Battle Cats Wiki

Viewer discretion is advised. This wiki is up-to-date until version 13.6;
Non-Cats, non-enemies information for later versions of the game are currently incomplete (latest version: 15.0).


If you notice any missing information, inaccuracy or error, contact us.

READ MORE

Battle Cats Wiki
~ Nyanko, this article is in need of a strategy! Show off your knowledge to the Battle Cats Wiki by adding one.
~ However, be sure to follow the Community Guidelines when creating a strategy!

Requiem for Angels (Merciless) is the second and final stage in Papuu's Paradox. This is a No Continues stage.


Battleground[]

Strategy[]

Because Papuu does not spawn until after the enemy base is hit, and because three UltraBaaBaas spawn during the initial wave, you can easily cheese the stage via stacking, potentially making it the easiest out of all of the Papuu stages, as long as you have level 40+ cats.

After killing the first two UltraBaaBaas using a Breakerblast cannon, and killing the rest of the initial spawn wave, you can use Catellite, Eraser Cat, and Manic Eraser Cat to hold back the third UltraBaaBaa indefinitely.

For the rest of the lineup, wave and/or surge cats that can outrange UltraBaaBaa will work extremely well. A number of Ubers can be stacked using this method, and as long as they neither have barrier breaker nor deal more than 256,000 damage per hit, you can easily stack up to the maximum cat limit of 50.

When you are ready to unleash the death ball you have created, spawn at least one barrier breaker to kill the UltraBaaBaa, then use those barrier breakers to kill the Boss spawn wave enemies that also have barriers. The bosses should die very quickly, leaving you to only worry about breaking the remaining barriers and killing the enemy base.


Trivia[]

  • This stage's Japanese name, Tenshi ni Yami Songu o (天使に闇ソングを, "Dark Song to an Angel"), is a reference to Tenshi ni Rabu Songu o (天使にラブソングを, "Love Song to an Angel"), the Japanese name of the American musical crime-comedy film Sister Act.
  • This stage's English name might reference Requiem for a Dream, a 1978 psychological drama novel that saw a film adaptation released in 2000.

Reference[]