Masamune (Final Fantasy VII)
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Artwork for Final Fantasy VII.
The Masamune (正宗, Masamune?) is Sephiroth's weapon in his various appearances in the Final Fantasy series. It is his version of the Masamune, a katana that has recurred since the original Final Fantasy.
Contents
- 1 Design
- 2 Appearances
- 2.1 Final Fantasy VII
- 2.2 Final Fantasy VII Remake
- 2.3 Final Fantasy VII Rebirth
- 2.4 Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children
- 2.5 Before Crisis -Final Fantasy VII-
- 2.6 Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII-
- 2.7 Final Fantasy VII Ever Crisis
- 2.8 Last Order -Final Fantasy VII-
- 2.9 Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia
- 2.10 Non-specific appearances
- 3 Non-Final Fantasy guest appearances
- 3.1 Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring
- 3.2 Kingdom Hearts series
- 3.3 Puzzle & Dragons
- 3.4 Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
- 3.5 Magic the Gathering
- 3.6 Astro Bot
- 4 Merchandise and replicas
- 5 Gallery
- 6 Etymology and origin
- 7 Citations
Design[]
The Masamune is designed as a Japanese odachi blade. The design and color of the tsuba (guard) and tsuka (hilt) have varied, alternating between blue and gold and entirely black (even red in the original game). The blade's exact length varies, usually measuring at least as long as Sephiroth is tall or slightly longer, which would make it approximately six-to-eight feet long. The angle of the curve of the blade also varies, but it is never entirely straight. The handle is more than long enough to accommodate both hands, but Sephiroth can carry it single-handedly due to his unbelievable strength. It has a rectangular tsuba, which is gold-colored in most appearances. As shown in Ever Crisis, the sword's length can be adjusted according to Sephiroth's will. Curiously, when Sephiroth held the weapon for the first time, it is seen with a white tsuka.
The Japanese (odachi, 野太刀:のだち?), on which the appearance of the Masamune is based, is a large two-handed Japanese long-sword carried by foot soldiers as a weapon against cavalry soldiers. They were generally used on open battlefields as the weapon's length made their use indoors or close quarters difficult. During times of peace the sword was worn slung across the back as a symbol of status as it required considerably more strength and skill to wield than a conventional katana. Although odachi are designed to slash, Sephiroth's infamous method of killing his targets is impalement.
Appearances[]
Final Fantasy VII[]

Said to be the only one capable of effectively using it, Sephiroth wields the Masamune as his personal weapon, but its origins are never stated. During the Nibelheim Incident, Tifa Lockhart momentarily, and unsuccessfully, attempts to wield Sephiroth's Masamune against him.
While initially a physical blade, after his transference into the Lifestream Sephiroth can manifest the blade at will, as he leaves the sword impaled in his victims and still has it whenever he is encountered.
During the brief time Sephiroth is in the player's party during "The Tragedy of Five Years Ago", the Masamune has six Materia slots in three linked pairs, zero Materia growth, a 255 Hit rate, and 99 Attack power. It has a 100% critical hit rate and deals Cut damaged. In his victory pose, Sephiroth swings the Masamune in front of him twice, flips it over in his hand, and slides it curve-up against his waist so the hilt rests at his side and the blade faces up at an angle behind him.
Tifa wielding the Masamune.
A replica of the Masamune, called Masamune Blade, can be acquired as an item in the Speed Square of the Gold Saucer, but it is a bonus item and cannot be equipped by any member in the party.
Final Fantasy VII Remake[]
Sephiroth wielding the Masamune against Cloud.
Sephiroth mentions he used the Masamune to kill Cloud's mother during one of his taunts. Cloud remembers Sephiroth grasping the Masamune when he declared himself an Ancient and the planet as his birthright, Tifa taking the Masamune from where it stood next to her father's corpse
as she attempted to kill Sephiroth, and then Sephiroth once again wielding the blade as he talked to his "mother". When Sephiroth shapeshifts Marco, a Sephiroth-clone, into himself, he uses the blade to destroy the bridge Avalanche was standing on, knocking them down. He uses the Masamune to repel Cloud's attack, sending him tumbling to the lower levels of the Shinra Building. Marco, under Sephiroth's control, wields the Masamune to kill President Shinra and stab Barret Wallace, and fend off nearby Whispers before transforming into Jenova Dreamweaver. Jenova Dreamweaver's light beam attack takes the shape of Sephiroth's Masamune.
Sephiroth ultimately uses the Masamune to cut open an entrance to the "singularity" and wields it as the final boss, performing powerful melee attacks and energy slashes, as well as using it as a conduit for Heartless Angel. After Cloud refuses to join him, Sephiroth overpowers and disarms Cloud of his sword. Whenever Sephiroth wields the Masamune, the blade glows purple.
Final Fantasy VII Rebirth[]
Masamune serves as Sephiroth's main weapon once again as both a boss and playable character.
As Sephiroth Reborn, he is able conjure up spectral manifestations of Masamune replicate some of his sword attacks such as Zanshin and Hell's Gate.
During the final phase of his boss fight, Sephiroth infuses the blade with Whispers, granting it a smoky black aura and augmenting his attack range with an additional longer black trail. His sword techniques also fire off Whispers as projectiles. Additionally, during some of his attacks, the Masamune itself can be targeted. Depleting its HP will weaken and stagger Sephiroth.
As Virtual Sephiroth, the Whisper Augment is replaced by the Affinity elemental buffs, similar to the Elemental Infusion ability from Remake. E.G. affinity: Fire in particular shoots out additional fireballs when using Zanshin.
During the Brutal Challenge: Rulers of the Outer Worlds from Chadley's Combat Simulator, Gilgamesh wields a replica of the Masamune called "Massy Moony".
Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children[]
The Masamune.
Sephiroth manifests the Masamune into his hand upon his transformation from Kadaj. Wielding the blade against Cloud and his new Fusion Swords, Sephiroth demonstrates the blade's power by slicing through several metal structures, pillars and concrete wreckage. Maintaining the upper hand throughout the battle, repeatedly repelling Cloud, Sephiroth eventually pushes him on the defensive and impales him on the shoulder. He is defeated when Cloud, bolstered by Sephiroth's threat to take the most precious thing in his life, executes his new "Omnislash Version 5", which leads to Sephiroth's destruction and causes to revert back to Kadaj, who dies.
The movie's revised version, Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children Complete, adds an auditory characteristic to the blade, which now hums in a similar manner to crystal when struck by wind. After kicking Cloud through debris (instead of to a wall), Sephiroth parries Cloud's Omnislash with the Masamune, and the scene where Sephiroth stabs Cloud in the shoulder during their fight is reedited to mimic Cloud's original impalement by the Masamune during the Nibelheim Incident, which he executes just as Cloud is about to complete his Omnislash. Sephiroth also uses a version of Octaslash, executing swift eight attacks, six of which break Cloud's defense, severely injuring him before flinging him back to the ground. Sephiroth clashes with Cloud for one last time after the latter is reinvigorated by Zack's encouragement from the lifestream, and blocks one of Cloud's attacks before succumbing to a prolonged version of Omnislash Version 5.
Before Crisis -Final Fantasy VII-[]
Sephiroth attacks the Player Turk during the Nibelheim Incident.
Sephiroth, with the Masamune, has cameo appearances where he supports the forces of the Shinra Electric Power Company in their battle against the terrorist group Avalanche.
Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII-[]

The Masamune appears in Sephiroth's hands whenever he fights, and in his boss appearances. It is not seen on Sephiroth's person during instances where he is not battling. The blade is shorter than in previous iterations, appearing more closer to a tachi blade rather than the typical nodachi design. In his CGI render in cutscenes, it uses the blue hilt and gold handguard first seen Advent Children, but in the original PSP version, it has a black hilt and simple square handguard in-game.
During a Virtual Reality System training, Sephiroth displays his extraordinary swordsmanship by easily repelling the assaults of his 1st Class SOLDIER friends, Angeal and Genesis, in spite of the pair attacking him at the same time. Overwhelming Genesis even with his Rapier powered by magic, Sephiroth demonstrates the blade's power by cutting through Genesis's fireballs and cleaving the Sister Ray's barrel into segments. When Zack is pitted against Sephiroth in a data simulation, he uses the Masamune to easily defeat Zack and break his sword, and would have killed him had Angeal not blocked his attack.
Sephiroth uses his Masamune to kill Ifrit in a single blow after saving Zack from the summon's surprise attack. He also dispatches a group of Genesis copies and monsters. He eventually wields the Masamune against Zack in his boss fight during the Nibelheim Incident, using it to perform his signature Octaslash and Draw Slash and to summon four large materia. After he defeats Zack and is stabbed by Cloud, Sephiroth blocks Cloud's attack using the Masamune and repels him back into Jenova's Chamber and impales and lifts him off the ground. Cloud uses the Masamune as a lever to hurl Sephiroth into the lifestream below the reactor.
Three of the combat simulations of Sephiroth in Hojo's Laboratory—Experiment No. 107, Experiment No. 108, and Experiment No. 124—wield a copy of the Masamune: Experiment No. 107 only uses it for combos and lacks Sephiroth's Draw Slash and Octaslash, using mainly magical spells, while Experiment No. 108 retains them. Experiment No. 124 not only has both Octaslash and Draw Slash, but also has a new attack called Quadruple Slash.
Final Fantasy VII Ever Crisis[]
Masamune appears as the weapon of choice for Sephiroth in his boss fights. As a playable character, it serves as the default weapon for Sephiroth (Original). Its unique Command Ability is Telluric Fury. While Young Sephiroth does obtain the sword during Chapter 6 of Episode 2, he is unable to use it during gameplay, only brandishing it in cutscenes.
Masamune's origin is revealed in Episode 2 of The First Soldier. It was created, at the command of the spirits within Robio, by the swordsmith Masamune, who named the weapon after himself. Masamune was obsessed with his masterpiece, slaughtering those who coveted the blade. The Five Swords of Igara banded together to stop the monster of a man, but set fire to Igara village in the process and were forced to flee north.
Sephiroth is instinctively drawn to the sword, insisting the blade was forged to be in his hands. The spirits force Sephiroth to endure several trials and use illusory dreams to try to lull him into eternal sleep, but Sephiroth overcomes all challenges and obtains the sword. It can change length and can be summoned and dismissed at will, so it doesn't require the use of a scabbard. It also has a will of its own, and Sephiroth must conquer it in order to defeat Revenant Mother Alissa. Sephiroth and Angeal agree to hide the true powers of the sword so it would not be taken by Shinra researchers.
Years later, Bachman confirms that the "spirits" of Igara, that compelled Masamune to forge the sword and drew Sephiroth into the temple, are Jenova.
Last Order -Final Fantasy VII-[]
In the anime OVA covering the Nibelheim Incident, Zack's Final Stand and the events in-between, Sephiroth massacres townspeople with the Masamune before making his way to the Nibel Reactor. Tifa's brief wielding of the blade after having watched her father die is also shown. Sephiroth uses the Masamune to defeat Zack wielding the Buster Sword, and disarms and impales Cloud after being injured by him. Cloud still has the Masamune impaled on him when Sephiroth falls to the lifestream.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia[]
Masamune is Sephiroth's 35 CP weapon. It grants an extra use of Octaslash and an additional stack of Jenova when breaking target or hitting a broken target, increases BRV potency and the maximum stacks of Jenova by 1, and raises maximum Bravery and Attack based on number of Jenova stacks.
Sephiroth's 15 CP weapon is called Masamune Blade, which is similar in appearance. Masamune Blade increases the Bravery potency of Sephiroth's first command, Fervent Blow.
Non-specific appearances[]

Since the Masamune is Sephiroth's iconic weapon, its non-specific appearances are related with Sephiroth's appearances in other games, like Dissidia Final Fantasy, Dragon Quest & Final Fantasy in Itadaki Street Special and Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring. In Dissidia the majority of Sephiroth's attacks employ the Masamune, with him using it either for energy-empowered strikes, energy blades or swift sword slashes. In Dissidia Final Fantasy NT the Masamune remains as Sephiroth's first weapon, though he can also equip other weapons that are similar yet different than the Masamune.
Non-Final Fantasy guest appearances[]
Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring[]

Sephiroth's sword.
Description
The Masamune is a 2-handed sword within the Forsaken Dungeon that provides 98 Weapon Atk, 8 Durability, +7 Magic Atk, -3 Speed, and -2 Consumption Rate. Only Masuda Koji can equip it. Sephiroth can wield the Masamune during Arcade Mode.
Kingdom Hearts series[]

Sephiroth summons the Masamune as he acts as Cloud Strife's personified darkness. While frequently engaging Cloud in battle, Sephiroth also battles Sora first as a trial in the Colosseum and then on his own interest. In both encounters, Sephiroth wields the Masamune in his off hand. In the first game, he wields the sword in an iaido stance and attacks with long-range quick draws, though in the second game, he attacks with more fast-paced flurries. The Kingdom Hearts series also marks Masamune's first appearance of its black hilt design.
In Kingdom Hearts Final Mix, Kingdom Hearts: Chain of Memories and its remake, Kingdom Hearts Re:Chain of Memories, the One-Winged Angel Keyblade is modeled after Sephiroth's Masamune.
Puzzle & Dragons[]
The Masamune appeared as part of the Final Fantasy collaboration.
The Masamune. Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[]
Masamune is Sephiroth's weapon of choice. Unlike most appearances, he wields it in a reverse grip as he often does when not in use, and uses it for many of his attacks, uniquely attacking with the pommel for his neutral normal combo. His forward air normal attack allows him to stick the sword into walls and use it as leverage to jump further. Unlike other swords, Masamune has two sweet spots depending on the type of attack Sephiroth uses. When swung, it is strongest in the center. For stabbing attacks, it is strongest at the tip. Due to the sword's length, Sephiroth has the longest consistent melee range in the game thus far.
Masamune is patterned after its common appearance in the Compilation of Final Fantasy VII in Sephiroth's 1P, 3P and 7P colors, but changes color to its original design from Final Fantasy VII in his 2P, 5P and 8P variations, and black in his 4P color to resemble its appearance other games such as Dissidia and Crisis Core.
Magic the Gathering[]
The Masamune is a Legendary Artifact with both White and Black variations.
Astro Bot[]
The Masamune appears as a "Gatcha" item in Astro Bot for Sephiroth, who appears as a Bot named the "One-Winged Nemesis". When acquired from the Gatcha Lab, its title is the "Infamous Ōdachi", with its description reading: "No need for a wing or a prayer when swinging this bad boy". Each time Astro interacts with the One-Winged Nemesis, he'll inflict Firaga, Blizzaga, Thundaga and Octaslash on Astro, in that order before returning back to Firaga.
Merchandise and replicas[]
Sephiroth's Play Arts action figures come with a Masamune.
Man at Arms have created a real life version of the Masamune. Compared to the Buster Sword, the Masamune is supposedly easier to handle in real life.
Gallery[]
Masamune's battle model in Final Fantasy VII.
Render from Final Fantasy VII Remake.
Tifa's field model holding the Masamune in Final Fantasy VII.
Sephiroth during the Nibelheim Incident.
Victory pose.
The Masamune is materialized in Advent Children.
Cloud's revised impalement in Advent Children Complete
Sephiroth's Masamune in Crisis Core.
Gilgamesh's Masamune in Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy.
Crystal Masamune used by manikins in Dissidia and Dissidia 012.
Sephiroth facing the Warrior of Light in Dissidia Final Fantasy.
The One-Winged Angel Keyblade in Kingdom Hearts, modeled on the Masamune.
Sephiroth wielding the Masamune during battle in Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring.
Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring.
Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia [FFVII].
Pictlogica Final Fantasy [FFVII].
Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade (SSR) [FFVII].
Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade (SSR+) [FFVII].
Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade (UUR+) [FFVII].
Final Fantasy Brave Exvius [FFVII].
War of the Visions: Final Fantasy Brave Exvius.
Advent Children version in War of the Visions: Final Fantasy Brave Exvius.
Mobius Final Fantasy. Etymology and origin[]
[view · edit · purge]The Masamune is named after Masamune Okazaki, a legendary Japanese blacksmith of the Kamakura Era employed under the Kamakura Shogunate. He was famous for his forging process of soshu kitae and nijuba, the strongest method for the body of katana, layering different consistencies of carbon steel for tensile composition and in such a way they were forged twice, and cultivating the aesthetics of katana through having refined and merged traits of quality with those of beauty.
His works were often compared to those of Muramasa, and sometimes mistaken for the other in fiction or fantasy novels, though always the better of the two. According to legend, the two swordsmiths set a sword of their making into a nearby stream as contest to see who made the better sword, with Masamune's blade said to have ignored all things that came near it. Though Muramasa belittled Masamune, a monk came to be the final judge and praised Masamune's swords for having benevolence, cutting only what it was meant to cut while Muramasa's cared little for what it cut. From this tale, Masamunes are said to be the marks of an internal peaceful and calm warrior, the opposite of Muramasas who were deemed bloodthirsty and cursed blades. All legends of the two ever having met are considered historically impossible since they were from different time periods.
Sephiroth's design was inspired by the legendary samurai swordsman Sasaki Kojiro. In turn, Cloud Strife is based on his more prodigious rival, Musashi Miyamoto.[1] Sasaki is said to have wielded a notably long nodachi, allegedly created by Bizen Osafune Nagamitsu.
While a Masamune would seem historically inaccurate for a character based on Sasaki Kojiro, the traits of its appearance and identity as a weapon for Sephiroth tie into various influences of Japanese culture. Within Japanese martial arts fiction, it is a common archetype to portray stronger adversaries with seemingly greater attributes than the challenging protagonist. The perversion of something sacred to be used for evil has its roots in Buddhism and Japanese philosophy. Kojiro and Musashi have had a long tradition of being portrayed in premodern popular culture, including the earliest forms of manga and urban legends. Being a war hero of the Wutai War, Sephiroth's ownership of a Masamune hearkens to the United States' victory over Japan in World War II, where the worn katana of the surviving Imperial Military forces were often taken as war trophies by Allied troops, some of these blades being odachi to even treasured swords like Masamune-made swords.
Within the art of Japanese sword-making, kenso is aesthetic appreciation revolving around the divination of surface patterns and physical attributes of finished swords to uncover the kind of spirit that a katana has when made. While many individual schools of katana-making have their own lexicon and defining attributes, there also exists a commonly shared ground of divination aesthetics. Masamune's attributes of kenso are said to be extremely powerful, and his swords gained the reputation of being sacred. One kenso trait of his swords is the folding fan shapes within its patterns, or ogiba. While the folding fan is considered an auspicious symbol of high class and great luck, it also relates to the invigoration of the spirit and closeness to the heavens, as the folding fan is said to be used as a divine receptor to channel the kami of Shinto faith into the being of a person during seances and kagura (dance to pacify deities) performances. The divination of kenso was also done to ensure a weapon matches its wielder, so the katana would share the same spirit as its owner. It could be argued that this explains Sephiroth's use of the weapon, significant of his perversion into madness and godhood, as this signifies that he may be "channeled" by Jenova, or the other way around. This would later turn out to be the case as confirmed in Episode 2 of "'The First Soldier.
In the Final Fantasy VII remake project, the Masamune bears a purple glow when wielded by Sephiroth. In Japanese sword appraisal studies of koto or pre-Tokugawa Shogunate era swords, specifically to Masamune and the Soshu school, his swords are said to have a deep purple radiance under shining angles of light. Swords said to have this purple refractive attribute draw mystical and artistic parallels to the phrase Shiden Issen (紫電一閃, Purple Lightning, (a) Flash of Lightning?), where they are believed to be embodying lightning itself, and especially from divine kami of swords and lightning, like Takemikazuchi and Susanoo. In Dissidia Final Fantasy NT, Sephiroth boasts to Ramuh he will "cleave his bolts". Alternately, lightning is also related with more malevolent supernatural beings, such as oni like Raijin, who spread pestilence and terror upon men, and to the underworld progenitor of mankind, Izanami, who is believed to have birthed lightning demons like Raijin upon her curse to take away 1000 lives of men every day.
The Masamune's origins appear to be lifted from the real world history of the Soshu-den school of swordsmithing, as well as their ties to the Hojo Kamakura Shogunate. As Goro Nyudo Masamune's fame rose to its peak with his weapons being renowned throughout the land, he eclipsed the Kikuichimonji Collaboration and the efforts of Emperor Gotoba into the 14th Century, whose benefactors and collaborators, the Hojo clan, became resented throughout Japan for not providing proper rewards and stipulations to those warriors and even religious powers for their services during the Mongol Invasions. The samurai began to show signs of rebellion when Emperor Godaigo planned reforms to return to Heian Era rule. As the Siege of Kamakura in 1333 saw the end of the Hojo Clan and the rise of the Ashikaga Shogunate, so did Kamakura's razing see the Soshu-den's prominence fade, with its famed smiths scattering back to their hometowns. Masamune and even his best student, Go Yoshihiro, soon passed away around 1337 into legend.
Citations[]
- ↑ Weekly Famitsu Issue no. 1224: Tetsuya Nomura Interview (Accessed: March 08, 2020) at The Lifestream
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