Auroral Uppercut in Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy.
Auroral Uppercut (羅刹七星拳, Rasetsu Shichiseiken?, lit. Rakshasa Big Dipper Fist) is a recurring ability in the Final Fantasy series associated with Prishe.
Appearances[]
Final Fantasy XI[]
Auroral Uppercut is an enemy weapon skill in which the user performs an uppercut. It is used by Prishe.
Final Fantasy XIV[]
Open your eyes!
Prishe of the Distant Chains
Auroral Uppercut is an enemy action performed by Prishe of the Distant Chains in
Jeuno: The First Walk alliance raid, where she will mark all players with a tether only visible to them, from which three arcs of different lengths shoot out. Players must observe the amount of times she winds up, marked by her audibly going "Wait for it..." and spinning her winding fist, to determine which arc they will follow when hit by the attack in order to avoid the spikes placed by the boss previously with the action Crystalline Thorns.
Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy[]
Auroral Uppercut is an aerial physical HP Attack for Prishe, known by default. It requires 30 CP to equip (15 when mastered), 130 AP to master, has Melee High priority, and induces Wall Rush. When used, Prishe will move towards the opponent before rising to the sky, making it excellent for attacking from below the opponent. In addition, it hits multiple times before applying the HP damage.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia[]
Prishe uses Auroral Uppercut.
Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade[]
Final Fantasy Record Keeper[]
Prishe uses Auroral Uppercut.
Final Fantasy Brave Exvius[]
Auroral Uppercut is an ability learned by Prishe at level 110 (7★). It costs 77 MP, has a 5 turn cooldown, and is available on turn 5. It deals 7 hits of Light physical damage with a modifier of 10x that ignores 50% DEF to one enemy.
Final Fantasy Trading Card Game[]
Auroral Uppercut is the ability of 1-116L Prishe. It costs 1 Light CP and doubles the power of Prishe until the end of the turn.
Gallery[]
Etymology[]
An aurora, sometimes referred to as a polar light, is a natural light display in the sky, predominantly seen in the high latitude (Arctic and Antarctic) regions.


