This is rather interesting. After all of the previous mistakes that Square-Enix has made (such as the awkward cliffhanger ending that FF12 had), I would never have anticipated them to try and give FF14 a phoenix's rebirth.
The question now becomes: is this a case of "too little, too late?" In my mind, the Final Fantasy franchise (and pretty much the rest of Square-Enix) no longer holds its definitive place as the key player in the JRPG genre. Until they end their continuing decline of embracing mediocrity, they'll just be another JRPG-pumping machine.
It's a shame, really. But hopefully at least FF14 has a better future now, if nothing else.
That's the thing. There is none. I've had this conversation with several of my die-hard JRPG friends, and it's a recurring theme: Squaresoft used to be the king of RPGs in their eyes back in the SNES and PS1 days... but starting with the PS2, they've diminished in quality. Their games still deliver a punch of an experience... but they just don't have this vision, this spark that they used to have.
I can think of several other "must play" RPG makers from the SNES/PS1 days... but that list drops significantly on the last 2 generations of consoles.
As for today... I think that Atlas is the company I look to for quality. Monolith, too. There's probably a couple of others that I should be thinking of right now... but the fact that I can't is really signs of the times.
Of course, I'd love nothing less than for someone to open my eyes to something of grandness. Prime, what is your opinion? Is there a company that you feel is still a shining beacon of light for JPRG fans? How about games that have come out in this generation? There's definitely good games... but I'm looking for the stuff of legends. Where are my Chrono Triggers and Secret of Manas? My Lufias and Breath of Fires?
Yeah, Valkyrian Chronicles has caught my eye. It'll probably be the next current-gen RPG-ish game I'll play. Looks genuinely good, and I look forward to it.
Yeah, Namco has been doing pretty well. Forgot about them. I have Eternal Sonata, but I've only played it enough to test it out. Will get back to it later. The Tales series looks pretty shiny as well.
I don't remember the "grown man" article. Looks pretty cool though; I'll read it in a little bit.
Considering that some (most?) publishers would have written the game's failure off and moved on, I think that this really says something positive about Square. Granted, my wife and I don't play MMORPGs...
Bandrik, aside from perhaps Dirge of Cerberus, I don't think that my wife or I have ever really been disappointed with a game from Square. I did find the pronunciation of marquis in FF12 to be rather infuriating, though.
Just a small fact update: it's not the first time a game's been pulled, and then later relaunched. See APB Reloaded.
I don't think the whole APB fiasco needs much explaining, since it became infamous back in it's heydey for actually failing and being shut down not even 90 days after launch, and actually became the head-on-a-pike example as to how game companies need to rethink their strategy on pay-to-play subscription games.
There's a couple of other MMO games that have also fallen under this, but APB actually went from subscription -to- F2P in the transition (though I believe the newer version suffers for it, but that's a discussion not for this article).
"[...]The game was such a failure that they issued an official apology, and in Japanese company style, got rid of the entire senior staff and replaced them."
I have to imagine that "got rid of the entire scene senior staff" means they were forced to commit seppuku.
Comments
The question now becomes: is this a case of "too little, too late?" In my mind, the Final Fantasy franchise (and pretty much the rest of Square-Enix) no longer holds its definitive place as the key player in the JRPG genre. Until they end their continuing decline of embracing mediocrity, they'll just be another JRPG-pumping machine.
It's a shame, really. But hopefully at least FF14 has a better future now, if nothing else.
I can think of several other "must play" RPG makers from the SNES/PS1 days... but that list drops significantly on the last 2 generations of consoles.
As for today... I think that Atlas is the company I look to for quality. Monolith, too. There's probably a couple of others that I should be thinking of right now... but the fact that I can't is really signs of the times.
Of course, I'd love nothing less than for someone to open my eyes to something of grandness. Prime, what is your opinion? Is there a company that you feel is still a shining beacon of light for JPRG fans? How about games that have come out in this generation? There's definitely good games... but I'm looking for the stuff of legends. Where are my Chrono Triggers and Secret of Manas? My Lufias and Breath of Fires?
Eager minds await.
Namco has been knocking them out of the park with games like Eternal Sonata and the Tales series as well.
And oh man, Valkyrian Chronicles. Truly remarkable (although they are SRPGS, not strict RPGS)
It's okay for a grown man to play Japanese video games.
Yeah, Namco has been doing pretty well. Forgot about them. I have Eternal Sonata, but I've only played it enough to test it out. Will get back to it later. The Tales series looks pretty shiny as well.
I don't remember the "grown man" article. Looks pretty cool though; I'll read it in a little bit.
Bandrik, aside from perhaps Dirge of Cerberus, I don't think that my wife or I have ever really been disappointed with a game from Square. I did find the pronunciation of marquis in FF12 to be rather infuriating, though.
I don't think the whole APB fiasco needs much explaining, since it became infamous back in it's heydey for actually failing and being shut down not even 90 days after launch, and actually became the head-on-a-pike example as to how game companies need to rethink their strategy on pay-to-play subscription games.
There's a couple of other MMO games that have also fallen under this, but APB actually went from subscription -to- F2P in the transition (though I believe the newer version suffers for it, but that's a discussion not for this article).
I have to imagine that "got rid of the entire scene senior staff" means they were forced to commit seppuku.