
Jagi eventually reveals he led Kenshiro there because there was a huge container of oil, which he breaks and then throws on a match on.

In Fist of the North Star, Kenshiro's final battle with Jagi takes place on a rooftop.Fate/stay night Archer does this as a part of his reality marble "Unlimited Blade Works".The two captains that he fights lead him away from the execution grounds simply to keep everyone else in the area from dying. In Bleach, ungodly powerful Head Captain Shigekuni Yamamoto-Genryûsai can make fire consume an area simply with the initial release of his zanpakuto.In the Else World sequel My-Otome, that continuity's Mai takes this to ridiculous extremes - she creates a giant version of the floating rings around her arms and legs and flies through it like a trained seal to obliterate enemies on the other side.
RING OF FIRE FULL
RING OF FIRE SERIES
The Gag Dub Yu-Gi-Oh! The Abridged Series plays Johnny Cash's song (quoted above) as it happens. Yu-Gi-Oh! also has one leap up around the arena during the duel with Panik with the intent of turning Yugi into a cinder.Expect it to be a part of the The Very Definitely Final Dungeon or any other situation where failure is not an option. The Ring of Fire is a great set up for a hero and villain to meet in a final confrontation, symbolic in that there is no escape from the fight and representative of the emotion of the scene. Fridge Logic tends to come into play as soon as the viewer realizes that sending the flames directly under the feet of the hero is probably a better idea on the part of the villain, but let's face it, it looks cool. Most frequently used by villains, especially Magnificent Bastards who want The Hero to be Deader than Dead, but can occasionally be enacted by The Hero when the Big Bad has run away from similar confrontations in the past. Much like a boxing ring or a gladiatorial arena with sealed exits, it is used to indicate that neither the Big Bad nor The Hero have the option of running away from the Final Battle, and the story will end with one of the two dead.


A commonly seen element of a climactic battle involving The Hero and their opponent being encircled by a flaming ring.
