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What is Final Fantasy all about?

Zulithe said:
Part of the beauty of Wikipedia is that it is an open encyclopedia that anyone can contribute to. If you're not satisfied with some parts of the article, feel free to expand on it yourself. :D
This is true. :)

I'm actually quite impressed by the entry they have there. I just wanted to expand based on my personal preferences for the franchise and give the original poster another view of things.
 

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Henry said:
My fondest memories are of the first Final Fantasy on the original Nintendo, where a friend of mine and I played it for a WEEK STRAIGHT during a college Christmas break

That one was probably the closest straight fantasy version of them ever produced; the rest have technological themes in them, to varying degrees by game.

I loved the original Final Fantasy on the 8 bit Nintendo. Great fun. I haven't played FF7 or FF8, but I watched endless hours of my ex-roomate play them and I have to say, I wasn't impressed; they look very boring. Definately not my idea of a good time, then again I dislike most console RPGs games.

BTW, if you have been living in a cave for several years, you have missed 8 Bit Theater. EBT is a spoof on Final Fantasy and is hillarious; I love the characterizations.

http://www.nuklearpower.com/
 

ssampier said:
I loved the original Final Fantasy on the 8 bit Nintendo. Great fun. I haven't played FF7 or FF8, but I watched endless hours of my ex-roomate play them and I have to say, I wasn't impressed; they look very boring. Definately not my idea of a good time, then again I dislike most console RPGs games.

I have a theory that like with trek, people tend to "imprint" on the first final fantasy game they play. I know none of them since VII which I loved to pieces, have ever seemed to quite measure up.
 

Rackhir said:
I have a theory that like with trek, people tend to "imprint" on the first final fantasy game they play. I know none of them since VII which I loved to pieces, have ever seemed to quite measure up.

You can probably take that theory to the bank. My first game was FFIV, and I'm deeply nostalgic about it, and think that there's never been anything quite as perfect (though VI and VII are extremely close).
 

Rackhir said:
I have a theory that like with trek, people tend to "imprint" on the first final fantasy game they play. I know none of them since VII which I loved to pieces, have ever seemed to quite measure up.
You're probably right. I played FF1 for the NES back around 1990 or so, and I loved it to death. I still look back on it fondly.

I also really like Final Fantasy VI (great characters, great soundtrack, and surprisingly non-linear for a console RPG) and Final Fantasy VII (this game blew me away when I first played it, even though it could be considered the game that started the "More cinematics, less actual gameplay" trend that the series has been suffering from for the last few games).
 

Rackhir said:
I have a theory that like with trek, people tend to "imprint" on the first final fantasy game they play. I know none of them since VII which I loved to pieces, have ever seemed to quite measure up.

Sounds right; IV was easily my favorite. I've played IV, VI, VII (didn't quite finish this one, because my brothers kept the PSX @home while I was at college, then overwrote my saved game... ), VIII (which I never did finish), IX, and X. I actually thought VII and VIII were the least fun; I never liked silent and sometimes whiny leads (X got a bit of this, too, but it at least had the advantage being one of the first good PS2 games).
 

Rackhir said:
I have a theory that like with trek, people tend to "imprint" on the first final fantasy game they play. I know none of them since VII which I loved to pieces, have ever seemed to quite measure up.
Not a bad theory at all. :)

I do have a very fond memory of FF IV. It took me forever to beat and it was my first square game. Was so good that I bought every single Square RPG over the next 5-7 years for every available system (for good and ill).

For me, the highlights of the franchise were VI, VI, VII & Tactics. When VI came out in the states, it was something like $75 and copies were really hard to find at launch. I was in high school at the time and had a job so the money wasn't a huge killer but I remember that the local EB (which weren't as popular as they are now) got 3 copies. 2 of them went to employees and I happened to have an in with one of the cashiers - she hid the third copy under the shelves somewhere until I could get there after school and pick it up. This was before the time of pre-orders and all that so it was much harder to get games.

IV (US FF II) was odd. The game had been out for over a year and I saw it *everywhere* it seemed. The really simple red box with the funny animal on the front didn't exactly sell the game. I saw it sitting on store shelves just about everywhere I went and it didn't look like it was selling. I was looking for a game to eat time over a school break and a friend said I should pick it up because I liked D&D. Picked it up and that was that.

VII was an experience that I'll never forget. Anyone remember the demo disc that was circulating for about a year before the US release? It had the first part of the game, up until you destroy the first reactor, with full cinematics. I must of played and watched friends play that demo about 50 or so times. It looked SO good and there weren't any really good RPGs out on the PS1 yet (Wild Arms was a pleasant surprise that came out a few months earier out of nowhere) - anyone else remember Beyond the Beyond? I was so hungry for a PS1 RPG that I played through and beat that game.

When it finally came out, I was continually blown away. It was also at that time that I got really sick and was confined to the house alot, so I had much time to kill. My PS also happen to go on the fritz about halfway through so many of the FMV sequences and even sometimes during the game would stutter, freeze or crash. Very frustrating. But still, the game was tons of fun.

Tactics is a whole other thread but it took me about 18 months to beat and that was on purpose. I never finished VIII (my least fav) and didn't try IX because it didn't appeal to me and I had too much of a social life at the time for videogame RPGs.

I never though FF would be good again by this point and pretty much wrote it off. I didn't pay much attention to FFX before it came out. I saw screenshots here and there but I was already too put off. Then the game came out. I read a few reviews and decided to pick it up. Blew me completely out of the water at first. I actually stopped playing it for about 8 months in the middle and got back to it later but it was still really fun and it got me interested in the franchise again. I enjoyed FFX-2 (about 2 hours from beating it) and am really hyped for XII.

But through all that, I still do rank IV as one of my faves of all time. One of the things that I will mention is that IV was a heavily scripted game for the first few hours and in spot through the whole game. People keep mentioning that the cinematics and sit-n-watching are a current trend for the franchise. No way. There was a ton of dialogue reading and no interaction all the way back to IV. The stuff now is just prettier. :)
 

It's a good general theory, but I think specifically it doesn't really hold true.

Frex, my first one was FF1, I've played all of them except X2 and 11. By far and away my favorite is FF6.

However, I like the SNES series the best out of the groups (NES, SNES, PSX, PS2), and those came out right around the time I was most impressionable as a kid... one of my fondest memories is the day I beat FF4. The rest of them I can take or leave, though I like FF9 enough.
 

As a Nintendo die-hard, I'm ecstatic to hear that the new GBA remake of FFIV will not only have everything that the PS1 version (from Final Fantasy Chronicles) had, but will also feature new content on top of that. Nostalgia is good. :)
 

Alzrius said:
As a Nintendo die-hard, I'm ecstatic to hear that the new GBA remake of FFIV will not only have everything that the PS1 version (from Final Fantasy Chronicles) had, but will also feature new content on top of that. Nostalgia is good. :)
Yeah, the updated graphics are also a nice bonus. :)

FFVI is getting the same treatment as well.
 

Into the Woods

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