The History of Final Fantasy

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•The Main Final Fantasies
  •Final Fantasy
   Final Fantasy II
   Final Fantasy III
   Final Fantasy IV
   Final Fantasy V
   Final Fantasy VI
   Final Fantasy Anthology
   Final Fantasy VII
   Final Fantasy VIII
   Final Fantasy IX
   Final Fantasy X
   Final Fantasy XI
   Final Fantasy Series
   Staff Spotlight
 Related Final Fantasies
 Portable Final Fantasies
 Related Games
 Related Links
The Villains
Foremost amongst Final Fantasy's villains are the Four Fiends. Lich is the undead and skeletal Fiend of the Earth. The many-limbed temptress Kary brings an exotic flair to Gurgu Volcano - her role as the Fiend of Fire. Deep in the secluded Sea Shrine lies the murky Kraken, Fiend of Water. The futuristic Floating Castle is the dominion of the whirling Fiend of the Air, Tiamat. The requisite Ultimate Evil, Chaos, controls them all from the Temple of Fiends.

The Big Secret

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Click here for the full-size shot
Board the ship, then hold "B" and press "A" fifty-five times. Surprise! Solve the sliding-block puzzle to garner a 100 GP reward. In addition, the long bridge on the top floor of the Floating Castle harbors WarMech, the most powerful enemy in the game. You have a 1 in 64 chance of meeting him each battle, so keep fighting.

The Game
Final Fantasy introduced many revolutionary concepts to the console RPG genre. The turn-based battles, with their party of heroes on the right and villains on the left, are as frequently imitated as Mario's running and jumping antics. The game's characters are drawn from the mythological archetypes of several cultures. Later games would evolve and refine the battle system, but the magic system would be jettisoned entirely. Instead of a common pool of Magic Points, in Final Fantasy one has eight "levels" of spells and from one to eight uses per "level."

The History
Final Fantasy was released in the US after Final Fantasy III had been released in Japan. Localized and published by Nintendo, the game actually sold more copies in the US than the original had in Japan! Sadly for fans, not even this success would bring the sequels to the States. This landmark title practically created the console RPG genre single-handedly. Its historical influence cannot be overstated.

Now show me Final Fantasy II