FINAL FANTASY V PIXEL REMASTER: Fantasies Revisited
FINAL FANTASY V was once a white whale for American JRPG fans. Can this rerelease live up to the game’s decades of hype?
FINAL FANTASY V was once a white whale for American JRPG fans. Can this rerelease live up to the game’s decades of hype?
FINAL FANTASY MYSTIC QUEST tried to simplify the JRPG for American console gamers. Instead, it made a fascinating failure.
FINAL FANTASY IV, initially releasted state-side as FINAL FANTASY II, is the series’ first truly great game. And it holds up beautifully.
FINAL FANTASY ADVENTURE marks a surprisingly strong departure from the series’ JRPG roots with a ZELDA-inspired adventure game.
Final Fantasy III didn’t come out in America until years later, which is unfortunate, because it’s a legitimately excellent JRPG even today.
THE FINAL FANTASY LEGEND, an experimental 1989 GameBoy JRPG, is both a fascinating misstep and the first of many FINAL FANTASY tie-in games.
Final Fantasy II is not well liked. In nearly every list I can find ranking the Final Fantasy games, Final Fantasy II sits square at the bottom. Tellingly, for many American fans, Final Fantasy II doesn’t even mean Final Fantasy II; it means Final Fantasy IV, released in America as …
Final Fantasy I’s Pixel Remaster is an approachable way to play an iconic game. How does the game itself hold up, 35 years later?
Voice of Cards: The Isle Dragon Roars is a throwback JRPG that looks fantastic but plays a little too conservatively to warrant interest.
It took years, but the long-awaited Final Fantasy VII Remake has arrived. It isn’t at all what we expected, but it may be exactly what the franchise needs to recapture that old magic.