Soulcalibur Playable Characters | |
---|---|
Introduced in Soul Border | Cervantes • Hwang • Inferno • Li Long • Mitsurugi • Rock • Seong Han-myeong • Seong Mi-na • Siegfried • Sophitia • Taki • Voldo |
Introduced in Soulcalibur | Arthur • Astaroth • Edge Master • Ivy • Kilik • Lizardman • Maxi • Nightmare • Xianghua • Yoshimitsu |
Introduced in Soulcalibur 2 | Assassin • Berserker • Cassandra • Charade • Heihachi • Link • Necrid • Raphael • Spawn • Talim • Yun-seong |
Introduced in Soulcalibur III | Abelia • Completeness • Amy • Aurelia • Chester • Demuth • Girardot • Greed • Lynette • Luna • Miser • Olcadan • Revenant • Setsuka • Strife Astlar • Tira • Valeria • Zasalamel |
Introduced in Soulcalibur Legends | Lloyd Irving |
Introduced in Soulcalibur Four | Algol • Angol Fright • The Apprentice • Ashlotte • Darth Vader • Hilde • Kamikirimusi • Scheherazade • Shura • Yoda Story but: Azola • Gerhilde • Helmwige • Shadow |
Introduced in Soulcalibur: Broken Destiny | Dampierre • Kratos |
Introduced in Soulcalibur V | Devil Jin • Ezio Auditore • Elysium • Leixia • Natsu • Patroklos (α Patroklos) • Pyrrha (Pyrrha Ω) • Viola • Xiba • Z.W.E.I. |
Introduced in Soulcalibur VI | 2B • Azwel • Geralt of Rivia • Grøh • Haohmaru |
Soulcalibur |
---|
Soulcalibur • Fable of Soulcalibur • Soulcalibur: Spirit Sword • Soulcalibur (Chinese Manhua) • Soulcalibur Original Soundtrack |
Characters |
Arthur • Astaroth • Cervantes • Edge Master • Hwang • Inferno • Ivy • Kilik • Lizardman • Maxi • Mitsurugi • Nightmare • Rock • Seong Mi-na • Siegfried • Sophitia • Taki • Voldo • Xianghua • Yoshimitsu |
Stages |
The Coliseum • Anarchy • City of H2o • Emperor's Garden • Harbor of Souls • Hoko Temple • Kunpaetku Shrine • Maze of the Expressionless • Coin Pit • Ostrheinsburg Castle • Palgaea Shrine • Proving Grounds • Shrine of Eurydice • Silk Route Ruin • Takamatsu Castle • The Adrian and The Fortress • Valentine Mansion • H2o Labyrinth |
Soulcalibur 2 |
---|
Soulcalibur II (Hard disk Online) • The Art of Soulcalibur 2 • Unlockables • Soulcalibur II Original Soundtrack • Weapon Chief |
Characters |
Assassin • Astaroth • Berserker • Cassandra • Cervantes • Charade • Heihachi • Inferno • Ivy • Kilik • Link • Lizardman • Maxi • Mitsurugi • Nightmare • Necrid • Raphael • Seong Mi-na • Siegfried • Sophitia • Spawn • Taki • Talim • Voldo • Xianghua • Yoshimitsu • Yun-seong |
Stages |
Egyptian Crypt • Egyptian Ruins • Eurydice Shrine Gallery • Hwangseo Palace - Phoenix Court • Royal Capital Ayutthaya • Kaminoi Castle - Sakura-Dai Gate • Labyrinth • Lakeside Coliseum • Coin Pit - Top Tier • Ostrheinsburg Chapel • Palgaea Shrine - Everyman Level • Pirate'south Alcove • South France Mansion - Library • Tartaros • Hamlet of the Wind |
Soulcalibur III |
---|
Soulcalibur III (Arcade Edition) • Unlockables • Soulcalibur 3 Original Soundtrack - Legend of Sounds • Chronicles of the Sword |
Characters |
Abelia • Abyss • Amy • Arthur • Astaroth • Aurelia • Cassandra • Cervantes • Chester • Demuth • Greed • Girardot • Hualin • Hwang • Ivy • Kilik • Li Long • Lizardman • Luna • Lynette • Maxi • Miser • Mitsurugi • Nightmare • Olcadan • Raphael • Revenant • Rock • Seong Mi-na • Setsuka • Siegfried • Sophitia • Strife Astlar • Taki • Talim • Tira • Valeria • Voldo • Xianghua • Yoshimitsu • Yun-seong • Zasalamel |
Stages |
Battle in the Strait • Anarchy - Spiritual Realm • Clock Tower • Egyptian Temple • Eurydice Shrine - Gate of the Gods • Thousand Labyrinth • Indian Port • Jyurakudai Villa • Kunpaetku Shrine Ruin • Lakeside Coliseum • Ling Sheng-Su Temple Ruin • Lost Cathedral • Lost Cathedral - Ruin • Lotus Garden • Old Toledo - Burning Gallery • Ostrheinsburg Castle - Battlement • Pirate Raid • Proving Grounds • Romanian Valley - Castle Siege • Sacred Mt. Fuji - Lava Bed • Clandestine Money Pit • Silk Road Ruin • Clandestine Buddhist Sanctum • Valentine Mansion • H2o Mill Valley |
Soulcalibur Iv |
---|
Soulcalibur 4 (Broken Destiny) • Soulcalibur Mobile • Soulcalibur IV (DC Comics) • Exciting! Soulcalibur Dojo • The Art of Soulcalibur: Broken Destiny • Unlockables • Soulcalibur IV Original Soundtrack • Critical Finish • Tower of Lost Souls |
Characters |
Algol • Amy • Angol Fear • The Amateur • Ashlotte • Astaroth • Cassandra • Cervantes • Dampierre • Darth Vader • Hilde • Inferno • Ivy • Kamikirimusi • Kilik • Kratos • Lizardman • Maxi • Mitsurugi • Nightmare • Raphael • Rock • Seong Mi-na • Setsuka • Scheherazade • Shura • Siegfried • Sophitia • Taki • Talim • Tira • Voldo • Xianghua • Yoda • Yoshimitsu • Yun-seong • Zasalamel |
Stages |
Distant Marsh • Egyptian Temple - Sacred Flame • Grand Labyrinth - Corridor of Suspended Time • Hall of the Warrior God • Ice Coffin of the Sleeping Ancient • Jyurakudai Villa - Virgin Snow • Kunpaetku Shrine - Dream Remnants • Ostrheinsburg Castle Throne Room • Ostrheinsburg Castle - Twilight • Phantom Pavilion • Sailor's Rest • Star Destroyer Docking Bay • Thesmophoros' Imperial Garden • Tower of Remembrance - Ancient Gate • Tower of Remembrance - Degradation • Tower of Remembrance - Encounter • Tower of Remembrance - Screw of Time • Wolfkrone Monument |
Soul Calibur 6 Low Level Fatal Error,
Source: https://soulcalibur.fandom.com/wiki/Ivy
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