And the PC version will run on pretty much anything.
That's really Final Fantasy 9 in a nutshell: it's so dense with things to do, with hidden delights, and with creative design that goes above and beyond, it's hard not to be charmed by the sheer love that went into every area.
FINAL FANTASY GAME PLUS
You can take Final Fantasy 9's opening hour as a case study for what makes it special among the series: you'll control three separate characters at different points, and during that time you can freely run around a city collecting tons of hidden items and gil caches, meet characters who will have small, cute narrative moments a dozen plus hours later, kick off a sidequest that lasts the entire game, play a minigame, learn FF9's card game and collect some rare cards, and participate in a wonderfully entertaining fake sword fight that was designed for this one scene and never used again. It's peppered with in-jokes and references that manage to never be obnoxious or exclusionary if you don't get them, they just add more flavor to a world already overstuffed with personality.
FINAL FANTASY GAME SERIES
It's a game that feels joyously made, celebrating the Final Fantasy series up to that point and the end of Square's insane hot streak during the PS1 era. Wes: Final Fantasy 9 is that one game I'll probably wax poetic about for the rest of my life. But the flavor that story brings sets it so far apart from your typical teens-save-the-world JRPG. There's some great wartime politics to dig into here, though the throughline never quite explores them as much as it should. But before that: great stuff! The world and writing, like in Matsuno's Final Fantasy Tactics, are fantasy by way of Shakespearean tragedy, with a quippy rogue, a dutiful but disgraced knight, and a princess forced to step into a leadership role she never expected. It just, uh, kinda disappears and then completely falls apart in the last third of the game. Wes Fenlon: Sam and Tom are nuts: Final Fantasy 12 has probably the best, least cliche story in a Final Fantasy game this side of Tactics. Give me a good party of pals who go on a journey and kill lots of cactuars. Final Fantasy has never been good at telling stories about politics, kings and queens. Plus the story never quite gains momentum. You can’t really coast through it without engaging pretty heavily with the combat and character building, which can really drag in the first few hours. 12 has a different appeal to the rest of the series. Luckily 12 has my favourite RPG systems of any Final Fantasy and the fast-forward command added by the remaster means I can blast through zones, level up quickly, and test out new party lineups. Tom Senior: There were apparently a lot of rewrites and story-shuffling during development and it really shows. Tell us your choices at the bottom, and enjoy. Since this is an argument that's been going on for years with a lot of near-identical outcomes, we've included an extra factor here-how the games' PC versions turned out informs the rankings here, since it's so inconsistent across the series. With most of the worthwhile entries on PC now-minus I and II, and spin-offs like Crisis Core-we thought it'd be a good time to discuss which mainline games are the best. And other times, it'll give you a laughing scene you'll wish you could forget. Sometimes, it'll give what might be the best minigame in history.
This means the series has sometimes alternated between being an innovator and out-of-date-but it has remained more or less enjoyable for three decades.Īt its best, Final Fantasy will give you an adventure you'll never forget, a combat and progression system that you'll obsess over, or characters you'll have a real affinity for. Its ups and downs over the years have arguably been caused by its most appealing central idea: that every entry is set in a new universe, with new characters and completely different systems.