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Final Fantasy Chronicles
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Music from Final Fantasy Chronicles is a set of two separately-released compact discs published by TokyoPop. Final Fantasy IV Official Soundtrack and Chrono Trigger Original Soundtrack were both released on August 21, 2001. Final Fantasy IV Official Soundtrack has 44 tracks of 63 minutes in total and includes an arranged version of "Theme of Love" by Shirou Satou. Chrono Trigger Original Soundtrack, 25 tracks and 73 minutes in total, includes three arrangements by Tsuyoshi Sekito and an arrangement of "Chrono Trigger" by Hiroshi Hata and Kalta Ohtsuki.[15][16] In addition, a strategy guide written by Dan Birlew was published by BradyGames on July 2, 2001.
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Final Fantasy Chronicles is a compilation of two Square console RPGs remade and re-released for the Sony PlayStation. These games are Final Fantasy IV and Chrono Trigger. There are ... extra features, most of which must be unlocked by playing the two games.
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From the glory days of RPGs, by the masters of the game, Final Fantasy Chronicles unites two classic Square role-playing games in one must-own package. From the Final Fantasy realm comes a brand new translation of the great Final Fantasy IV (released in America as FF2), while from other lands comes the equally memorable Chrono Trigger. Each is enhanced from their acclaimed originals, with new cinematic sequences, new gameplay, enemies, and items, and a translation truer to the original Japanese text. Chrono Trigger even includes new elements that help tie up loose ends that lead up to its sequel Chrono Cross, while Final Fantasy IV takes the gameplay to another level with a two-player battle mode that for the first time in a Final Fantasy game lets other players join together in combat sequences. Nearly every RPG you've played on PlayStation traces its inspiration back to the two landmark RPGs in this collection. Celebrate the games that ignited a passion and started a role-playing revolution with Final Fantasy Chronicles.
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For all of Square's explosive growth over the last few years, Final Fantasy Chronicles proves that the company hasn't forgotten its roots. Like 1999's Final Fantasy Anthology, which saw the release of Final Fantasies V and VI, Chronicles is a repackaging of two of Square's greatest triumphs from the golden 16-bit era--here, Final Fantasy IV and Chrono Trigger make their return. But in the 21st century, when games are as often based on polygons as plot, can a couple of good old 2D epics make a new mark? The answer depends largely on your perspective.
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Final Fantasy 2 coverage added! Sections added: Armors List, Axes List, Bows List, Controls, Gloves List, Head Gears List, Items List, Knives List, Levelling System, Magic List, Magic System, Shields List, Spears List, Staves List, Swords List, Weapon System.
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The adventure of Final Fantasy 4 is lined with many enemies and bosses. The monsters in Final Fantasy 4 are a classic mix of traditional Final Fantasy beasties, including imps, zombies, skeletons, bombs, man-eating fish, slimes, and about 200 others. Early on, the fights are easy, but as the game progresses, the enemies grow in power faster than Cecil and his allies, and as a result the later parts of the game are harder. Boss fights are always special in Final Fantasy 4, and frequently the boss fits with the theme of the area. For example, the final enemy in a cave full of rivers and lakes is a large octopus. Every boss fight is brought forth by either an event in the story or the party's attempt to get an extra special item or ability.
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