In Symphonia's sequel, Indignation itself is used as both a normal spell and a mystic arte for Genis. In both language files of Symphonia, there are unused voice clips of this arte used by Kvar, who does not have access to this arte in any final version of the game. In Tales of Symphonia, Genis Sage is capable of using Indignation to activate the mystic arte Indignation Judgement, while Over Limit mode is active. Shizel can also cast the spell, with her incantation being a pun on the similarity between the Japanese words kami, meaning "god", and yami, meaning "darkness". The English localization cut out Sekundes's voice from this scene, so it appears as a monologue for whoever casts the spell extension instead. The resulting scene is a cameo of the opening scene from Tales of Phantasia, with the same full incantation and a duplicate reaction by Sekundes, finishing the battle with a one-hit kill. In Tales of Eternia, this spell can be used as a mystic arte, but this can be done only once in any full playthrough, during the battle with the Greater Craymel of Time, Sekundes. Since this time, Indignation has become a standard addition to most of the Tales games, usually appearing as a standard third-tier spell. Later in the game, Arche Klein learns it from Reisen. The Indignation spell first appeared in the opening scene of Tales of Phantasia, as the spell that forces Dhaos to escape through time to avoid an almost certain defeat during the original past timeline of Aselia's history. It is the highest-level and most powerful spell of its element that can be learned. Generally, this spell is best described as summoning a single, massive bolt of lightning that creates a large dome of energy around its impact point, dealing Lightning-elemental damage. Indignation as it appears in Tales of Symphonia. 4.15 Tales of Symphonia: Dawn of the New World.
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