


How dare you devalue FFV like this?
Also probably IV more strongly in theory, but that game didn't exactly know where to put its dramatic stakes, so none of the party deaths/grievous injuries felt like they did much.


I mean, I said “arguably better plots of its peers”, as in the peers are/were (arguably) better.
Though let’s be real, early 8/16 bit FFs… as much as I loved them, were and are nerd games. Lotta people who love FF likely never even touched those games. 7 or 10 being big entry points for people in their 30s/40s now.
FF7 was a first when RPGs were “cool” for the average joe gamer, and the plot helped. Unlike 8 which was a lotta wtf,omg,bbq.
Last edited by kaynide; 04-11-2024 at 07:48 PM.





This is hilarious, because gaming really didn't hit the mainstream until about 2006/7. FF7 and the entries on PS1 were still "nerd" games by far. They just reached outside of the target demographic due to the sheer scale of their marketing (mainly 7's worldwide marketing, a first for the series).
Also, you're a nerd on an MMO forum. Nerdiness went mainstream around the same time gaming did, maybe a little later, and it's because of the reach of the internet.
Gaming itself is a nerd hobby started by nerds, originally for nerds. Society viewed gaming as for nerds and children, largely, until again... the mid 00s. And you still see a lot of people in more conservative or old folks circles express that.
What you're actually perceiving is the first big schism in the Final Fantasy series' fanbase where VII brought in a lot of people to the series(again because of the way it was marketed), and that new fanbase running rampant over and against the older one. Because it's an ongoing series that has no end in sight there's a different entry point for everyone that opts into it, it has one of these schisms since VII every 3~4 entries now.
There are people in their 20s now who started with FFXIII, for instance, and you can find them droning on about how awesome Lightning actually is, and pulling stuff from XIII-3's story trying to pedestal her as the strongest person in all of Final Fantasy lore etc.
Similarly there are people in their 30s who started with X, and have not played anything in the series before that.
This doesn't make them not nerds, it just means there wasn't something that drew them into the series before they found the entry that they started with, and in these cases, this would be their parents or older siblings introducing those games to them as children.
People in their mid 30s and older really did get to start with the beginnings of the series, and their lifelong fan status means something to a lot of them. The newer or younger fans resent that.
When they hear the older fans talk about the older games, they get defensive. No one wants to hear that they aren't a real fan of a series, even if they aren't, and so you see all of the clashes. It's hilariously all varying flavors of nerd rage. It's just Nu Nerds vs. the old guard at this point.
And that's to say nothing of the Final Fantasy fans who reject the MMOs.
"Average Joe Gamer" is out playing some other series, likely first person shooters or Candy Crush.
Last edited by Vyrerus; 04-12-2024 at 09:26 PM.
(Signature portrait by Amaipetisu)
"I thought that my invincible power would hold the world captive, leaving me in a freedom undisturbed. Thus night and day I worked at the chain with huge fires and cruel hard strokes. When at last the work was done and the links were complete and unbreakable, I found that it held me in its grip." - Rabindranath Tagore
Kind of, sort of, but not really. The reason gaming became "mainstream" is it became clear that the people who grew up playing games from the 8-bit and 16-bit eras weren't going to leave the hobby. But like, Final Fantasy VII still 'big' for it's time period. To relate it to music the music of the era... It wasn't Green Day levels but it was absolutely Rancid levels.This is hilarious, because gaming really didn't hit the mainstream until about 2006/7. FF7 and the entries on PS1 were still "nerd" games by far. They just reached outside of the target demographic due to the sheer scale of their marketing (mainly 7's worldwide marketing, a first for the series).



Reminder that FFX-2 got advertised on Smackdown. Like, not just 'ad playing in the break', they actually gave it a spot during the broadcast. They didn't do that for 'nerd stuff'.Kind of, sort of, but not really. The reason gaming became "mainstream" is it became clear that the people who grew up playing games from the 8-bit and 16-bit eras weren't going to leave the hobby. But like, Final Fantasy VII still 'big' for it's time period. To relate it to music the music of the era... It wasn't Green Day levels but it was absolutely Rancid levels.
Vyrerus is actually pretty damn wrong on this while being convinced he's right. Gaming was 'mainstream' since somewhere in the NES era, the thing that changed in the next few generations was the presumed core age group of the audience. NES was presumed to be a children's toy, the SNES/Megadrive era was when you started seeing teenagers being factored in (mostly thanks to arcade hits crossing over, since arcades themselves skewed to the teens at the time), the Playstation 1 and 2 explicitly aimed at that teenage demographic--although the PS2 got pretty far by just telling the family 'hey, we're a DVD player'. It wasn't until the early HD era that the presumed audience of games started including adults, and even then, it was definitely the 'college frat guy' crowd for a while there, defining stuff like early WoW and Xbox Live; after that point, it was actually Nintendo that found the way out of that by appealing to much more casual demographics. Gaming was always considered 'mainstream', it just wasn't always considered 'adult'.
And of course, since we're talking about a Japanese franchise we should consider that Japan had a whole other thing going there, gaming always had an eye for the adults there. The fitness aids and puzzle games that we associated with Nintendo's 'Wii Fit era' was there since the Famicom over there, and one of the core prongs of the audience for the Game Boy was the salaryman on a train commute. We as the international audience were completely oblivious to the mountain of Mahjong games that hit pretty much every platform over there, which hit solely because a core part of the audience was the exact kind of guy that regularly played Mahjong.
Last edited by Cleretic; 05-04-2024 at 10:56 AM.
Did FF 5 mechanically change when that happened though? Because giving you Relm with Galuf's exact job levels and everything kind of mechanically disconnected that death.



It actually does, but in fairly minor ways. Galuf and Krile's base stat spreads are different; Galuf's got the lowest Agility but highest Stamina in the game, so he'll by default wind up slower but with more HP. Meanwhile Krile's actually the fastest but has the lowest stamina. Krile's also tied for the lowest base Strength, and is very nearly tied for base Magic, both times competing with Lenna; meanwhile, Galuf's other stats are both one point off from Bartz's. (Surprisingly, Faris is the one barreling right down the middle on very stat, she's always second or third.)
You don't notice that because jobs and equipment have much more noticeable and controllable impacts, you'd probably only see the differences right at the start, but they are there. If you're really going min-max on FFV, you would be giving Galuf and Krile different jobs.
Last edited by Cleretic; 05-14-2024 at 11:41 AM.
|
|
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
Cookie Policy
This website uses cookies. If you do not wish us to set cookies on your device, please do not use the website. Please read the Square Enix cookies policy for more information. Your use of the website is also subject to the terms in the Square Enix website terms of use and privacy policy and by using the website you are accepting those terms. The Square Enix terms of use, privacy policy and cookies policy can also be found through links at the bottom of the page.

Reply With Quote



