Final Fantasy XIII User Review
FFXIII's fast-paced battle system is just what the series needed.
- Posted Sep 20, 2012 3:36 pm GMT
- Difficulty:
- Easy
- Time Spent:
- 40 to 100 Hours
- The Bottom Line:
- "Solid"
Reactions to the release of Final Fantasy XIII were nearly identical to the consumer's attitude toward the music industry these days. As an avid fan of contemporary music, I've noticed much backlash on the message boards and YouTube comments towards bands that evolve their sound with their newest album. Over and over again, anonymous people complain that a band's music has remained the same for too long, only to act completely offended when any new music strays even slightly from their previous sound. This hypocrisy rears its ugly head again and again in almost every conversation about Final Fantasy XIII.
First revealed at E3 2006, Square Enix's newest incarnation in its revered franchise aims to return to its roots. After the backlash toward Final Fantasy XII, Square knew it needed to return to form, and return to form it did. However, the formula also received some radical changes.
Twelve was criticized because the battle system was cumbersome, the world was vast and empty, and the story comprised a shallow Star Wars rewrite. These aspects are what Square focused on when developing Thirteen. How does it compare? "Streamlined" sums it up pretty well. Final Fantasy XIII takes a more traditional approach to the series, yet makes some much needed changes in order to update the franchise for our fast-paced, twenty-first century world. Battles are more fluid, traversing the world is easier, and the pacing of the story is quicker.
Thirteen introduces the Paradigm Shift system, which allows classic Final Fantasy jobs to be changed on the fly during battle. Every battle requires a degree of planning revolving around switching to different Paradigm sets at a moment's notice. The battles are tough, and so a retry system has been implemented which resets game overs to right before the previous battle. This makes developing tactics for each battle convenient and exciting.
The next two aspects of the game, the world and story, go hand in hand. The game progresses in a heavily linear fashion, with much of the game's map relegated to perfectly straight lines. This and the excision of traditional towns, removes a large chunk of the exploration factor expected from a JRPG. However, because the progression of the game is more fluid, there is more focus on the story. Beautiful, fully animated cutscenes and exchanges of dialog lay at the end of almost every stretch of land.
Heavy emphasis is put on the back story and current goings-on of the gigantic world these characters live in. Flashback scenes detailing how these characters' fates intertwine flesh out the plot. The amount of information being flung at the player can be overwhelming sometimes, though. The characters represent typical Japanese archetypes, but most people will still find themselves rooting for the good guys.
Final Fantasy XIII represents a huge risk for Square Enix. How were they supposed to completely overhaul their trusted formula again, while still being more traditional than their last game? Well, this is how, and they've done a great job. On paper, Final Fantasy XIII fixes every problem that the gaming community had with Twelve: the battle system, the world, the story, everything. For some people Thirteen isn't good enough. It's good enough for me.
First revealed at E3 2006, Square Enix's newest incarnation in its revered franchise aims to return to its roots. After the backlash toward Final Fantasy XII, Square knew it needed to return to form, and return to form it did. However, the formula also received some radical changes.
Twelve was criticized because the battle system was cumbersome, the world was vast and empty, and the story comprised a shallow Star Wars rewrite. These aspects are what Square focused on when developing Thirteen. How does it compare? "Streamlined" sums it up pretty well. Final Fantasy XIII takes a more traditional approach to the series, yet makes some much needed changes in order to update the franchise for our fast-paced, twenty-first century world. Battles are more fluid, traversing the world is easier, and the pacing of the story is quicker.
Thirteen introduces the Paradigm Shift system, which allows classic Final Fantasy jobs to be changed on the fly during battle. Every battle requires a degree of planning revolving around switching to different Paradigm sets at a moment's notice. The battles are tough, and so a retry system has been implemented which resets game overs to right before the previous battle. This makes developing tactics for each battle convenient and exciting.
The next two aspects of the game, the world and story, go hand in hand. The game progresses in a heavily linear fashion, with much of the game's map relegated to perfectly straight lines. This and the excision of traditional towns, removes a large chunk of the exploration factor expected from a JRPG. However, because the progression of the game is more fluid, there is more focus on the story. Beautiful, fully animated cutscenes and exchanges of dialog lay at the end of almost every stretch of land.
Heavy emphasis is put on the back story and current goings-on of the gigantic world these characters live in. Flashback scenes detailing how these characters' fates intertwine flesh out the plot. The amount of information being flung at the player can be overwhelming sometimes, though. The characters represent typical Japanese archetypes, but most people will still find themselves rooting for the good guys.
Final Fantasy XIII represents a huge risk for Square Enix. How were they supposed to completely overhaul their trusted formula again, while still being more traditional than their last game? Well, this is how, and they've done a great job. On paper, Final Fantasy XIII fixes every problem that the gaming community had with Twelve: the battle system, the world, the story, everything. For some people Thirteen isn't good enough. It's good enough for me.
More User Reviews
A noticeable change from the previous Final Fantasy games which risks alienating its core audience.
Review Stats:- 1 user agrees with this review
- Posted Jan 19, 2013 4:25 pm GMT
Final Fantasy, One game you can always embarass your friends by talking about in public
Review Stats:- Posted Jan 12, 2013 4:22 am GMT
I was excited to play Final Fantasy XIII, only to be severely disappointed.
Review Stats:- 1 user agrees with this review
- Posted Dec 12, 2012 10:58 am GMT
This one is my favourite of all, very linear but visuals and story and combat system is just amazing. Worth Playing
Review Stats:- Posted Oct 7, 2012 11:19 pm GMT
A bland and very uninspired game. A stain on the Final Fantasy name, FF13 is not just a bad FF, it's a bad game period.
Review Stats:- 4 out of 8 users agree with this review
- Posted Oct 1, 2012 6:49 pm GMT
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