The History of Final Fantasy 74
Nerezza writes "A new site, Oscuro Destiny, has put up its first feature! Final Fantasy is a feature article series from an up and coming site." Includes info on the history of Squeenix and a look at the MMOG.
My Final Fantasy? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:GB (Score:5, Informative)
FF Adventure was part of Seiken Densetsu
Technically, they're not part of FF, since Nintendo had Square slap FF on them so they'd sell better through name recognition.
Re:GB (Score:1)
Re:GB (Score:2, Interesting)
mods, what the heck, funny??
this is serious! ^_^
i remember being about 8 and playing ffa1
for the gameboy over a 10 hour long cartrip..
at the end of this game, YOU KILL GOD.
(now i'm way more accustomed to asian thought,
but at 8, i wondered if i was going to hell
for beating this game... ^^)
still, those gameboy ffa's were so good,
i could remember wanting to go back and
play again just to 'see' friends from
back in the storyline.
hey, c'mon, i was little.
Re:GB (Score:1)
Re:GB (Score:1)
Well, you kill the god in the first game, but in the sequel, the god will kill you. In the third part, the killed ones will proclaim you a god, though, so it's kind of a win-win situation anyway, considering the greater story arc.
Or something along those lines. =)
Squeenix? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Squeenix? (Score:1)
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:2, Funny)
Every time one of those games game out, we'd be overwhelmed with FF-geeks. And look out if/when the release date was pushed back. You'd think you'd just told them their mother died. For some of the geeks, I wondered if that was worse.
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:1)
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:1)
To quote that article that you stated, about one of those games, King's Field, they had to say this: "It's sad to say, but this is Square's worst US release." That came one year before the release of Final Fantasy
While Rad Racer and 3-D Worldrunner were popular, they came three years before Final Fantasy was released. So it is
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:2)
so yes. they were released at the same time. the fears of bankruptcy have never been corroborated by anyone in Square. it's simply hearsay, and further proof that this "article" wasn't reasearched very well.
Re:_Final_ Fantasy? (Score:2)
Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:1)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:2)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:1)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:2)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:1)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:2)
Re:Final Fantasy Tactics (Score:1)
The original feature concept was to follow the series numbers, as opposed to the overall "theme", or canon as you put it. Also, FFXII was removed from the feature after it was touched on in the Future of FF section.
Re:Crap. (Score:1)
Re:Crap. (Score:2)
sorry. your piece was fluff. poorly-researched, and poorly-written. it's nothing personal. though I would suggest actually playing every Final Fantasy before trying to publish some sort of definitive history.
I agree (Score:1)
You'd think there would be 5 or 10 pages per game with some screenshots, quotes, etc..
Re:I agree (Score:1)
Re:I agree (Score:2)
Re:I agree (Score:1)
An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
This article seems to be nothing more than a re-wording of that piece; am I missing something?
Also, please note the difference between "its" (possessive) and "it's". The article is full of all sorts of apostrophe wizardry.
I'm not saying this to disparage the piece, only to let the author (who has already posted in this story) know about it. Even though I'm not a fan of the outcome, as a fan of the
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:2)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
After reading through the entire piece, I stand corrected. The similarities between the Gamespot feature and this one lie only on the "History of Square-Enix" page.
Overall it is an interesting read. It comes across a bit like a series of fan reviews, but on the whole they are fairly well-written. I would have liked a bit more depth in the Final Fantasy 1, 2 and 3 sections, but that's only d
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:2)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:2)
So are "its" and "it's", although you'd seem to prefer to just write them off as "errors".
Write like an amateur, and be treated like one.
As someone who ran a little video game news & reviews site for a number of years, I can tell you that professionalism is everything. We were just silly high-school kids, but because we wrote and presented ourselves as professionals, we were inundated with thousands of dollars of games and hardware for
Re:An interesting article, but it has been done. (Score:1)
They should add Fable... (Score:2)
Re:They should add Fable... (Score:1)
Re:They should add Fable... (Score:1)
Re:They should add Fable... (Score:2)
Re:They should add Fable... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not a very detailed look into FFXI at all.... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Not a very detailed look into FFXI at all.... (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Very poor article. (Score:3, Interesting)
It is painfully obvious that Chris St. Pierre hasn't actually played the first three games of the series. normally, this wouldn't be something I'd hold against someone, but one would expect that someone who is writing a history of a certain topic would actually be fairly well-versed in the subject matter.
the reason the above gripe is so important, is because the author starts making more assumptions on the series based on his lack of knowledge ("Some say it resembled an early Final Fantasy V"). to anyone that has actually played the first three games (all fully translated by various romhacking groups), this is a direct assault on their intelligence.
Later sections tend to fluctuate between downright amateurish and passable, but all read like high school essays. Nobody cares about the author's personal experiences with the games. What's worse, in later articles, many of the authors start openly speculating on the motives of Squaresoft's development team, while trying to pass these comments off as fact.
Minus numerous factual errors (Uematsu stopped being the primary composer near the end of FF8, not X2 as one author speculated), and largely sub-par writing styles, it's obvious that the authors actually care for the series. But would it have hurt them to spend at least an hour researching before writing something that's supposed to be a big draw on their site?
if this lack of discipline is what I am to expect with the rest of the site, I don't think I'll ever be going back. and I'm pretty sure I'm not the only one.
Re:Very poor article. (Score:1)
Re:Very poor article. (WITH LINE BREAKS) (Score:1)
Hmm...this is a hard one to reply to...not because I have to take up a defensive position, but because it was the one of the ONLY responses so far to provide any sort of criticism worth reading, so I appreciate it.
One important thing to note is the nature in which the feature was written. It was an undertaking that in no doubt had the standards set high. After all, it IS Final Fantasy we're talking ab
Re:Very poor article. (WITH LINE BREAKS) (Score:2)
I guess a large part of this was my fault, as I had assumed from the
Re:Very poor article. (WITH LINE BREAKS) (Score:1)
No worries though, I'm glad you've pointed all these things out, and hope that you can give us another chance, if it's at least quick glances now and then to see how we're doing.
A pity (Score:4, Interesting)
But this article was so bad as to be painful at times. First of all, if you're going to produce something of this length, PLEASE get somebody intelligent and literate to proof-read it before you post it. I'm not just referring to some of the obvious spelling and grammar errors in there, but also to the fact that it read like it was written by a bunch of 14 year old fanboys. Yes, I love the series as well, but you don't have to write every section of the article as though it's an advert for the game in question. Tone down the gushing a bit and turn up the actual content. You're not actually trying to make a profit off sales of the games, so you don't need to come over like an official advert.
But please, please, don't then go and spoil the plot to pretty much every game in the series. Final Fantasy games live or die by their plots and giving away the whole thing isn't going to convince anybody to go out and play it. By all means sketch out the background to it, giving a bit of detail about the world, the protagonists and the villains. What we don't need is a breakdown of who does what to who and when. If we want to know that, we'll go play the game.
Also, if you're going to write an article like this, try to actually include some content that the audience isn't likely to already know. Most Final Fantasy fans, even very casual ones, will know the main features of each game in the series. If you want us to read though something that long, you need to do a bit of research and tell us something we might not know. Maybe talk a bit about the public and critical receptions that each game received, compare the numbers of copies they sold with their main competitors or talk a bit about the inspirations for and motifs within each of the games. This information is all out there; if you want us to read and enjoy your article, go find it. Moreover, as a number of other comments have already pointed out, for the love of god, make sure you get your facts right and keep fact separate from opinion.
Finally, where was all the missing stuff? No mention of Final Fantasy Tactics, Crystal Chronicles or Kingdom Hearts? It's a bit hard to see how you can do a complete history of the series withot touching on these. Sure, none of them appeal to quite the same audience as the "numbered" Final Fantasy games, but Square has a habit of using them to test ideas that later appear in the main series.
Re:A pity (Score:1)
Click here for my earlier response. [slashdot.org]
As for the missing FF's, the point of the article was to describe the numbered series, not the extras. As I mentioned in the link above, The History of Final Fantasy is NOT the title of this feature, and should not have been the title of this post.
Re:A pity (Score:1)
First off, I'd like to point out that I did work on one of the pieces of the whole article. However, I
Re:A pity (Score:1)
Re:A pity (Score:1)
There are some "character advancements" surrounding some of Square's characters, so it may be worth mentioning. Yes, I know this piece was directed at the numerical FF games; I'm just defending the grandparent. In a couple of lines for example, Cloud's saga is completely re-opened.
Correcting the headline: (Score:2)
I'm sorry to be so negative, but it kind of rubs me the wrong way that the submitter is a bit less than forthcoming about the fact that he is the webmaster of said site. Slashdot at its best feels like a community of like-minded souls sharing links and news, not promoting their own fan sites.
Give the man some credit (Score:2, Insightful)
He invented moogles, for chrissake!
Regardless of the other qualities of the feature, I have a question; Where is Yoshitaka Amano? While Nabuo gets extensive mention and a bio, I don't think I saw Amano's name more than