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FAR: Changing Tides
FAR: Changing Tides

May 01

The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe
The Stanley Parable: Ultra Deluxe

Apr 30

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One of the strangest experiences I’ve had with a game where it was rare that I would say I was having a bad time or finding it a slog to get through, yet I’d also rarely say I was having a great time.

The only time I died in this game (playing on normal difficulty.) was during a train defence mission, and yet I frequently felt like I must have been ignoring some fundamental aspects of combat and levelling.

The battle system means that you would have to be deliberately negligent to have your whole team KO. If you’re well stocked on healing items it should never be a problem because eventually, you’ll chip away and win. It is an incredibly forgiving system that breeds bad habits in me because there’s no pushback against playing badly. The game hasn’t given me an incentive to be more optimal and improve my build, and it doesn't do a good job explaining some of your options. Also the AP needed for upgrades is bafflingly expensive, and while the game is very generous with XP. Very strange balancing.

Much has been said about how incoherent the story is. Interesting that a game originally called “Final Fantasy Versus XIII” seem to have all the opposite strengths and weaknesses to Final Fantasy XIII.

XIII starts linear and opens up, XV starts open and then (figuratively and literally) puts you on rails for the 2nd half.

In XIII there’s so much mythos and lore that’s told to you, yet you barely explore the world and see what a society shaped by these deities looks like.
In XV you explore a world that not dissimilar to our own that feels at odds with the fantasy elements that the game insists did shape it.

I almost found myself wishing this did still have the Fabula Nova Crystallis mythos attached because at least some shared proper nouns would have helped connect certain things.

It’s all frustrating because the open world does have some smart systems, even though the sidequests and hunts are all fine but dull, (the finding 5 frog type missions are very bad.)

The loop of doing these simple tasks, fighting monsters, banking XP, picking up ingredients that you can make meals that gives you additional boosts for doing more hunts all syncs up pretty well. In some ways it’s a more considered open world than seen in FF7 Rebirth. The world feels like a more natural believable space.

There’s more dynamic dialogue between the boys, so you can at least enjoy that while doing some of these activities, something that was sorely lacking in FF7 Rebirth and could have elevated that open world a long way.

Although ultimately it leads to tedium because the novelty of driving around soon wears thin, and you're left with a clunky fast travel system to circumvent it.

The thing most people love about this game is the boys camping road trip and bonding, and while I did like it, I can’t say that I felt as much for these boys as most other FF casts. I think because most of the game’s content is in its open world, the interactions that happen feel less meaningful.

The critical path is less than half the length typical of other Final Fantasy game. In some ways I can’t complain it’s briefness means I got through it without much issue, but Final Fantasy is where I want these huge sprawling stories, and in FFXV… well it might have been there in the design document but it wasn’t apparent to me playing it. When this stuff this does come into the story more I didn’t understand or know what anyone was talking about. Which just meant that all it’s biggest moments don’t really hit. And there are some good choices made at the end that feel wasted.

Ardyn was a great villain though, I’ll give him that.

This review contains spoilers

So I put about 6 hours into the Steam version of this, was experiencing quite a few crashes, but seemed to have tempered them a bit but then I reached an issue where it would just get stuck on a loading screen and wouldn’t progress, and I decided this wasn’t worth all the effort and I’d just watch a compilation of cutscenes on youtube to get some closure on this game as I progress through my current Final Fantasy hyper-fixation.

Seemed to be doing what it could to answer the criticisms of the first game by giving you more open, explorable locations with NPC’s to talk to some of whom have side quests. Although actually doing any of them was not a particularly enticing prospect.

The good thing is the battle system is more open from the start, and the concept of having monsters fight alongside you instead of a 3rd party member does seem cool would have liked to have seen how that progressed.

Story was a lot more coherent than the first game, but it does suffer for the smaller cast of characters. It does have a good antagonist as well, someone who’s motivations are… insane but sympathetic. There's some interesting twists on the usual JRPG themes.
It also understandably has this lower budget straight to VHS sequel vibe that’s hard to shake.


There was a lot of good in the story emotionally here, but it is a bit unsatisfying that things end up being a cliffhanger for the next game. In some ways it's an incredibly brave ending, but it's obviously not going to stick.

Huh how about that. It’s the middle game of a Final Fantasy trilogy with a story about multiple timelines that ends in a tragic but uncertain fate for the female protagonist. Interesting. Mind you this one actually made a lot more sense.

Needed a palate cleanser game, and played this because it's something that I had on PS Plus and could be finished in less time than it takes to watch a film. Sort of lacks some charm compared to the original or Um Jammer Lammy, and there seems to be a bit of an input delay so you basically have to learn to press everything slightly ahead of time. Still a decent time though.