Template:Sideicon Template:Images
A short cloak made of thin material that has been imbued with a magickal power.
Final Fantasy Tactics description
The Elven Mantle (エルフのマント, Erufu no Manto?), also known as Elven Cloak, Elf Cloak, or Elf Cape, is a recurring accessory in the series. It debuted in Final Fantasy V and has since reappeared throughout the series. It is mostly known for its evasive properties.
Appearances
Final Fantasy
A cloak enchanted with elven magic.
Description
The Elven Cloak is an armor that appears in the Dawn of Souls and 20th Anniversary versions in the Earthgift Shrine and Whisperwind Cove. It can be equipped by everyone except Black Belts and Masters, and grants +9 Defense, +1 Weight, +1 Agility, and +1 Intelligence. It works similarly to a shield, granting the player a chance to deflect attacks for no damage.
Final Fantasy V
Cloak that sometimes evades physical attacks.
Description
The Elven Mantle is an accessory equippable by everyone that can be found in Castle Walse, Karnak Castle, and the Moogle Village, as well as stolen from Halicarnassus. It boosts Magic Defense by 1, but its main feature is to allow the user to evade attacks 33% of the time.
Final Fantasy Tactics
Elven Cloak increases physical and magical Evasion by 25, and can be bought for 8,000 gil.
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles
Elven Mantle is a Defense-raising artifact, which raises Defense by 2.
Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light
The Elf Cape is an accessory that doubles Magic Evasion. It is found on Mount Gulg.
Dissidia Final Fantasy
Elven Mantle is a basic accessory that boosts Bravery by 6% when the character successfully dodges an opponent's attack. it can be obtained by trading 1,900 gil, Resilience Shard x2, Guts Shard x2, and a Guts Crystal.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia
Final Fantasy Record Keeper
Gallery
Etymology
elf is a type of supernatural being in Germanic mythology and folklore. Reconstructing the early concept of an elf depends almost entirely on texts in Old English or relating to Norse mythology. Elves entered the 20th-century high fantasy European genre in the wake of works published by authors such as J. R. R. Tolkien.
An