Dell Partners with Square 307
zenintrude writes "Gameforms is reporting that Square has signed a deal with Dell that will secure new Dell computers to be shipping with Final Fantasy XI pre-installed. This comes on the heels of another story involving Square partnering with nVidia, in which certain aspects/details in Final Fantasy XI will only be able to be accomplished with a geForce4 card."
uh oh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:uh oh (Score:1)
Dude, I can't lose any more productivity
Re:uh oh (Score:2)
Yay, more pay to play! (Score:1, Flamebait)
First Post. :) (Score:1)
Re:First Post. :) (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, there are certain things a GF4 can do that older Radeons, etc, just can't do. They don't have the feature set. In that case, I don't mind so much if they use those features and then say "best with GF4" or something. But if they go out of their way to use pixelshaders on the GF4 and not support the equiv functionality on the Radeon 9700, for instance, that's just fucking shitty and people should boycott Square and Nvidia if that comes to pass. The last thing we need is another 3dfx Glide situation where games are pretty much card-specific.
missing the point (Score:1)
Being unfamiliar with the game, lets just guess that there will be a quest for some semi-uberweapon, but if you have a Radeon 9700,for instance, you will be unable to equip it or something equally sucky
Re:First Post. :) (Score:2)
Perhaps there are going to be some substantial enhancements to the game? Judging by the poor quality of the ports of the previous games, I expect little from this one.
Square and Co (Score:1)
This is sad... (Score:5, Interesting)
Yea, 3df/x tried that... (Score:2)
Re:This is sad... (Score:2, Interesting)
All this does is gives nVidia a game with which to showcase some of the new features of their new cards, how is this a bad thing? Let's not forget that this game is also going to be released for the PS2, so I find it highly doubtful that anything especially important would need a GeForce 4 to run.
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Buying a graphics gard shouldn't be about politics and "us versus them", it is a tecnical issue, an issue of performance, price, andh possibly customer service. nVidia shouldn't be going over the consumers heads to screw those who vote against the party. It sounds like time for nVidia to pack it in... step aside and let some responsible competition emerge who actually wants to improve open computing standards without belittling users.
Screw Sony - "fancy visual effects" are the sole reason why graphics accelerators exist at the consumer PC level... they are "especially important" to this discussion. The bad thing is not that nVidia can show off their fancy features. The bad thing is that nVidia paid Square dirty money to cripple the game on ATI, and Square accepted the deal. If Square already developed the new effects, why artifically restrict users from seeing them? Because they didn't vote for the right dirty... er, buy the right companies video card? Technology isn't the issue here, but is should be. That is a the bad thing. This is sad.
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
What if the less powerful card is based on an earlier generation chip? Y'know, like the GeForce MX line? A GF4 MX doesn't have a GF4 powering it. It doesn't do complete DirectX 8 compatibility, so the ATI card will some effects not found in lower end cards.
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Maybe OpenGL lags behind DirectX, but it seems less whimsical, and a touch more concrete. Since SGI had to create hardware which falls into the spec, and has committed te spec into being a cross-platform standard, OpenSGi might be a samer graphics standard.
Of course that could bust be my anti-MS bias poking through, but it seems that OpenGL might be a healthier standard for the graphics industry. Oh, yeah, and SGI rules. Just in case you didn't know.
My two points are:
1. SGI rules
2. the standard should precede the hardware implementation. The latest point release shouldn't necessarily be sucking up to the latest graphics card's release. The most important innovation should be determined by the clients' needs, not the chipsets' innovation-implementation schedules.
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Re:This is sad... (Score:2)
Personally, I prefer competition. I don't care to buy an nVidia product because I am sick of everyone pulling a 3dfx tactic with their hardware. People aren't writing games for OpenGL or DirectX anymore... They are writing games with easy tweaks and hacks that only work properly with nVidia hardware. A sign of the growing laziness of software developers...
We're going to see what we saw a few years ago. Game developers are going to be obsessed with including features of the newest cards, and they are going to write software around specific peices of hardware (e.g. 3dfx and their GLide API). The game market is going to puke a bit until people on average can have acceptable 3D hardware, or developers stop pushing the limits. Most people don't want to upgrade upgrade their hardware constantly. GeForce 3s were only released early last year, and now nVidia's new product is about to hit the streets. Talk about quick product cycles...
Partnering? (Score:5, Funny)
All this promiscuous 'partnering' is sure to result in a computer virus that won't wash off so easily.
hmmm... (Score:1, Funny)
Connections (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Connections (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Connections (Score:3, Informative)
[com.com]
Sony becoming a sleeper PC giant
Re:Connections (Score:1)
Re:Connections (Score:2)
You want to know what's going behind the scenes, Dell offered a better deal/or has more customers or something resulting in the bling bling.
Re:Connections (Score:2)
Bandai and Sony are not competitors. Sony has no handheld systems of their own (Pocketstation doesn't count), and Bandai hasn't had a home console for a long time.
Bandai is considered a partner of Sony, actually. The Swan Crystal is listed in the hardware section of the Japanese Sony site, even.
< tofuhead >
Dude... (Score:1)
If you can't beat em with technology (Score:5, Insightful)
It's the same way with Sony. If you can't win with better games, win with more money and an unstoppable juggernaut of a marketing department.
Re:If you can't beat em with technology (Score:5, Interesting)
I hope ATI gets it together but how long have people been saying that ?
(ATI driver) If you can't beat em with technology (Score:2)
Also, on a few games I noticed that sound would go to crap in win98 games after awhile. While the video card had no relation to my soundcard, once installing a GeForce4MX this problem went away. I'm guess that the ATI drivers for 98 had a memory leak or something.
It's like having an awesome car, and a pair of undersized tires and low axles. It's great to drive around, but go anywhere with a bump and something gets torn out from underneath you...
Good video card=hardware+drivers+support+compatibility - phorm
Re:If you can't beat em with technology (Score:2)
I've personally been playing more games from smaller developers these days. A notable one is a twitch game called Space Tripper. You can download it for Windows, Linux, and MacOS and the full version only costs $12.00. How can you beat that? The game is totally fun and addictive, and has some of the best 3D graphics that you will see in any shooter. It runs on a very minimalistic 3d accellerator too (by todays standards). You can get it from http://www.pompom.org.uk
Of course, I still have a ton of PSX and Dreamcast games to play. Until these newer consoles start getting decent material, then I'll still be set for years of gaming.
great idea for selling computers (Score:1, Interesting)
Now only if Dell could convince them to port the game to Linux, they could have a killer game, on a killer OS!
Drats, we use Compaqs at work.... (Score:1)
Correct me if I am wrong... (Score:1)
Seriously how many games like EQ are we going to see made? Why didn't square try to cut into some totally uncharted territory and offer something that no one had ever seen. They could have done so much more with the idea but they didn't. Might have worked well too if they had done something totally unique. What the game market needs is originallity not rehashes of things that have been and are being done to death.
However show me a MMORPG of Shadowrun (done well please) and I might take interest. Shadowrun has always been a wonderful world to play in, and it is a shame that no one has really done much with it.
Re:Correct me if I am wrong... (Score:1)
Another Vote for Shadowrun (Score:2, Interesting)
ok, so let me guess what OS it ships with (Score:1)
Dude! (Score:1, Troll)
And then, at that moment there was a Final Fantasy that didn't fly off the shelves...
No ATI? (Score:1)
Re:No ATI? (Score:3, Informative)
Nope, it's pretty much DirectX or OpenGL.
Of course it will. Probably look alot nicer on a 256 meg Radeon 9700 Pro, to boot.
Dude... (Score:5, Insightful)
But seriously, this could be a good thing and it could also be a bad thing. If FFXI gains enough popularity to generate the fanbase it needs in Japan, a US port (to PC) would be almost guaranteed. But, considering that nobody wants to pay (monthly) for FFXI after buying it, is giving it away free going to make people want to buy it? I think not. Take Everquest, for example-- you can pick up a jewel case copy for $10, a huge slash over what it was back in the day. I did this. And I stopped paying for it two months later, when I found that I don't like that style of game. If anything, it's going to get a huge fanbase for the first month or so and then everyone will quit.
Of course, that's all just my speculation, being a typical FF fan. See sig.
Re:Dude... (Score:2)
Re:Dude... (Score:2)
They understand! (Score:1, Insightful)
It took someone long enough to understand how to deal with the MMORPG market, and it took Square to do it.
The thing is, rpgs of this sort are -addictive-. There isn't alot of gameplay to them, never has been. (I hold this true of games like NWN and the like; you don't actually -play- the game, you -experience- it. And this is addictive. It's also why I refuse to play them anymore.)
So what are they understanding? That 'Hey! You can give the game away for free and charge for subscription, like AOL cds!' If there's very little cost of entry, you're more likely to try it and, thus, be addicted by it. Behold, instant cash cow.
I'm just wondering why it took so long for companies to figure this out, seeing as how I've read speculation on this crap for years...
Re:They understand! (Score:2)
Re:They understand! (Score:2)
p.s. Did I mention that the world I play in has removed almost everything Bioware put into the game from the default merchants to the way that experience is gained? We haven't gone as far as the HCR folks because we believe that game fun should come before following the DnD 3'rd edition rules to the letter, but we lean much more towards them then towards Biowares Diablo wannabe)
I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:3, Interesting)
There would be such a massive market if they released a patch, or released a remastered version of the game (updated graphics, perhaps?) that it would easily cover it's own production costs.
Re:I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:3, Informative)
It will still run in software mode, but it seems to crash a lot anyway (under Win2000, at least). I still insist that it's one of the best console to PC ports I've seen in a long time, in terms of preserving the 'feel' of the game, and the 'feel' of the console. (Particularily when using a good gamepad, like the Logitech Wingman series)
Unfortunately it really is showing its age. I can't really blame it, considering it is just a port, but I'd love to see a patched version that works on newer systems.
Re:I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:2)
Re:I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:2)
FF1 [rpgamer.com]
FF2 [rpgamer.com]
Re:I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:2)
On the plus side, you can see Aeris again in FFT.
BTW: anyone know if an english version of the story it was based off of is available. (The name of it is in the FF7 end credits.)
Re:I want a recompiled FF7 (Score:2)
Nvidia strongarming... *sigh* (Score:2)
Random numbers strike again (Score:1, Troll)
Is it just me, or did anybody else see this exact story come out of the random Slashdot story generator?
Counter-proposal (Score:5, Insightful)
What? Don't think it'll sell? So quit trying to port XI.
Re:Counter-proposal (Score:2)
You can emulate all the originals nicely on the PC. And the ports of 7 & 8 didn't sell well, AFAIK.
Re:Counter-proposal (Score:2)
Probably because they were shoddy ports and loaded with bugs. I still have never been able to play through my copies of FF7 and FF8 on the PC. FF7 had issues with the movies playing upside down and the video not syncing with the audio.. and FF8 has issues with pretty much any video card out there (I've tried a Rage Pro, Radeon, and GeForce2/3).. the graphics all show up as "tiles". Not even the patch (which is supposed to fix the tiles) fixes the problem.
Pretty lame. I believe FFXI's PC port will be handled by Square themselves, so maybe this time they'll get it right.
Re:Counter-proposal (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, two factors are diffent. One, this is MMORPG, a genre that has proven itself to have worked best on the PC platform in the past. Sure, there have been console MMORPG's like PSO, but nothing so widely successful as Everquest, for example. Also, as an MMORPG, it is absolutely critical for its sucess to have as rapid growth of users as possible. With standalone games, the overall sales are not affected so much by how many people get it as soon as possible, but the quality of a MMORPG is dependent on a large user base, so if it starts slow, it would hamper later sales badly.
Secondly, this will be a simultaneous release. Unlke the PC ports, people can immediately pick their favorite, most convenient platform without suffering a time penalty, so the sales figures will more accurately and fairly reflect the viability of Square games on the PC versus Playstation. This may be important to show that PC ports are not a waste and bring efforts to port FFXII immediately.
Of course, in my opinion, FFXI has a high probability of failure. Even if executed perfectly on technical terms, the Final Fantasy series fanbase is not necessarily big on MMORPG. I know I like standalone games better, because playing MMORPGs put certain pressures on me that I don't want to deal with. I don't feel like I can play at my own pace, sometimes for the best affect I have to coordinate my playtime with other, and I like a cohesive story that comes to some sort of definitive close. Those differences between traditional FF and MMORPG may cause FFXI to fail, if MMORPG and standalone are sufficiently exclusive communities. I know several people who plan to skip XI because they have no love of MMORPG, and also know several MMORPG players who aren't impressed in the least bit by the name 'Final Fantasy'. Of course, this is only among the people I know, so I have no idea what the true picture is..
(Port FFX please!?). Re:Counter-proposal (Score:2)
Thus far I've collected all of the FF series available to North America up to FFIX. I have FFI on NES, and the rest as part of the FF Anthology/etc. I was somewhat saddened that FFIX didn't come out on PC, although I ended up buying the PS1 disc and played it through on emulator (which worked surprisingly well).
Unless a decent emulator comes out or a port for PC is announced, I may end up not playing FFX at all, even though I love squaresoft games.
Limiting themselves to a single console seems to eliminate a lot of people from getting the game. I haven't seem PS2's coming out overly cheap on eBay yet either.
Anyone know of FFX/PC or a good PS2 emulator? - phorm
Wow! (Score:2, Funny)
Before you know it every Dell box will come with Windows pre-installed. Oh, wait...
Good idea, bad idea. (Score:2)
Striking a business deal to provide your game on a large customer base.
[Please note that I say this for games, not utilities or operating systems]
Bad idea:
Requiring your game to only be 'optimized' on a specific company's chip-set.
You guys are pathetic (Score:2, Insightful)
The reason Square is making so many 'exclusive' deals with Final Fantasy XI is because they want this product to be a success. MMORPGs, whether the cheap ****s who won't and never will float the monthly fee will admit it, are quit good and successful games. If this is a quality MMORPG, Square could have themselves a big money maker on their hands. Not only that, but an MMORPG that is insanely popular is a great way to get consumers interested in your other console games. Even better, its a good way to convince them to buy the console where near all Square games live.
( Exception being for portable Squaresoft games. No portable Sony system. )
Square knows it needs as many people playing its MMO as possible. More subscriptions means more monthly cash, more 'friends' of possible subscribers online, etc. . They don't want barriers such as 'which gaming system you prefer' to stand in the way of addicting you to their game. ( especially with that nice monthly fee
Basically, this story means that a great number of people will play this game purely because it comes with their new Dell computer. It ensures a greater online gaming population of players, and more subscriptions for Square. Its a smooth move.
nVidia Isn't Appearing So Virtuous Anymore... (Score:2, Interesting)
It's a lesson in monopoly. You keep a company at bay, balanced by another and they BOTH behave and keep prices down. You leave one alone, and prices go up, service goes down, and the customer gets screwed.
I can only hope ATI does well with the latest Radeon Pro (quite highly rated from what I've seen). I'm disgusted with nVidia. This kind of business practice makes me think I should never buy an nVidia card again. Some areas only playable if you buy a ridiculously expensive card? It's incredible what capitalism gives us, just incredible.
Re:nVidia Isn't Appearing So Virtuous Anymore... (Score:2)
nVidia=3dfx? (Score:5, Interesting)
Now nVidia is doing the following: "This comes on the heels of another story involving Square partnering with nVidia, in which certain aspects/details in Final Fantasy XI will only be able to be accomplished with a geForce4 card"
Now a geForce4 is a nice card, but the ATI 9700 is the only card that fully supports DirectX 9. You would think the 9700 would be better for Final Fantasy.
There is probably a chunk of code that says,
if (card_manufacturer = nVidia)
{
frame_rate=fast;
colors=vibrant;
special_effects=on;
}
It seems like nVidia is going the 3dfx route. Too bad; competition in the graphics card market is good for the consumer.
Re:nVidia=3dfx? (Score:2)
Re:nVidia=3dfx? (Score:2)
Also, Square has become more concerned with making Pretty Games then making Good Games (at least since FF7). I am sure that if ATI was the recognized leader in Graphics technology in PC circles, they would have approached ATI instead.
END COMMUNICATION
Re:nVidia=3dfx? (Score:2)
Later, as Direct3D got better and there started to be useful 3d accelerators like the Riva and TNT, companies started writing multiple renderers for both Glide and Direct3D. That was a small part of what killed 3dfx - their drivers for everything other than Glide sucked. They took a long time to get multitexture support in D3D (which gave a 100% boost in games that supported it), and even longer (post-Voodoo 3 launch) to get a full OpenGL driver out the door which helped some games and the professional market.
Potentially, this game may work on some other more advanced card further down the line. I guess we won't know till somebody hacks the game and tries to enable the feature on a Radeon. Then again, the Geforce 4 uses the same architecture as the Geforce 3 so they're probably lying.
Re:nVidia=3dfx? (Score:2)
My point is that by the time it's out, the GF5 could well be out. The card will, doubtless, tear up the Radeon 9700. Now, I've seen the Radeon in action, and it really can tear up any other card. The GF4 can't hold a candle to it.
My point is that now that ATI looks to be serious about graphics again, we're going to see quite the fight between them and nVidia. The cards are going to keep going back an forth. One company will gain an edge, retain it for awhile, and then the other will make a come-back.
It's not a huge stretch to figure this out.
It honestly doesn't make sense to optimize for any one platform / card. It makes sense to optimize the hell out the entire game. Sweet merciful crap, look at UT2003. That game/engine is optimized.
The cards don't make a lick of differnce. The newest will usually beat the latest from the other guy, especially now that ATI is being a more serious threat. DX9 doesn't matter that much. NV30 (the GF5) will have that too.
Is this a good thing or bad thing? (Score:2, Interesting)
This is strange (Score:2)
Problems with MMO games in general (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Problems with MMO games in general (Score:2)
I enjoy going back to my old games, and can't imagine spending hundreds of dollars a month on games. However, I figure that they're not really trying to target me. (So much the better, because I've never really liked "online communities" of any sort; these things really don't appeal to me.)
Re:Problems with MMO games in general (Score:2)
How Lame (Score:2, Insightful)
That must be part of the "real operating system" option--the one that Dell doesn't offer.
Where? (Score:3, Informative)
and why is this good for Dell? (Score:2)
Can the fees possibly cover the increased support and installation costs?
137 comments later noone think this may be a hoax? (Score:3, Interesting)
Square USA has nothing even close to this; Dell is silent as hell. even square japan has nothing at all:
the only press release i can find is here [nvidia.com] but it just says Nvidia chips are used for testing and with the "best way to play" logo -- so does Unreal Tournament 2003 -- it says nothing about GeForce being the ONLY playing video-card (as all directX compatible (OpenGL?) should work okay. (just like UT2k3 runs just fine on my radeon)
besides this is all for japan anyway. There are rumors (Electronic Gaming Monthly) that says there may not ever be a FFXI release because of the massive amount of support square will have to burden -- and if EA does not want to do it, they may just skip it. (can't find online version of article)
small side note: i remember back in the days when FF7 supported every videocard *except* nvidia TNT... haha... but eventually nvidia gained enough popularity / people bitched about it and they released a patch to allow nvidia. (they even had software rendering back then!) i bet if us radeon users bitch enough they will make a patch for it too.
another small side note: again. back in FF7 pre-nvidia-patch days -- the software rendering was so slow it was possible to predict the slot-machine thingy for one of the mini-games. i actually did much worse in that mini-game after the patch was installed. -- so i finished that part with software rendering, and played the rest with the patch.
"Sir, I'm scared." (Score:3, Interesting)
As a Linux convert I've come to really like having choices. When a piece of software (open or closed) rises to the top on its own merits I don't have much to complain about. The problem is when a product is artificially bootstrapped the alternatives tend to get ignored, even if there are 'better' choices. I really liked my Amiga and Atari Lynx. Unfortunately I was 'forced' to switch to the 'inferior' substitutes of a Windows 3.1 PC and a Gameboy in order to stay mainstream. Certainly poor company management was a factor in both these cases, but I consider them clear examples of quantity beating out quality.
Hopefully I'm just old and bitter. I used to play Everquest, enjoyed it for a time, but in the end it was just sucking up time and providing little enjoyment. I was aware of the amount of willpower I needed to exert in order to give up the game. MMORPGs can be fun, but addictive. Everquest was certainly much harder to give up playing than any MUD I played, and those were free.
FF11 might be a great game. Square has certainly rarely disappointed me. But this is a new and wide open market, and name recognition will sell units even if the game sucks. I just don't want to take another step backward, and I'm pretty sure deals like this aren't designed to improve the market for me.
Re:"Sir, I'm scared." (Score:2)
Re:"Sir, I'm scared." (Score:2)
*blink* Wow. Thank you for kindly pointing out my complete and utter lack of a clue. I must have missed a fnord or two in the article.
You are certainly correct that Square is not Sony, so I'm not sure why I ignored that very obvious fact while I was crafting my rant. I humbly withdraw my unfounded complaint.
XI? (Score:2)
Attack of the l33ts (Score:2)
If this game now comes preinstalled and probably with a 30 day free trial offer to get people hooked, FF XI will be full of them, too. Thanks Dell, Square for your help with taking the "RP" out of RPG. You can line up with Sony Online, Microsoft and FunCom over there. All hail FF XI, the new king of online hack 'n slash for l33t d00dz.
If you want roleplay, you're probably better off sticking to text MUDs, and most of those are free at any rate
Will FFXI USE that GF4? (Score:2)
The REAL Story... No thanks to SlashDot... (Score:3)
Dell Japan has decided to release two versions of their PCs packaged with Final Fantasy XI. Dell Japan will release the Dimension 8200 and Dimension 4500 with the PC version of Final Fantasy XI. Both PCs will come equipped with an Intel Pentium 4 1.8Ghz processor and a GeForce4 Ti4200 64MB DDR video card. So if you live in Japan and want to get the best performance from Final Fantasy XI this might be a PC you could consider buying.
Here's a link to Dell's website showing off the systems:
http://www.dell.com/html/jp/products/dimen/ff11
No where do I see that you will be forced to use an nVidia card on the PC version of the game, and no where do I see this deal being in the United States (yet.)
Also, FFXI isn't even out for the PC in the U.S., much less Japan. Squaresoft says November 7th for Japan... with the U.S. version slated for early 2003 release.
Why do I have to do your job for you, SlashDot?
Re:The REAL Story... No thanks to SlashDot... (Score:3, Informative)
FF X was a nice comeback... (Score:1)
Did you play FF9? (Score:2)
It had a whole LOT of references to the pre-FF7 games.
Sucks? Pish. (Score:2)
Damn, do I count as the only person on Earth who actually liked "Spirits Within?"
I mean, it had a decent plot (even if large portions of it did drew heavily from the games IV/II, VI/III, and VII), the graphics made for amazing eye-candy (good enough CGI to "forget" it counted as an animated movie after the first fifteen minutes), and a reasonably consistent game (er, movie) world.
I really suspect it flopped only due to the same anti-animation prejudice American audiences have against anime in general. I don't know a single person who said they hated it - But at the same time, I don't know more than two or three people who actually saw it.
Re:Sucks? Pish. (Score:2)
No, it didn't. It wasn't a Final Fantasy plot, it wasn't an american plot... and it wasn't even a very good Jappanese plot.
it was bloodthirsty, distopian, anti-establishment, and mundane. Every good FF game I've ever seen has magic and a villian that the heroes actually fight and face down... Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within did not.
Now, don't get me wrong--the CG was great, the design of the gagets was great, and the story had a message... but between every character aside from the two non-military folk dying and the utter lack of FF's traditional "different" feel, it just wasn't a good movie.
Great CG. Bad Movie.
I really suspect it flopped only due to the same anti-animation prejudice American audiences have against anime in general. I don't know a single person who said they hated it - But at the same time, I don't know more than two or three people who actually saw it.
The last movie I saw that I hated was "Superstar," and I got dragged to go see that. I'm an anime fan, I saw the movie twice... and while I won't say that I hated the movie, I hate the fact that they wasted the chance they had with a bad script, lousy voice sync, and bad market research.
Making a movie isn't art. Making a scene or playing a character is, but making a movie is a business, just like making an art gallery is.
Reformat, reinstall. (Score:2)
Re:Reformat, reinstall. (Score:2)
Re:Square is loosing... (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm just upset they're abandoning the installed FF fanbase in favor of a 'trendy' MMORPG. What made the series great was the story lines, characters, the single player experience.
Now instead of leveling up to track down Sephiroth or defeat the Ultimate Weapon, I get to have Jimmy McNutsack in his parents basement in Iowa call me a 'big gay fag homo'.
I swear to god, those things are just irc chatrooms with 3d avatars, and less intelligent conversation.
Re:Square is losing... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Square is loosing... (Score:2)
I would have rather seen another traditional FF game taking the spot of FF11. Another game like 9 would have been great. Oh well.
Re:Why won't they move on? (Score:3, Informative)
Bushido Blade
Einhander
Ehrgeiz
Vagrant Story
Xenogears
Parasite Eve
Chrono Trigger/Cross
Driving Emotion Type S
The Bouncer
Kingdom Hearts
I think that Square pumps out the quality non Final Fantasy titles, and you're just not paying attention.
Re:Why won't they move on? (Score:2)
I'm sorry, but youre wrong. Bushido Blade was amazing, and Einhander is the best sidescrolling space shooter ever
As for RPGs, FF8 sucked, bu FF9 and FFX were both very good, and very different (albiet not plot wise) from other games in the series. Squaresoft's other RPGs are also very good, and are typically completely different from each other. They often have a unique combination of the classic Square RPG with some action gaming added in. Vagrant Story and Parasite Eve are perfect examples.
And what's wrong with RPGs anyway? They happen to be my favorite type of game.
I predict that FFXI will be a failure
I personally agree about FFXI, but not for the reasons you mention. Online gaming just isn't as popular as all the hype. Most gamers like to play games alone or with friends that are there with them. The majority of gamers aren't the type you see in internet forums, they're at home playing EA's Madden 2002 with their buddies on the couch. I'll personally be avoiding it because online RPGs require you do dedicate WAY too much of your life to them to be any good at it, and I have other things I like to do besides play video games, and other games I like to play.
FFXI doesn't require the hard drive, and the PS2 network adapter and software are only $30. That's chepaer then what you need to buy to get online with any other console, including the Xbox with it's already builtin interface. I don't think that either of those two things are going to be a factor in FFXI acceptance.
Square was one of those companies that used to be cool. Now however, it's just producing sub-stanard games with revolting storylines who's sales are driven by the memory of what Square once was.
Sounds to me like somebody's making excuses and kicking themselves because they bought an Xbox instead of a PS2.
Re:Why won't they move on? (Score:2, Insightful)
Parasite Eve? I've had numerous hours playing, but more importantly, replaying the first of that series. As for the second one, it's still a good play.
FFT? Okay the name is the same, but the play is much different and welcome to replay.
There are also a couple of other RPG titles that I've yet to buy/play (Salsa(?) Frontier, etc).
So, I'd have to say that they put out more than just FF games and those ones are quite good.
Re:Why won't they move on? (Score:2)
???
Xenogears (great game, btw - looking forward to Xenosaga ep. 1 next year...) used a polygonal background with sprite characters animated on top of it for the exploration. The Gear sequences were fully polygonal, but seemed to use VERY simplified backgrounds. In fact, it seemed to be the exact opposite of the FF7 engine, which used polygonal characters over static (or fmv) backdrops.
Chrono Cross was all polygonal, IIRC (Can't seem to find my copy to verify this). Again, the backgrounds during combat were very simplified, but enginewise, that appears to be the only similarity I can find. (the other similarity between the two games being the exceptional music, by Yasunori Mitsuda, IIRC)
I can't speak for the file layout, though. =)