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  • Base Breaker: Fans are divided over whether Reaver is hillarious and awesome (and voiced by Stephen Fry), or is a Creator's Pet who seriously needs to finally get some comeuppance for his bad deeds, particularly for making Fable II's Player Character give away his youth (if the player chooses to be good) and killing Barnum.
  • Broken Base: It's a Peter Molyneux franchise; what do you expect?
  • Creator's Pet: Arguably Reaver, considering that the games tend to gloss over his atrocities in favor of his Badassness. However, as said above, he's a bit of a Base Breaker.
  • Designated Hero: Played with in Fable 2. Since you're The Chosen One, pretty much all of your "moral lapses" are forgiven, simply because it would be far worse to punish you and put you off your destiny. Same with 3, if you are not the ruler of Albion when darkness incarnate hits, everyone loses.
  • Fan Dumb: Because of Peter Molyneux's reputation for drastically over-hyping his games, it's especially common for people to jump at any minor flaw of Fable II and quickly descend into a rant that implies they're going to sue Lionhead and/or Microsoft. This includes people complaining that the ability to play online required you to download a patch online, claiming that unavoidable features such as pushing people off cliffs and planting an acorn weren't in the game.
  • Follow the Leader: Sometimes described as the lovechild of The Elder Scrolls and Gauntlet (1985 video game).
  • Fridge Brilliance: Some people have made a fuss about death just being a slap on the wrist in Fable II and Fable III, but the sheer brilliance of it is that no matter how powerful you are, you're not guaranteed a happy ending, especially in Fable III. In other words, death is not important - your decisions are. You're a Hero.
  • Game Breaker: Spam some of the Will powers and the enemies won't even touch you. Lampshaded when some bandits shout out remarks along the lines of "How the Hell are we supposed to fight against that?" as you're frying them from the inside out.
    • Plug in a second controller in Fable 2. Start co-op mode without a gamer profile or using an existing save to load an equivalent power henchman. Discard the henchman's abilities, and then leave co-op mode. All that free xp you just gained from discarding the henchman's skills is now yours. Rinse and repeat, as the henchman gets more powerful each time!
    • Being a landlord in Fable 2 makes your ascendance to insane riches laughably easy. Within a few hours a player can afford to buy all the property in the game and becomes so ridiculously wealthy that any money made through adventuring is effectively redundant. In Fable 3 this is still the case, and key underpinning of the game's moral choices revolve around carefully managed economics, thereby making the "Good" path easy to follow for a land owner. One would hope that after three years of development Lionhead would improve game balance, but no.
  • Goddamned Bats: Goddamned Shadows. Goddamn Hollow Men. The third game actually adds bats to trouble you.
    • They are, however, fairly easy to dispose off and constitute no danger.
  • Moral Event Horizon:
    • Lucien's Dragon, The Commandant forces you to thank him for brutally torturing you, to kill your only friend in the spire and probably does many other horrific things in between the time skips.
    • The Hero, depending on how you play him/her. Try reenacting the slaughter of Oakvale. Subverted though, by the fact you can become good again.
  • Most Annoying Sound: "Try to get your combat multiplier even higher." in the first game
    • This was Lampshaded in the sequel: one of the loading screens states that there is a rumour that shortly after the first game's villain was defeated, the Guildmaster was found dead with the words "Your health is low!" carved into his head.
    • This one is Lampshaded several times. There's a potion shop in Bloodstone called "Your Health is Low." Additionally, an assassination contract calls for the murder of someone who dresses up like the Guildmaster and says "Your Health is low, do you have any potions." to the annoyance of everyone.
      • The Gargoyles also use the "your health is low" phrase as well, though thankfully, you can shut them up.
      • Well fortunately that one can be turned off. What can't be turned off (short of modding the game) is the incredibly grating buzzing sound the mana shield spell makes for as long as it is active.
    • "Keep hitting it like that." "Hit the blade, not the anvil!" "The anvil doesn't need forging!" "You know how to use a hammer." Throws me off every. Time. Imagining the blacksmith's face is the red hot blade I'm hitting seems to help for some reason.
      • "Shops are now opening!" Annoying when you're trying to concentrate on your blacksmithing, at least.
    • The dog in 2 & 3. You walk up to a chest straight in front of you and then your dog barks and has the little treasure symbol above his head! "Where, boy? Where could the treasure possible be?"
    • There's also the taunting gargoyles, but they're supposed to be annoying.
      • And the third game brings the gargoyles successor, the gnomes, which is hinted at in the mission where you give them life; the item used to transform them from lifeless garden gnomes is caused by a gargoyle that looks identical from the ones in the second game. They're considerably more horrible than gargoyles, as gargoyles were just insulting, gnomes downright threaten you.
  • Nightmare Fuel: The series has had its share.
  • Revenue Enhancing Devices : The DLC for Fable 2 and 3.
  • Ugly Cute: A fair portion of the various creatures throughout the series. An example of the dichotomy between the ugly and the cute is the Minions. Visually fearsome to the point of hideousness. But they make the most adorable sounds that two metal objects scraping together can evoke.
  • Unfortunate Implications: Pretty inevitable with a game series that tries to portray morality through physical features, most notably its trend towards Light Is Good and Dark Is Evil. Very few players have complained, though, because of how obvious the angel/demon symbolism is.
    • There is also the Blind Date quest. Constituting to how the debate of homosexual marriage being a right is still controversial, the fact that playing straight Incompatible Orientation with the gay boy is considered "evil" by definition is, in hindsight, very much offensive to those who have moral obligations against homosexual conduct, especially if they don't hate the individual to speak of. In fact, this adds to the myth that all of those who are against gay marriage are Heteronormative Crusaders, a myth that is insulting especially to those who try their very best to protest against the conduct as peacefully as possible.
      • Well, it is a dick move to set up a blind date guaranteed to fail. Would you like it if someone arranged you a gay blind date?
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