Four Ways You'll be Able to Experience Final Fantasy XV's World
The Gold Ballroom of the Millennium Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles is a perfect place for a Final Fantasy press conference. With its Old Hollywood opulence it looks like a room an evil despot from one of the games would hang out in. It’s got the chandeliers, the ornate molding, the gold-tinted details—the works. It’s where the angry old emperor reveals its true evil space dragon form before the final battle. (It’s also what Donald Trump’s White House will probably look like.)
It’s also where Square-Enix held a short press briefing to go over in advance some of the notes from tonight’s big Final Fantasy XV event. It’s where we learned about all the spin-off media coming alongside the game, and where we first got to play Platinum Demo, the tiny taste of Final Fantasy XV arriving for free on Xbox Live and the Playstation Network tonight. It’s also where we got to speak with the game’s director, Hajime Tabata, and the director of the spin-off film, Takeshi Nozue. Basically it’s where Square-Enix first revealed their ambitious multimedia plans for the latest core Final Fantasy game, plans that we’ll quickly break down for you here right now.
Here’s what to expect from this latest Final Fantasy go-round:
1. Final Fantasy XV
Uh, yeah. Obviously this is the big one, the game whose roots stretch back a decade to the original concept for Final Fantasy Versus XIII. Some of the most basic ideas from Versus XIII remain in place, but director Tabata confirmed that development essentially restarted from scratch when his team took over and transitioned the game into Final Fantasy XV. Their policy was to keep the general aesthetic and character designs that had been revealed in the Final Fantasy Versus XIII trailers, but overhaul the way it played and the direction of the story, resulting in a game that’s no longer as closely tied to the Fabula Nova Crystallis concept as Versus XIII would have been. The narrative heart of XV will be your player character Noctis’s connection to his friends, tight bros from way back who head out on a road trip in a sporty little roadster. The new trailer shown at the event once again emphasized the camaraderie of the road, with multiple shots of them camping, fixing their car, eating (and playing pinball) at roadside diners, and generally just being dudes in love with the highway when it’s late at night. If the game made you bust out your Rock Band instruments to play a show after every extended diving segment, it would fit perfectly: they look like a band, act like a band, and travel like a band, only instead of sick solos they rip warp strikes and magic blasts on dark creatures from beyond the veil.
2. Brotherhood: Final Fantasy XV
With its first episode available now, this five-episode anime series will focus even closer on the unbreakable bonds between Noctis and his buds. Produced by A-1 Pictures, the studio behind the Sword Art Online and Black Butler anime series, Brotherhood will be distributed for free online. The clip we saw reaffirmed the basic archetypes of the core foursome: Noctis is the reluctant hero, glasses guy is the haughty smarty pants who gesticulates while making special business happen, Prompto with the blond pompadour is the comic relief, and the beefy brother with the vest is the resident badass. Tabata explained that the multimedia approach was designed intentionally to attract a new generation of players who maybe aren’t familiar with Final Fantasy and who now experience entertainment in a variety of formats and through distribution channels that didn’t exist until the last few years. The anime is a crucial part of that project, as it’ll speak to an audience that would clearly already be predisposed to enjoy a game that traditionally has a heavy anime influence, but maybe aren’t used to playing games on consoles. If you get them hooked on the characters and relationships through a medium they do love, perhaps they’ll slide right over into the game.
3. Kingsglaive: Final Fantasy XV