2499: One Week to Go

Until what, you ask? Until Final Fantasy XV, of course.

Regular readers will know that I don’t often get hyped up about big-budget releases, but ever since I played Final Fantasy VII for the first time back in my schooldays, the mainline Final Fantasy series has been something that I cannot — will not — miss out on. And the signs are good for XV to be an incredible installment.

Here’s a new trailer if you’re not sure what the fuss is about:

There are so many things I like about this trailer, and what it promises from the full game.

Broadly speaking, I really like the “fantasy based on reality” idea that appears to have been the main impetus behind its design. Final Fantasy XV’s game world, Eos, is based on the modern age in a believable manner — right down to your party sometimes spending downtime with their heads stuck in their respective smartphones rather than talking to one another — but incorporates classic Final Fantasy material in amongst all that. I’m a big fan of this idea; I love the concept of “supernatural crazy things happen in a world that is like ours”, so I’m very much on board with Final Fantasy XV’s overall setting.

One of the things I’m most interested in is the small playable cast, which consists of just four members plus occasional guests. This is one of the smallest playable casts in Final Fantasy history, though the last time the party was this small (FFI and FFIII; you could perhaps make the argument for FFV too) the technology wasn’t really there to do anything interesting with characterisation. (EDIT: descarte25 quite rightly pointed out in the comments that we’ve also seen small casts in X-2, XIII-2 and Lightning Returns.) Now, though, we have incredibly realistic character models doing believable things in a plausible fantasy world. And the small cast size means that everyone is going to get some exploration; no-one is going to feel like a “bonus party member” who is little more than a walking collection of stats and abilities.

It’s an interesting bunch of characters, too. Noct, while looking like one of the most emo teenagers in the entire history of the series — which is saying something in a series that features Squall Leonhart — has already shown himself across a couple of demos and an anime series to be a likeable, interesting and anything but morose protagonist with plenty of depth to his character. The fact that it is his story rather than an unlikely group of heroes who just happen to stumble into their destiny to save the world puts an interesting twist on the series’ prior formula. Noct starts the game as someone unique and special, though perhaps doesn’t quite know what to do with his status, and thus relies on his friends to help him through his journey.

One of the key themes of the game as a whole is intended to be the bonds of brotherhood between the four characters in the main cast. They grew up together, fight together and live together on the road as Noct continues his journey; although the circumstances of each of them meeting, as depicted in the Brotherhood anime, were anything but natural — not least because Noct is a prince — it’s clear that their mutual relationships are going to develop and deepen over the course of the adventure. The best RPGs convey a clear sense of party members being true companions, closer than family, and if Final Fantasy XV pulls it off correctly, it’s going to be a memorable ensemble cast for sure.

Outside of the story, there are a bunch of gameplay systems I’m looking forward to, too. The Ascension system looks like an intriguingly deep means of developing the four characters’ abilities, for one, and the magic system, where you mix elemental energy with other items to produce all manner of different effects, looks particularly fascinating. Magic is also interesting in that it has an impact on the environment around you, too; fling a Fire spell and the surroundings will burn and become scorched; fling a Blizzard spell and everything will become coated in frost. This is not something that is normally acknowledged in role-playing games, so I’m interested to see how it fits in here.

There look to be a wide variety of sidequests along the way, too, including Final Fantasy XII-style hunts. I’ll be interested to see how deep these sidequests are; technically the Behemoth hunt in the Episode Duscae demo was a sidequest, and that had a ton of things to do along the way, including investigating the area, tracking the beast to its lair and devising a spectacular strategy to deal with it — including abilities for each character that were unique to that fight rather than simple hack and slash. While I’m not counting on all sidequests being that interesting, the designers have claimed that they’ve made an attempt for there not to be “filler” content (“bring me 50 pelts from the monsters on the plains!”) and so hopefully this stuff will be worth doing. It remains to be seen how well they achieve this.

That’s probably enough enthusing for now, because you can bet there’ll be plenty more to come next week once the game’s actually in my PS4. Here’s an hour-long video of some of the music from the game.

 


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