A harp embellished with silver. It can easily lose its luster, rendering its effects weaker, and thus makes upkeep an arduous task. Though bards may not use this harp to attack directly, they use it to affect the heart of whoever hears its song. Its melody can inspire allies in battle, while in other cases weaken the enemy's fighting spirit by inducing nostalgia and guilt. The silver harp's incredible and bewitching power can even be used to heal pain.
Final Fantasy Brave Exvius description
Silver Harp (銀の竪琴, Gin no Tategoto?) is a recurring Instrument in the Final Fantasy series. It is generally one of the weakest, if not the weakest, harp in the games it appears in.
Appearances[]
Final Fantasy IV: The After Years[]
Silver Harp is the second weakest harp, providing 15 Attack, 35% Accuracy, and deals extra damage against Ghouls. It can be bought for 880 gil at Damcyan, Kaipo, and Baron, and can only be equipped by Edward.
Final Fantasy V[]
Basic harp. Must be used two-handed. Full power from back row.
Description
Silver Harp is the weakest harp, providing 15 Attack and 100 Hit Rate, although the damage it deals is equal to 1/16th of the target's current HP. It can be bought for 800 gil at Crescent.
Final Fantasy Dimensions[]
Silver Harp is the weakest harp, providing 30 Attack and 15 Hit Rate.
Pictlogica Final Fantasy[]
Pictlogica Final Fantasy ≒[]
Final Fantasy Record Keeper[]
Final Fantasy Explorers[]
A pure silver instrument that wards off evil. It helps one focus and does extra damage to fiends.
Description
Final Fantasy Brave Exvius[]
Silver Harp is an Instrument obtained by 320 gil at Grandport, Felicitas Town, Village of Ambel, Town of Kolts, Aquapolis Olderion, and Town of Amore, and by crafting it using 64 gil, x3 Spellsilks, and x3 Silver Ores. It provides 20 ATK, +70% accuracy, has a damage range of 130*170%, and requires both hands to wield.
Gallery[]
Etymology[]
Silver is a chemical element with the chemical symbol Ag and atomic number 47. A soft, white, lustrous transition metal, it possesses the highest electrical conductivity of any element and the highest thermal conductivity of any metal.
Silver often carries connotations of "second-best", especially when contrasted with gold.