RF Generation.  The Classic and Modern Gaming Databases.RF Generation.  The Classic and Modern Gaming Databases.




Posted on Feb 4th 2025 at 05:37:17 AM by (slackur)
Posted under Final Fantasy

Ah, Final Fantasy.

After a long and, frankly, ridiculous series of confusing events, the Pixel Remaster compilation of the first six Final Fantasy games became available physically for Switch and PS4 for under forty bucks total.  (This was during the end of 2024, and the price has jumped up again since then.)  I will readily admit to some FOMO during the initial sold-out launch before it was later confirmed to be re-released for a cheaper price.  By the time it became more widely available I was comfortable waiting until a further sale. 

Why did I want the compilation?  It is kind of absurd, as we have in our collection possibly every other physical NA release of almost every game in the series.  SNES, PSP, PlayStation/2/3, GBA, DS, 360, PS4, PS5, etc.  We have the CD soundtracks to at least half of the games, several versions of most of the guides, and the Spirits Within and Advent Children movies.  We already have the ready ability to play all six of the first games in several ways.  Why on earth would we need another?

The short answer is that I just like the series!  The best (IV and VI in my opinion) are some of my favorite games, the middle tier are generally better than average RPGs, and even the least preferable often have some interesting ideas.  Some of my favorite characters, music, and story beats come from Final Fantasy games.  Having six games (with orchestrated soundtracks!) all on one disc/cartridge with a few extra bonuses and QoL improvements (although missing some added content from other releases) was enough to get me to bite, although as mentioned I definitely waited for a sale.

My history with Final Fantasy goes all the way back to the first game on the NES.  (I stil have my second CIB copy, although the poster is hanging up in our basement.)  I had already finished Dragon Warrior and a few C64 dungeon crawlers, and when Nintendo Power hyped this new release and even published a guide for it, I was pumped.  It didn't disappoint, although my thirteen-year-old brain would have been forever stuck without that Nintendo Power Strategy guide.  I grinded for hours and hours after school, determined to 100% the game.  I would put it down for other games and then pick it back up, but I often forgot where I was and just kept leveling my characters and wandering around.

And then, the Super Nintendo was announced.  I was simultaneously delighted and saddened; it looked amazing in magazines, but I was a poor kid and my parents had scrounged years before to get me the NES.  I had traded and hunted garage sales with chore money to build up the meager twenty NES carts I owned, and they would be my only possible method to acquire a new console.

A friend got his SNES and our friend group was amazed.  It sealed the deal; I was determined to find a way to get one.  In the back of a gaming magazine (Electronic Gaming Monthly, I think) were lists of dollar amounts FuncoLand offered for Nintendo games.  After some simple math, I found I could trade my NES and all of my games to get a shiny new SNES.  My parents would buy F-Zero so I had more to play than Super Mario World (which I had already completed at a friend's house long before I got my own copy.)

I got $14 for Final Fantasy.  I remember because I debated about letting it go, but there was no other way.  I tried to finish it but by then I just didn't have the time.  I reluctantly mailed off (!) my NES and all fourteen games.  The next few weeks felt excruciating, but one day the mail delivered the gaming console I still have to this day, yellow tint and all.  And I played Super Mario World and F-Zero for hours every day after school, loving every minute and scrounging to rent every title as it came in to our local store.

About a year later, I overheard a classmate discussing an epic narrative of dark knights and redemption, of chivalry and summoners, of dragoons and magic.  I literally thought they were discussing a movie, but I later found they were gushing over the epic story of a game of which I was only vaguely aware; Final Fantasy II for the Super Nintendo (actually IV, but that's a different story.)

I waited and waited until our local rental store got a copy, and then waited more as it was always checked out.  When I finally got to play it, I was amazed!  I fell in love with the story, I found the combat much more interesting and entertaining than the first Final Fantasy, and even my dad (who never had interest in any video game) commented about how much he enjoyed the music.  I had my progress reset a few times in-between rentals, but I never minded too much.  When I finally secured my copy and eventually saw the credits roll, it cemented itself as one of my most cherished gaming memories. 

By the time Final Fantasy III (actually VI) released on the SNES, my High School friends and I were racing to see who could get a copy and complete it first.  We swapped copies of SNES games back and forth to play through, including FFII, but this one we each wanted for ourselves.  It did not disappoint.  Once again the music, characters, story, and gameplay simply elevated the experience to a sublime epic.  To this day I still give both SNES Final Fantasy games equal billing as all-time personal favorites.  (Yes, there was also 'Mystic Quest,' but I consider that a spin-off.)

As the years went by and more Final Fantasy games came and went, I played most near the time of release.  Some I really liked, some far less so.  While personally those two SNES titles remained the height of the series, I've still liked the majority of the games and I think pretty much all of them were worth my time.

There are more Final Fantasy stories to regale, such as when my beloved wife surprised me with a new copy of Final Fantasy VIII on the same day I didn't tell her I went and bought a Dreamcast (we were realistically too broke to have bought either) and sleeping my way through Final Fantasy VII, but this is already getting away from where I wanted to go with this write-up.

I never did go back and finish the original Final Fantasy, even as I bought another copy to complete our NES collection.  I also wasn't import savvy and couldn't read Japanese, so I never played through the Famicom Final Fantasy II (which is completely different that the SNES game.)  I always intended to correct that, and though the GBA Dawn of Souls release would have been perfect I still hadn't gotten around to it.  Then the Pixel Remasters were announced, and I was determined to play through them.

I have to say, at my age and stage of life the Pixel Remasters are the ideal way to play these games.  The built in maps, the EXP and money boosters, the quality of life improvements such as retargeting after a monster dies, the absolutely gorgeous music, all work to give a 'seasoned' gamer like me the experience I want while respecting my time.  I was able to truly enjoy the original Final Fantasy and I was surprised at how it was simultaneously primitive and revolutionary for the time.  The story was simple but had more content than I remembered.  The flexibility of the party system made it fun to tinker.  I still liked the fantasy tropes lightly mixed with sci-fi.  It may have taken 35 years (gulp!) but I am very glad I 'finally' played through it.

Next up was Final Fantasy II, based off the original Famicom version.  I had always heard of this as the black sheep of early FF games, primarily due to the complete overhaul and changes to the traditional leveling system.  Perhaps due to the Pixel Remasters tweaking this system, I didn't find it more difficult, just different.  (I know this is at least in part due to the original penalizing stats while others increased, such as when casting enough spells a character's intelligence would go up but their strength would go down.  The Pixel Remaster version does away with such penalties.)  To my delight I enjoyed it completely!  Once again I was impressed with a much fuller and more detailed story, though still simple by later standards.  The music is as good as the rest of the series.  The characters, while set, are extremely flexible in their builds and less defined by roles.  Some of the puzzles and maps were very obtuse and the encounter rate is way over the top, although once again the Pixel Remaster comes through by allowing encounters to be turned on or off.  Overall, I came away quite satisfied by the time I saw the end credits.

I'm taking a break and working through the Ys Memoire: The Oath in Felghana remake/port, Ys being another series with which I have a long and colorful history.  It is serving as a fun palate cleanser before diving into the remake of the Famicom Final Fantasy III, the only other game in this compilation of which I have yet to experience.  (I played through the PlayStation port of Final Fantasy V upon the stateside release.)

Maybe you don't have a history with these early Final Fantasy games, and therefore they won't hold the same magic.  Maybe you are curious about 'classic' JRPGs and want to see where they came from.  Many a gamer these days started with Final Fantasy VII or even later, and these games represent a completely foreign experience.  What I can definitely say is, I'm very glad I picked up this compilation and 'finally' got to cross off a few on a backlog that started when I was a whole lot younger and had a lot more time on my hands...
Smiley





Posted on May 11th 2022 at 08:00:00 AM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, final fantasy, metal


So a Decisive Battle / Boss Theme cover from Final Fantasy VI was going to be an inevitability, I suppose. Definitely a track that I knew I would get to eventually, but for the longest time I didn't have any inspiration to do it. Then the inspiration hit me all of a sudden and I didn't wait to get started on this one. I hope you all enjoy it!



Posted on Mar 6th 2022 at 01:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, final fantasy


After a brief hiatus from working on new content for my channel, I finally made my return with Dark King, the final boss theme from Final Fantasy: Mystic Quest!  I know this game has its fair share of haters, but I quite enjoy the game for what it is, and everyone knows it has a rocking soundtrack! I hope you guys enjoy this one!



Posted on Feb 15th 2022 at 01:00:00 PM by (MetalFRO)
Posted under Final Fantasy, The Spirits Within, Squaresoft, movie review

[img width=251 height=377]https://vignette.wikia.nocookie.net/finalfantasy/images/4/4a/FFTSWPoster.jpg/revision/latest?cb=20130405010722[/img]

Summer 2001 was an interesting time for me. I had moved out of my home state to the East Coast and was trying something new in the work arena. Previous jobs had come and gone, and nothing really stuck, so rather than continue to flounder, I thought I would change my course. I quickly found out that my newly chosen path was a huge mistake, and within just a few short months, I would move back to my home state and get back on the career path I started on, albeit in a different direction. But for a few months in the middle of 2001, I lived about 45 minutes from the ocean, and had a fairly eye-opening experience learning about the differences between small town midwestern life and what life was like in the south.

During my stint on the coast, I spent a fair amount of time on my off days looking for entertainment. Whether it was browsing music shops, used video game stores, pawn shops, etc., I found ways to occupy my time when I wasn't working. And of course, there were also movie theaters. One of the more highly anticipated releases the summer of 2001 was Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, which was to be the debut film from Square Pictures. Having played and enjoyed Final Fantasy VII just a year or so prior, I was looking forward to the movie. I thought the idea of using full computer animation for everything was novel at the time and assumed the storytellers at Square had a good chance of coming up with a good story.


Continue reading In Defense Of...Final Fantasy - The Spirits Within



Posted on Feb 7th 2022 at 01:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, final fantasy, acoustic


Well, it's been a while since I've done one of these! I was replaying Final Fantasy VII recently, and this track really stood out to me when it played in the game. I've heard it plenty of times while listening to the soundtrack on its own, but something about hearing it in the context of the game really made it hit that much harder. On the Other Side of the Mountain is already a pretty straightforward acoustic piece, so my cover is just a 1:1 recreation. Nothing fancy, no frills, just a quick playthrough of a nice tune. A little bit different from my usual metal covers, but I hope you all enjoy this one just the same!



Posted on Jan 13th 2022 at 01:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, metal, final fantasy


Truth be told, I've only dabbled in Final Fantasy XIV a bit, and I'm not sure if I actually heard this theme in the game or not. But when Torn From the Heavens came up as an 8BBG track, I was really intrigued and was looking forward to working on it. I was working on my recently posted Those Who Fight cover at the same time as this one, so that's where most of my creative energy went during that time, so this ended up being pretty much a simple recreation of the original track. Nonetheless, I still think this cover turned out pretty decent, and I hope you all enjoy it!



Posted on Dec 24th 2021 at 01:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, final fantasy, metal


Final Fantasy VII's main battle theme Those Who Fight has always been one of my favorite tracks in all of VGM and was one of the main tracks I wanted to cover when I started my channel. I purposely held off on doing it though because I didn't think I could do it justice at the time and wasn't confident that I would be able to make the cover I really wanted to make until I had some experience under my belt. So fast forward about a year and half later, I've improved and somewhat learned the ropes with making these covers, and I finally feel like I've 'found my sound' if that makes sense. The time finally felt right to create my own interpretation of a very important piece of music. Was it worth the wait? Yes, it was. I can confidently say that I made the cover that I always wanted to make. I still don't consider it perfect, but after delaying it and working on it for an extra week, I knew I would never be 100% satisfied with it. It's time to call it done and move on. It's extremely gratifying for all the ideas I had swirling around in my head for the last couple of years to finally come to fruition, and I really hope you all enjoy this one as much as I enjoyed making it!



Posted on Oct 23rd 2021 at 12:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, final fantasy, sephiroth, metal


I've been wanting to get around to doing some full metal covers from Final Fantasy VII since I started my channel, and I finally felt like the time was right to start making them. FF7 has probably my favorite soundtrack from any game ever, so I really wanted to have some experience under my belt before tackling anything from it. Birth of a God plays during the Bizarro Sephiroth fight at the end of the game, and it's a really awesome track that I've always enjoyed. Expect to see more FF7 covers over the next few months!



Posted on Sep 9th 2021 at 12:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, final fantasy


I've been itching to get back to Final Fantasy for a while, and I've had an arrangement of this track sitting around for a couple of months, so the time was finally right to put my spin on this one! This is a track I've had my eye on covering since my Final Fantasy IV Zeromus cover from about five months ago. The Zeromus cover has always been my favorite, and, with both tracks being pretty similar, it just seemed inevitable that I would get around to this one eventually. I hope you all enjoy it!



Posted on Apr 8th 2021 at 12:00:00 PM by (Disposed Hero)
Posted under VGM, cover, metal, final fantasy


My March started out kind of rough with some failed arrangements that never quite came to fruition. About midway through the month, I set those other projects to the side indefinitely and started fresh on this piece, and the inspiration hit me pretty hard and resulted in what I think is my best cover yet. Final Fantasy IV is a very important game from my childhood as it is to my recollection the first RPG I ever actually finished, and it is still an all-time favorite of mine to this day. The game and of course its music composed by none other than Nobuo Uematsu is full of nostalgia for me, so I was glad to finally get around to this one. Working on Final Fantasy music is always very gratifying for me, so expect to see more in the coming months!



Posted on Apr 2nd 2020 at 04:00:00 AM by (Crabmaster2000)
Posted under Maps and Manuals, RPGs, Final Fantasy, NES

[img width=700 height=525]https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49725455167_2064b5756b_k.jpg[/img]


This year has been a good year for me in regards to making progress on beating my NES library. In January and February, I was able to pump out some serious completion numbers. For the first couple weeks of March, I was able to tackle a few games from my sublist of games that I anticipated to be the hardest ones for me to complete. Before all this COVID-19 stuff, I planned to continue putting time into these challenging titles specifically. Things are stressful enough at the moment, so I decided to change my tactics and go with some comfort food instead. My stress reducer of choice was the original Final Fantasy. Now I've beaten this game before, but not before I started keeping records and recording my plays.


Continue reading Maps & Manuals & Self-Isolation



Posted on Nov 1st 2019 at 04:00:00 AM by (Crabmaster2000)
Posted under NES Challenge, Nintendo, Mario, Ninja Gaiden, Kirby, Donkey Kong, Final Fantasy, Dragon Warrior, Community, Challenge

[img width=700 height=393]https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/48988536653_f2720338a5_o.jpg[/img]


The RF Generation community of collectors and players has committed themselves to demolishing the entire licensed NES library in the year 2019. Is that even possible you say, with your help it totally is!! Check out the RFGen 2019 NES Challenge thread to see how to join in at anytime throughout the year. There is plenty of opportunity to participate regardless of your skill level, favorite style of game or the amount of time you have to invest. Come over and play with us here:

http://www.rfgeneration.c...m/index.php?topic=18893.0

With the year closing in all around us we've had a slight surge of renewed interest in the NES Challenge with a few members putting in some last minute efforts, come old players reappearing and a couple new names added to the scoreboard. We've still got a ways to go, but as of this writing we have collectively destroyed 492 game for the Nintendo Entertainment System in 2019.......which is pretty impressive, but still short of our goal of the entire North American licensed library. Click that link above and take a look at our remaining list of games and jump in and lend a hand. Still a surprising amount of variety to play so no excuses in these last two months!!!



Posted on Apr 4th 2018 at 12:00:00 PM by (zophar53)
Posted under RF Cinema, Final Fantasy VII Advent Children, Final Fantasy, movies, discussion

[img width=300 height=450]https://i.imgur.com/KqlAb2t.jpg[/img]

Final Fantasy VII was released over 20 years ago, but to many it's still heralded as one of the greatest RPGs of all time. Personally, I feel the sacred status some have heaped upon it is a bit overblown, but I won't deny having a big ole soft spot for it. For its time, it was an incredible experience and Square Enix (then Squaresoft) exploited its popularity with spin-off games and merchandise. And despite nearly bankrupting itself with the unmitigated disaster that was Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within, the Japanese developer saw fit to make another movie, this time based in the world of Midgar and featuring Cloud Strife, and everyone's favorite villian with an absurdly, impractically long sword. So how does Advent Children hold up? Let's find out together.


Continue reading RF Cinema: Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children



Posted on Sep 17th 2017 at 12:00:00 PM by (bombatomba)
Posted under bury the hatchet, FF7, Final Fantasy VII, FFVII, Final Fantasy, nostalgia

[img width=700 height=393]http://i67.tinypic.com/35lu3xu.jpg[/img]

Now that I'm forty, and being that it is the dog days of summer, it's about time I managed to accomplish something.  I'm sure I did something this year, but my summer list seems a little heavy.  Hmm.  Still haven't fixed the fence.  And all those branches in my backyard...  are still attached to that bush for some reason.  Well, I've managed to grow up some, I guess.  Maybe.  Gosh, this is really depressing.

Well, I did manage to do something this year; a certain thing that has dogged my steps for half my life now; a game I had a beef with from way back in 1997.  But I was ready and attacked it full force, summons and limit breaks a blazin', and after quite a few gaming sessions I finally finished Final Fantasy VII.

Happy Birthday to me.



Continue reading Final Fantasy VII, Consider This Thy Fork!



Posted on Mar 22nd 2017 at 12:00:00 PM by (SirPsycho)
Posted under Music, konami, arcade, squaresoft, final fantasy, black mages, nobuo uematsu


Kenichiro Fukui is a composer that few likely know off the top of their head. He began his career as a member of the Konami Kukeiha Club in 1990 under the moniker "Funiki Fukui". The first game he worked on was Sunset Riders in 1991, but he only did the sound effects for the game. His first full composition job was Konami's light gun arcade game Lethal Enforcers. He worked on a few more arcade games at Konami, including 1992's GI Joe with Tsutomi Ogura and 1993's Violent Storm with Seiichi Fukami.


Continue reading Composer Compendium: Kenichiro Fukui


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                               
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