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FFII PSP Goddess's Bell

The Goddess's Bell waiting to be claimed (PSP).

Goddesssbell

A bell that can break the seal barring entry to Kashuan Keep.

Description

The Goddess's Bell (めがみのベル, Megami no Beru?) is a key item from Final Fantasy II. An ancient key, it is sealed deep in the Snow Cavern.

Story[]

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. (Skip section)

After the Kashuan Keep was built, the King of Kashuan worried that people would try and steal it. So he built a door and three keys. Unless one was a member of the Kashuan royal family, it was impossible to open the door without a key.

The three keys were built from friendship, love, and wonder. The keys built from friendship and love soon broke, but the one built from wonder never did, and it was this key that became the Goddess's Bell. Pleased with this key, the king ordered that it should be hidden in a cavern of snow. It was, and it was guarded by an Adamantoise.

Eventually, Firion and the party come to retrieve the bell so that they may enter the Keep, since Gordon had gone missing. The Empire of Palamecia is also searching for the bell and dispatches Borghen to retrieve it. This is implied to be a suicide mission as Borghen mentions he'll be executed were he to return empty handed.

Spoilers end here.

Other appearances[]

Final Fantasy Record Keeper[]

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Etymology[]

A goddess is a female deity with supernatural powers. Goddesses most often have feminine characteristics, but they may be represented with characteristics of both masculinity and femininity or with characteristics that do not conform to any binary gender. In some traditions, such as the Classical Greek and Roman, it was common for personifications of abstract concepts like Victory to default to feminine representations, which may or may not be treated as a goddess in its own right. While goddesses may be associated with any variety of phenomena, including war, destruction, or death, they tend to be associated with the roles and characteristics their cultures of origin assign to femininity, which may include creation, mercy, sexuality and/or sex work, or motherhood.

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