LYCOS RETRIEVER
Final Fantasy Tactics Advance: Square Enix
built 618 days ago
With less than two months before the release of Final Fantasy Tactics Advance in Japan, Square has announced that the classic summon monsters, or sacred beasts, will be making an appearance in the game. New job classes have ... been announced.
Source:
Needless to say, Final Fantasy Tactics Advance put forth a pretty ambitious idea that would have been hard to pull off under any circumstances. Square ultimately brings the story to its logical conclusion: Marche destroys Ivalice and returns the world to the way it was. However, each of his friends manage to take something away with them from their time in the fantasy land that helps them deal with the real world they've been dumped back into. Whether it is self-confidence, respect for a bumbling but caring parent, or just a bit of smugness at knowing how proficient they all are with melee weapons, they are all changed for the better.
Source:
The game's soundtrack is composed by Hitoshi Sakimoto and Masaharu Iwata, both of whom later collaborated to compose music for Stella Deus and Final Fantasy XII. Matsuno approached his long time friends Sakimoto and Iwata to compose the music soon after the initial release of Final Fantasy VII.[51] Sakimoto composed 47 tracks for the game, and Iwata was left to compose the other 24. The orchestral nature of the game's music was made possible using synthesizing operated by the synthesizer operator Katsutoshi Kashiwabara and sound programming Hidenori Suzuki. The album was first released on two Compact Discs by now-defunct DigiCube on June 21, 1997 bearing the catalog number SSCX-10008,[52] and was re-released by Square Enix on March 24, 2006 with the catalog number SQEX-10066/7. It spans two discs and 71 tracks, covering a duration of 2:31:03.
Source:
When Square's Final Fantasy Tactics debuted back in January of 1998, few people seemed to really care. While the Final Fantasy brand had become increasingly popular (thanks in no small part to the runaway success of Final Fantasy VII), not even that could lure the average gamer into picking up a strategy role-playing game (RPG).
Source:
This entry was posted on Saturday, April 21st, 2007 at 11:57 am and is filed under Final Fantasy Tactics, Japan, Nintendo DS, SRPG, Square Enix. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can skip to the end and leave a response. Pinging is currently not allowed.
Source:
In 2006, Square Enix revealed the Ivalice Alliance series, with Final Fantasy Tactics A2: Grimoire of the Rift, which is an indirect sequel to Final Fantasy Tactics Advance, to be released on the Nintendo DS. Few gameplay details have been released about the game, but it is confirmed as a Nintendo DS title.
Source: