Life's refreshing breeze, blow in energy! Cure!
Please refer to the Manual of Style or editing help to get started.
Conqueror of the skies, Bahamut has known many names; the Dragon King, the Hallowed Father, the First Sire.
Dissidia Final Fantasy (2008) Summon Compendium
Bahamut (バハムート, Bahamūto?), sometimes known by his epithet The Dragon King, is one of the most prominent summons in the Final Fantasy series. Bahamut has appeared in several installments, as well as his own game, Bahamut Lagoon. He also appeared as an enemy in Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars with the name of Bahamutt, in addition to being the namesake for the Sky Fortress Bahamut in Final Fantasy XII. Final Fantasy VII series has several species of Bahamut. A Bahamut-like summon called Gun Dragon appears in Final Fantasy: Unlimited.
His signature attack, Megaflare, is a great breath of energy concentrated into a beam and fired to opposition, which deals non-elemental magic damage that ignores defense and evasion. Megaflare has variations corresponding to different appearances of Bahamut, including Teraflare, Gigaflare and Exaflare.
Bahamut is one of the iconic summons in series. He is typically considered the strongest among storyline summons and more often than not, the player must prove their worth by winning against Bahamut himself, or, rarely, another storyline boss. According to the Dissidia Final Fantasy museum, Bahamut's evolution throughout the series means he cannot be classified as just a dragon.
Appearances[]
Final Fantasy[]
Bahamut is found underneath the Cardian Islands. He cannot be summoned, as there are no Summoners, but plays a minor role by promoting the player's characters into a new job after they have acquired a Rat's Tail from the Citadel of Trials. The new classes are not only stronger, but also enables them all (except Master) to learn additional magic. Most, if not all, can equip more types of equipment.
The class upgrades are:
- Warrior to Knight
- Black Mage to Black Wizard
- Thief to Ninja
- Red Mage to Red Wizard
- White Mage to White Wizard
- Monk to Master
Final Fantasy III[]
Bahamut makes its first formal appearance as a summon available to players. It is a level 8 Summon Magic that can be used by the Evoker, Summoner, and Sage jobs.
Bahamut is first encountered during the game's story as a boss the party must escape from. Later, after obtaining the Invincible, the heroes may visit Bahamut's Lair to obtain the summon.
Final Fantasy IV[]
The Hallowed Father... The First Sire, Hallowed Father to all Eidolons, watches over his children from on high. So indomitable is His strength that He has never known defeat. None could hope to emerge victorious against Him, save perhaps a warrior capable of rising to the heavens in order to deliver the felling stroke.
Eidolon Library
Bahamut is the "God of Eidolons", and lives on the Red Moon in the Lair of the Father awaiting Rydia and the party to come and challenge him so Rydia would be able to summon him. To be given this challenge, Rydia must already be in possession of the Leviathan and Asura. Bahamut has two guards who take the form of children, and he has admitted Rydia was the first he ever accepted. His summon has a casting time of 3, and costs 60 MP (99 MP in the 3D versions). In the Easy Type version, the casting time was reduced to 2.
Lunar Bahamut challenges Kain Highwind during his trial in the Lunar Ruins in Final Fantasy IV Advance and Final Fantasy IV: The Complete Collection. Also, Dark Bahamut is an optional boss in the Lunar Subterrane.
Final Fantasy IV -Interlude-[]
Bahamut returns as a Summon spell for Rydia that deals massive non-elemental damage to all enemies at the cost of 60 MP. He is only available during the final battle.
Bahamut is the last Eidolon summoned by Rydia? after the first four Eidolons are defeated. She tries to finish off the party with Bahamut, but the real Rydia appears and summons the Mist Dragon to knock some sense into Bahamut who dismisses himself from battle.
Final Fantasy IV: The After Years[]
The Mysterious Girl summons Bahamut to defeat Cecil, allowing her to seize control of Baron Castle. Bahamut is fought in the final chapter alongside the Mysterious Girl, and is the last boss before the Creator. If Rydia has recovered Leviathan and Asura as summons, Bahamut will turn on the Mysterious Girl and destroy her before returning to Rydia. Otherwise, Bahamut must be slain and will not be available to summon.
Final Fantasy V[]
Bahamut is released in the merged world after the tablet from the Pyramid of Moore is obtained. He moves to the North Mountain, which the party must climb to fight him at the summit. He becomes a level 5 Summon and deals non-elemental damage to all enemies. Bahamut takes 66 MP to summon.
Final Fantasy VI[]
Bahamut is an esper acquired after defeating Deathgaze on the Falcon. Mega Flare (Sun Flare in the SNES version) deals non-elemental magic damage to all opponents. Its Spell Power is 86, is unblockable, and ignores defense. It costs 86 MP to cast. It teaches Flare at a rate of x2. Bahamut's Level Up bonus increases the wearer's level up HP gain by 50%.
Bahamut can also be summoned using Setzer's Slot ability by aligning three dragon symbols.
Final Fantasy VII[]
There are several species of Bahamut, which are referred to as "Bahamut strains": Bahamut, Neo Bahamut and Bahamut ZERO.
Summoning Bahamut, Neo Bahamut, or Bahamut ZERO against Emerald Weapon has an effect on its AI, making it less likely to use Aire Tam Storm. All Bahamuts ignore the target's Magic Defense when calculating damage.
The Bahamut Summon Materia is found in the Temple of the Ancients after defeating the Red Dragon. It costs 100 MP to summon and unleashes a magical piercing attack, Mega Flare. Bahamut's spell power is equal to 4.0625x the base magic damage.
Final Fantasy VII Remake[]
Bahamut can be obtained through Chadley's Combat Simulation by defeating him in battle. His description says that it was a dragon king revered by the original stewards of the planet, which might allude to the original game where his materia is found in the Temple of the Ancients.
Bahamut is so large it can only be summoned in certain battles, mostly against enemy bosses (although he cannot be summoned against himself in VR Missions). He'll attack enemies with Flare Breath, Claw Swipe and Umbral Aura if left on his own. The player can expend ATB to command him to use Umbral Inferno and Umbral Strikes, which will deal increased damage is Umbral Aura is active. Once his summon gauge is depleted, he'll unleash his signature Megaflare, which is the strongest summon ability in the game, routinely dealing 9999 damage.
A whisper version of Bahamut is fought at the final segment of the game in Chapter 18.
Final Fantasy VII The First Soldier[]
Bahamut was a Boss Monster. During Season 2, it would fly through the maps occasionally casting Megaflare in areas with Candidates as long as it was not engaged in battle. Bahamut occasionally stopped on tall formations on the map, such as tops of buildings or mountains, allowing itself to be confronted in battle.
Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children[]
Bahamut SIN is summoned by Kadaj over Edge. The former members of AVALANCHE team up to fight it.
Before Crisis -Final Fantasy VII-[]
Bahamut can be summoned in battle using the Bahamut Materia, and deals heavy non-elemental damage to all enemies. Additionally, Bahamut Zero also appears.
Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII-[]
- See the summon sequences here.
Two versions of Bahamut appear, each as a boss. The original version of Bahamut from Final Fantasy VII uses the original Megaflare, while the stronger Bahamut Fury uses a new attack called Exaflare.
Megaflare's power by level:
Attack | Level 1 | Level 2 | Level 3 | Level 4 | Level 5 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Megaflare | 58 | 62 | 66 | 70 | 84 |
Final Fantasy VII G-Bike[]
Final Fantasy VIII[]
Bahamut is a Guardian Force acquired after defeating him in the Deep Sea Research Center. Bahamut's Mega Flare is a non-elemental attack that damages all enemies and ignores the targets' Spirit stat.
A late-game GF, he doesn't learn any junction abilities naturally, and is the first GF to learn Stat+60% support abilities. Bahamut allows players to learn an ability that has the junctioner gain HP by walking on the field, and the only GF to learn Auto-Protect naturally. He also has the ability to create magic spells of the highest tier.
Bahamut's Triple Triad card drops from his boss form.
Final Fantasy IX[]
Bahamut is an eidolon and one of Dagger's original eidolons. It is a powerful non-elemental dragon summon who plays a role in the story in the First Battle of the Iifa Tree and Battle of Alexandria. After obtaining the Hilda Garde III, Beatrix gives the Garnet to Zidane, which Dagger can use to learn Bahamut as a summon ability for 80 AP.
Bahamut's summon attack is Mega Flare. Its spell power is equal to 88 plus the total number of Garnets in the party's inventory. Mega Flare inflicts massive non-elemental damage to all enemies. Before Dagger loses her eidolons it costs 224 MP to summon, but after she re-acquires it, Bahamut costs 56 MP to summon. Bahamut has a Tetra Master card, won off the Eidolon Master in Treno's card stadium in the endgame.
Final Fantasy X[]
Bahamut is an aeon, and plays a major role in the story. He sleeps in Bevelle Temple where summoners can obtain him on their pilgrimage. His special attack is Impulse, a non-elemental attack which causes moderate damage to all enemies, and his Overdrive is Mega Flare. Bahamut breaks the damage limit automatically.
Final Fantasy X-2[]
Bahamut is fought several times as a boss, and plays a minor role in the story, as his fayth speaks to Yuna.
Final Fantasy XI[]
Bahamut is present as a plot-based Avatar. He is a prominent figure in the Chains of Promathia storyline, and is unavailable to players as a summon.
Bahamut is also the name of a server.
Final Fantasy XII[]
Though not a summon, Bahamut is referenced in one of the airships, the Sky Fortress Bahamut, which serves as the final dungeon. The final boss, The Undying, takes on an appearance similar to Bahamut, and uses Bahamut's signature attacks, Megaflare and Teraflare, as well as an attack called Gigaflare Sword.
Final Fantasy XII: Revenant Wings[]
Judge of Wings summons Bahamut to destroy part of the Muruc Cashuac Skysea. Bahamut later appears as a boss and an actual summon. He is a rank 3 Non-Elemental Flying summon whose regular attack is Bahamut Claw, while his special attack, Mega Flare, causes massive non-elemental damage to all targets in range, and inflicts Disable.
Bahamut can be fought again at the Keep of Forgotten Time to be unlocked in the Ring of Pacts.
Final Fantasy XIII[]
- See the Gestalt Mode And Summoning sequence here.
Bahamut is one of Etro's Eidolons who appear before l'Cie to save them from despair. He becomes the Eidolon of Oerba Yun Fang, who encounters him in the Fifth Ark.
Bahamut uses powerful non-elemental attacks, making him the Eidolon with the highest damage-dealing potential. Fang's Gestalt Gauge increases by driving up enemy chain gauges, defending against attacks and inflicting status ailments upon enemies.
Bahamut's Gestalt Mode sees him transform into a flying mechanical wyvern, which Fang can ride. His attacks involve quick dives, lasers and explosions, culminating in his finisher, Mega Flare.
Final Fantasy XIII-2[]
Caius Ballad can transform into a dark incarnation of Bahamut called Chaos Bahamut, and later into a more dragon-like version called Jet Bahamut. In the latter form, Caius gains the ability to summon Amber and Garnet Bahamuts as his support. A promotional poster shows Caius atop Chaos Bahamut in Gestalt Mode.
The white version of Bahamut is summoned by Lightning to save Noel and escape Caius's attacks while she and Noel ride atop him.
Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII[]
While not being able to use Incarnate Summoning to transform into Chaos Bahamut, Caius can call it to his aid. When Lightning calls for aid in her final battle, the Eidolons, including Bahamut, answer her call. Afterward Bahamut and the other Eidolons fade away while the souls depart for the new world.
Final Fantasy XIV[]
Bahamut is a key figure in the lore of Final Fantasy XIV. In the original Final Fantasy XIV Legacy, Bahamut was a Primal that emerged from Dalamud during the finale. Using Teraflare, he begins the Seventh Umbral Era by unleashing his wrath upon the realm, which would terraform the land.
During the events of A Realm Reborn, the adventurer is directed to the Binding Coil of Bahamut, where it is revealed that the Elder Primal is being regenerated by the captive dragons of Meracydia within the Coil. An incarnation dubbed Bahamut Prime is fought in the Final Coil of Bahamut within the crystal of Bahamut himself.
After clearing the Lv. 70 Summoner job quest, "An Art For The Living", the adventurer can summon a version of Bahamut called Demi Bahamut, a large, glowing egi-like version of Bahamut Prime.
In the patch 5.4, Lunar Bahamut was introduced as a primal summon by the Teleophoroi and is featured in the 5.5 dungeon Paglth'an.
In addition, the Final Fantasy XIII trilogy incarnation of Bahamut appeared in the Lightning Strikes event as Aspect of Chaos. Wind-up Bahamut is a minion the player can acquire.
The Final Fantasy IV version of Bahamut can be obtained as a mount after collecting all the Endwalker Extreme trial lynxes, under the name "Apocryphal Bahamut".
Final Fantasy XV[]
Bahamut is an Astral god in the world of Eos. Depicted as a male humanoid in dark draconian armor whose wings are made of swords, Bahamut is said to have picked the first Oracle from the land of Tenebrae, giving them their traditional trident and the powers that are passed through their bloodline. Likewise, Bahamut is said to have given the Crystal to the king of Lucis, and thus would be the originator of the magical powers the Lucis Caelum lineage wields.
Unlike the other Astrals, Bahamut can only be summoned during a specific scripted boss encounter. He uses Ultima Sword, an attack that causes several massive blades to rain down on the enemy. In a later update, he appears as part of a cutscene where all five Astrals aid the protagonists during their approach to the final battle. In the multiplayer expansion Comrades, Bahamut acts as the final boss.
Bahamut is the main antagonist in Final Fantasy XV -The Dawn of the Future-, the novelization of the cancelled second season of DLC.
Justice Monsters Five[]
Bahamut is an obtainable SR monster. He is a Light-elemental monster whose type is Climb, class is Dragon and his speciality is Balance. His hero tech is Mega Flare which fires a powerful beam smiting all enemies. His leader bonus is Starshine which increases light damage dealt by 100%. His auto-effect is Dark Damage -20% which reduces dark damage taken by 20%. Unlike the main version, this Bahamut is more in line with his classic dragon-like form.
Final Fantasy XVI[]
Bahamut is a Light-aspected Eikon whose Dominant is Dion Lesage of Sanbreque. Bahamut is revered in the empire as dragons are considered holy creatures by the Greagorian church. Bahamut is a flying Eikon who fights by projecting devastating energy beams from his mouth and wings. He is a large Eikon, though not as large as Titan.
Final Fantasy Tactics[]
An esper that attacks with its fearsome breath.
Description
Bahamut is a powerful summon learned for the Summoner by using 1200 JP. It costs 60 MP, has a speed of 10, and has an area of effect of 4 vertical 3. Bahamut has a 20% chance of randomly being learned in battle by a Summoner who has not yet learned it and is not KO'd by it, or absorbs at least 1 HP worth of damage. Nullifying the damage does not count.
Final Fantasy Tactics S[]
Final Fantasy Type-0[]
Bahamuts are dragon-type Eidolons used by Rubrum. During Militesi invasion of Rubrum's capital, a Bahamut is shot down with members of the Peristylium healing it. Another Bahamut covers the mission's Class Zero members as they charge at the Militesi soldiers to buy Caetuna time to summon Alexander. Summoning an Eidolon kills the summoner, and thus the class taught in the summoning arts at Akademeia has numerous casualties and are only deployed as a last resort.
Bahamut is obtained as a summon by completing the mission "Operation Vulturnus" in the second playthrough of the 5th Chapter. His abilities include an aerial charge, a stomping attack and his signature technique, Mega Flare. A more powerful form of Bahamut, Neo Bahamut is available by completing the Expert Trial "Colonel Faith's Revolt" on Agito difficulty.
Bahamut ZERO is temporarily playable at the end of chapter 5.
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: Echoes of Time[]
When wearing the Mythic Beast Sallet and Mythic Beast Plate, a male Yuke resembles Bahamut.
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles: The Crystal Bearers[]
Bahamut is a boss summoned by Amidatelion to keep Layle and Keiss from pursuing her. Bahamut holds no major importance in the story beyond showing the full extent of Amidatelion's power.
After the dragon is defeated, no further mention is made of it, although it appears as an emblem for Layle's jacket.
Final Fantasy: The 4 Heroes of Light[]
Bahamut is fought as an optional boss on the 80th level of the Moonsand Ruins. Bahamut is a light-elemental dragon and does not have access to his signature ability, Mega Flare. After the player defeats him, they will obtain the rare Orihalcon item.
Final Fantasy Dimensions[]
Bahamut is the final summon fought in the Mountain of the Father, accessible after a pathway has been created by defeating Nil Vata. It requires 78 MP and a Summon Lv. 7 to use. It deals heavy non-elemental damage to all enemies, and can break the damage limit.
Along with Flare, Bahamut is the basis for Giga Flare Fusion Ability, which is a stronger version of the base Bahamut summon (the description erroneously states that it is single target).
Final Fantasy Dimensions II[]
Mootie is the Eidolord of the Eidolons. He is a newborn Eidolon that joins Morrow's party as a companion, and the juvenile form of Bahamut.
A corrupt version known as Chaos Bahamut also appears, serving as the main antagonist of the Crystal of Time arc.
In addition, multiple versions of Bahamut exist as neutral-elemental summons for various characters.
Dissidia Final Fantasy[]
Bahamut appears as a summon that casts Aura on the user, which repeatedly increases their Bravery points over a certain period of time.
Bahamut can be summoned by two distinct ways: automatically, which summons it immediately when the summoner's Brave becomes lower than half of their original Bravery base, increasing their BP by periods of 20 and showing its Final Fantasy X artwork, and manually, where the summoner's BP is increased by periods of 40 and its Final Fantasy III artwork appears. Bahamut's auto version is obtained in the third stage of the Destiny Odyssey VIII storyline and its manual version is obtained in the same odyssey's second stage. The dialogue Bahamut says to the player is based on what he says to the party in Final Fantasy IV when he is beaten.
Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy[]
Yuna can summon the Final Fantasy X incarnation of Bahamut to perform either Impulse or Mega Flare.
Bahamut also returns as a summonstone, with the same function as in Dissidia. However, the manual version grants Bravery increases in increments of 99, while the automatic version raises it in increments of 75. His auto version is now found in Chapter Ten: Champions of her Will of Scenario 013, and speaks the same dialogue as he did to the Warriors of Light when he granted them new classes. The manual version can be purchased from certain Moogle Shops for 60 KP.
Dissidia Final Fantasy NT[]
Display the extent of your might and the depth of your courage
Bahamut prior to battle
Bahamut is one of the seven obtainable summons, acquired at the start by random. He rains down bolts of energy or sweeping energy beams. His signature skill is Megaflare, where he targets all three of the enemy team members with radiating beams of light that damage them before exploding. His pre-summon effect is Frenzied Bellow, which increases the gauge gain for character-specific EX Skills, and his effect after summoning is Drakenscourge, which, on top of increasing that same gauge gain, also lengthens duration for those skills. When summoned, the controller's sync light turns green. In the console version's story mode, he is confronted by Warrior of Light, Noctis, Cecil and Garland.
As a boss, Bahamut attacks with similar techniques from his summoned incarnation, but also comes with an aerial stomp that produces a shockwave and an orb of energy that deals consecutive hits before exploding and a flying sweep. His HP attack is Megaflare, though it only targets one character. When his HP is halved, his attacks are enhanced and he starts the phase by raining down bolts of energy. He has access to a buff skill called Regal Air and gains new HP attacks in Gigaflare, which targets a character with a powerful explosion that expands outward, and Teraflare, which is similar to his summoned version's Megaflare, except colored differently and the explosion radius lingers on as it expands.
Whilst not physically appearing Yuna can summon her Bahamut's Glyph to use Impulse.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia[]
Theatrhythm Final Fantasy[]
Before wyrms were thought of as dark creatures, dragon and man lived in peace. In this ancient age, none was greater than the Dragon King, Bahamut, who lends his wisdom and might only to Warriors of Light.
CollectaCard
Bahamut is the rarest of the summons, and the only guaranteed chance of using him is by equipping Bahamut Magicite.
Theatrhythm Final Fantasy Curtain Call[]
Bahamut is a summon, and is exclusively used by several characters. Equipping Bahamut Magicite can enable any character to summon him.
The characters that can exclusively summon Bahamut are:
- Final Fantasy IV - Rydia
- Final Fantasy V - Krile Mayer Baldesion
- Final Fantasy VI - Terra Branford, Celes Chere
- Final Fantasy IX - Vivi Ornitier, Garnet
- Final Fantasy X - Tidus, Yuna
- Final Fantasy XII - Ashe
- Final Fantasy XIII - Hope Estheim, Oerba Dia Vanille
- Dissidia Final Fantasy - Chaos
- Final Fantasy Type-0 - Ace
- Final Fantasy XIII-2 - Serah Farron
The characters that summon Bahamut are allusions to their own games, such as Tidus being guided by Bahamut's fayth in Spira, and Krile owning a wind drake. Additionally, Bahamut SIN from Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children appears as a boss-type enemy.
Theatrhythm Final Fantasy All-Star Carnival[]
Bahamut is a summon, with Mega Flare dealing damage to a group of monsters with a large amount of health remaining in music stages.
The characters that can exclusively summon Bahamut are:
- Final Fantasy VI - Celes Chere
- Final Fantasy VII - Sephiroth
- Final Fantasy IX - Vivi Ornitier, Kuja
- Final Fantasy X - Tidus, Yuna
- Final Fantasy XI - Prishe
- Final Fantasy XIII - Oerba Dia Vanille
- Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children - Cloud #2
- Dissidia Final Fantasy - Chaos
- Final Fantasy Type-0 - Ace
Theatrhythm Final Bar Line[]
Pictlogica Final Fantasy[]
Pictlogica Final Fantasy ≒[]
Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade[]
Final Fantasy All the Bravest[]
Bahamut is the sole summon monster that the Summoner can summon. It performs Megaflare when summoned.
Final Fantasy Record Keeper[]
Bahamut appears as a summon and as multiple bosses.
Summons[]
The Bahamut (V) summon is a rank 5 summon magic ability. When used, Bahamut will perform Megaflare, which deals three powerful non-elemental summon magic attacks to all enemies. The default Bahamut summon's appearance uses his sprite from Final Fantasy V. At the initial launch of the game, this version of Bahamut dealt a single powerful non-elemental magic attack. This was eventually changed in a later update to the game.
A unique version of the Bahamut (V) summon was originally used as a tutorial ability during the game's initial launch, however it was replaced with the Roaming Warrior tutorial in later updates. This version eventually was released as a login reward, however it could not be honed and did a single non-elemental summon attack to all enemies.
Lastly, Bahamut (VI) is a unique Bahamut summon that can only be obtained during the Cardian Islands Lord of the Sky event. This version is based on the Final Fantasy VI version of the summon. When used, Bahamut will perform Megaflare, which deals three powerful non-elemental summon magic attacks to all enemies. Despite doing the same amount of damage as Bahamut (V), the summon accumulates less soul break points for the user.
Bosses[]
There are multiple versions of Bahamut from different titles fought as bosses. These versions include the Bahamut from Final Fantasies III, IV, V, VI, Crisis Core, VIII, X, XIII, and World of Final Fantasy. Different enemies classified as Bahamut also appear, these include Dark Bahamut from Final Fantasy X, Tiamat from Final Fantasy VIII, and Chaos Bahamut from Final Fantasy Dimensions II.
Lastly, Bahamut can also be summoned by specific characters during their unique Soul Breaks. These Soul Breaks often have the character summon the versions of Bahamut from their original game, these include the Bahamuts from Final Fantasy X and XIII. In addition, elements of the Bahamut from Final Fantasy XIV loosely appear during Alphinaud's Teraflare Ultra Soul Break.
Final Fantasy Explorers[]
Bahamut is a summoned monster the Explorers must battle. He is located on Jamenir Mountain, the second tallest featured on the island of Amostra after the Great Crystal at the island's center.
Final Fantasy Explorers-Force[]
Final Fantasy Brave Exvius[]
Bahamut is the strongest of all Espers and one of Hess' Eight Sages. He was sealed inside the Fire Crystal by the Sworn Eight of Paladia as part of their plan to end the war in Paladia. Eventually, he was released during the events in the Zoldaad Chapter, when Jake destroyed the Fire Crystal in order to weaken the Empire's military strength. Bahamut appears briefly to confront the airship Invincible, commanded by Dr. Lazarov. Claiming the airship has "his heart", the Dragon King challenges the machine by breathing his Megaflare, causing severe damage and forcing Lazarov to hide for repairs. Bahamut then leaves.
A vision of Bahamut known as Shadow Bahamut serves as the Boss of the Raid event Vision of Bahamut.
War of the Visions: Final Fantasy Brave Exvius[]
Not only did Bahamut, king of the dragons, once scorch the earth in a five-hundred year battle against the gods, it continues to erase the beauty of the stars from the sky. The powerful and withdrawn dragon clan has passed down countless anecdotes such as these since ancient times. As the oldest esper in existence, the omniscient Bahamut is worshipped as a god who controls all and is respectfully revered as the Dragon King in a certain land. All successors to the throne of this land, without exception, must partake in a ceremony to climb a mountain high enough to reach the heavens, where the Dragon King itself is said to dwell.
Vision card description
Bahamut appears as an obtainable summon and vision card. Its party ability is Light Unit MAG Up 50% and Light Unit AGI Up 8%. Its bestowed effects are Magic Attack Up 15 and Max HP Up 15%. Its evocation magic is Megaflare. It is illustrated by G-ROW Art.
Mobius Final Fantasy[]
Bahamut's Final Fantasy XIII incarnation appears as an ability card and as an enemy summoned by Meia that can be fought during multiplayer mode. Caius also appears as an enemy Bahamut during the Final Fantasy XIII collaboration event.
World of Final Fantasy[]
Bahamut, also known as Tiababylo, appears as a powerful Mirage whose signature attack is Megaflare.
Stranger of Paradise Final Fantasy Origin[]
Bahamut appears as a DLC boss and eventual ally. Residing in Cornelia, in-game dialogue states Bahamut originally hailed from another dimension. After Jack Garland proves his worth in a series of trials, Bahamut agrees to train the Warriors of Light.
Chocobo series[]
Bahamut is a recurring non-playable character in the Chocobo game series. In Chocobo's Dungeon 2, by breaking a high level claw, it is possible to receive Bahamut as a playable character. The player must give up a lot of Energy to call him.
In Final Fantasy Fables: Chocobo's Dungeon, he is the final boss in the Chocobo's Memories dungeon, which is a 100-floor dungeon with several checkpoints and a high level difficulty that can be entered through the Chocobo Statue located in the Blue Sky Park, at northwest of the Fountain Piazza in Lostime (renamed Chocobo Park). He is located on the 99th floor, as the vital item which has to be collected—Chocobo's fragments of memories,—are located on the last floor. If beaten, he will drop a magicite which can later be used to summon him in dungeons.
He can also be found in the Guardian of Darkness dungeon by stepping onto a teletransporting tramp, also leaving a magicite after defeated (but finding him is rare, as the tramps could also take the player to Dungeon Hero X's secret shop).
In Chocobo to Mahou no Ehon: Majo to Shoujo to Go-nin no Yuusha, he is a human character that appears in the third picture book, "The Sky Flying Twins". He is the professor of both Raffy and Elly. He is also fought several times in the "Aerial Circus".
Final Fantasy: Unlimited[]
A Bahamut-like summon named Gun Dragon makes an appearance as Kaze's ultimate summon. It comes in two forms: the "Chaos" reddish form seen in the first episode, and the rarely seen silver true form seen in the finale and the Final Fantasy Unlimited: Before CD.
The Soil Charge Triad (Soil is like the colored bullet of a Magun, used to summon creatures) needed to summon Gun Dragon is:
- The light that fills up your eyes! Tears of the Rainbow!
- The ultimate spirit! Soul Gun Metal!
- The helix of my life! Endless White!
In both occurrences, Kaze must turn himself into Endless White, leaving Makenshi to fire the Magun in Unlimited Before and Lisa in the anime series finale.
The villain Pist steals the Magun at one point, and creates the "Ultimate Summon" with it—however, he is unable to handle the energies involved, and it blows up in his face. Pist's Soil Charge Triad is:
- The glare of obvious intelligence! Marvelous Orange!
- The desire for an endless quest! Maniac Purple!
- The promise of a perfect victory! Char-Coral Pink!
Final Fantasy Trading Card Game[]
Bahamut appears in Final Fantasy Trading Card Game as multiple Fire-elemental Summon cards and a single Dark-elemental card: one depicting his Final Fantasy XIII Gestalt Mode; one depicting his artwork as Bahamut Fury from Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII-; one depicting his Theatrhythm Final Fantasy model; one of his artwork from Final Fantasy Type-0 , one with his Final Fantasy III Yoshitaka Amano artwork, one with his Final Fantasy Tactics artwork, one with his art from Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade as Neo Bahamut, and one of his Theatrhythm Final Fantasy Curtain Call artwork as Bahamut SIN. His Dark-elemental card depicts his official CG artwork from Final Fantasy XIV.
Final Fantasy Portal App[]
Assorted incarnations of Bahamut from throughout the series appear as Triple Triad cards.
Non-Final Fantasy guest appearances[]
Other Square Enix titles[]
Bahamut appears as an important figure in the Super Famicom RPG, Bahamut Lagoon. Like other Final Fantasy summons that appear in the game, he is one of the Holy Dragons that can be summoned to perform a powerful elemental attack. The Bahamut of the title would later appear as a summon in Final Fantasy Dimensions II and Mobius Final Fantasy.
In the English localization of Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, Magikoopa's dragon is named Bahamutt and must be slain before Magikoopa can be attacked again.
Bahamut is also featured in the Square Enix PSP title, Lord of Arcana, being a boss and a summon players can obtain. In Bravely Default and Bravely Second: End Layer, Bahamut is name of Ominas Crowe's pet dragon, who also serves as in an optional boss in each title.
Bahamut has also made appearances in several Japanese-only titles, such as Blood of Bahamut, the Lord of Vermilion series, and the Itadaki Street crossover titles with the Dragon Quest series. In addition, the summon has appeared in several defunct Square Enix mobile and browser titles such as Guardian Cross, Knights of the Crystals, and the original Million Arthur.
Non-Square Enix titles[]
A Bahamut based on the Final Fantasy Tactics version of the summon appeared in Puzzle & Dragons as part of a collaboration event with the Crystal Defenders.
Scrapped appearances[]
Bahamut was planned to be a summon for the first Kingdom Hearts, but was removed before the game was released. All that is left is a small data code that can be accessed with cheat devices, adding the option to summon Bahamut in the summon menu. However, attempting to summon Bahamut will crash the game.
In addition, Bahamut was originally planned to be included as a boss in Mario Sports Mix, which was co-developed with Square Enix. Its model and boss field can be found in the game's files.
Mentions and cameos[]
Bahamut is referenced several times in some fashion in the Kingdom Hearts series. The name of an Arrowgun wielded by Xigbar in Kingdom Hearts 358/2 Days is named after the summon. In the Japanese version of Kingdom Hearts Re:coded, the upgrades to the Metal Chocobo Keyblade, which is associated with Cloud Strife, are named after Bahamut and the four variations of it that appear in the Compilation of Final Fantasy VII. In Kingdom Hearts III, Bahamut is mentioned by name by Rex in the Toy Box, while the summon's Dissidia NT form appears as an action figure in Galaxy Toys. In addition, Bahamut's signature move, Mega Flare, appears as a recurring fire-based command.
The The World Ends with You features a pin called Tin Pin Bahamut, referencing the Final Fantasy summon. The pin's psych blasts a huge burst of energy at the opponent, dealing massive damage on contact. Tin Pin Bahamut can only be obtained after defeating the Wizard of Slam in a bout of Tin Pin Slammer.
In the The 3rd Birthday, the helicopter Aya Brea procures to escape during the game's fourth chapter is named the Bahamut 524.
In Squaresoft 1999 RPG-racing game Racing Lagoon there is car paint (green-violet) named Bahamut as well as decal with Bahamut sprite which can be put on a car.
Bahamut has also appeared in popular web media, such as 8-Bit Theater and Dead Fantasy.
Influences in other titles[]
The popular Japanese browser game, Granblue Fantasy, features Bahamut as a primal beast summon, being the true form of the character Vyrn. The game's designs for Bahamut and Proto-Bahamut are heavily inspired by the Final Fantasy series version of the summon. Their summon attacks, Catastrophe and Catastrophe Nova, are also similar to Megaflare, firing a beam of blue flames onto all enemies. Granblue Fantasy borrows a majority of its influences for summons from Final Fantasy, featuring several alumni from the series among its development staff.
As part of a collaboration between Capcom and Square Enix, Tetsuya Nomura was asked to design various new armor types in Monster Hunter 4 Ultimate. For Female Hunters, Nomura created the Anat Armor set, which is influenced by Bahamut's recurring design in the Final Fantasy series.
Merchandise[]
Bahamut has been a popular figure for Final Fantasy merchandise, mainly in the form of displayable figurines.
Bahamut ZERO and Neo Bahamut have been released as small trade figurines in Japan as part of Final Fantasy Creatures collections. The Bahamut SIN figurine, part of the Advent Children "Monster Deluxe" collection, measures approximately 7" tall with a display base, and is sculpted for Kotobukiya by Takayuki Takeya. Bahamut SIN is also part of the Creatures Kai Vol. 1 collection.
Bahamut from Final Fantasy VIII has been released as an action figure that was sold in two colors: fully painted, and in transparent version. In the Japanese version, all Guardian Force figurines contained parts to assemble a Ragnarok figure. Final Fantasy VIII Bahamut has also appeared as part of the first Final Fantasy Master Creatures series and is available in two colors: normal and Tiamat. The Creatures Kai Vol. 2 series includes figurine of the Final Fantasy IX Bahamut.
Made by Kotobukiya, the Final Fantasy X Bahamut figurine depicts the aeon in detail, with a paint job that has a metallic sheen and comes with a display stand.
Perhaps the rarest Bahamut merchandise is the Squall and Bahamut limited hand-crafted coldcast statue, made by Kotobukiya in 1999. Each statue comes with a serial number. The size stands at approximately 400mm.
Etymology[]
Bahamut (Arabic بهموت Bahamūt) originated as an enormous whale in ancient pre-Islamic Arabian mythology. Upon Bahamut's back stands a bull with four thousand eyes, ears, noses, mouths, tongues and feet called Kujuta (also spelled "Kuyutha") (compared with the pair of Behemoth and Leviathan). Between each of these is a distance of a 500-year journey. On the back of Kujuta is a mountain of ruby. Atop this mountain is an angel who carries six hells, earth, and seven heavens on its shoulders.
Another version of the Arabic story is that Bahamut is indeed a dragon and he stands on a whale called Liwash.
In modern times, the game Dungeons & Dragons is responsible for reimagining Bahamut as the king of dragons, a benevolent Platinum Dragon; the opposite of the malevolent Tiamat, the five-headed Chromatic Queen of Dragons.
The various versions of Bahamut in the Final Fantasy VII series are named after different Japanese fighter planes: the Ki-202 Shūsui Kai (秋水改), the A6M Reishiki Kanjō Sentōki (零式艦上戦闘機), the J7W1 Shinden (震電), and the A7M Reppū (烈風).