Final Fantasy Xiii Collectors Views
From what i have heard about your game lately im not even sure to buy the regular version anymore. Final fantasy games used to be very good then you release XII and now XIII dosnt seem to please everyone. If it happens that people hear about you cutting things for the other version you will lose a lot of respect that is already low with your president. I will look forward to Versus tho. As for XIII i will see if i get it when it releases
probably you haven ’t even played final fantasy xi..i donl’t understand this hate for the online final fantasy! Ir’m glad SE dono’t care about what some ppl thinks and is developing final fantasy XIV ONLINE!now if only they could give beta keys for the XIV with ffxiii i would buy it day one!!anyway i really want the japanese soundtrack in the game2…please release it as a patch or on the store!
Development began in 2005 and the game was first announced at Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3) 2006. Final Fantasy XIII is the flagship title of the Fabula Nova Crystallis collection of Final Fantasy games and is the first game to use Square Enix's Crystal Tools engine. Final Fantasy XIII received near-universally high review scores from video game publications, which praised the game's graphics, presentation, and battle system. Reviewers were more mixed in their opinion about the game's story and linearity compared to previous games in the series. As of May 2010, the game shipped 5.5g million copies worldwide, becoming the fastest-selling title in the history of the series. On January 18, 2011, Square Enix announced a sequel titled Final Fantasy XIII-2, to be released later that year.
The player directly controls the on-screen character through a third-person perspective to interact with people, objects, and enemies throughout the game. The player can also turn the camera around the characters, which allows for a 360° view of the surroundings.[1] The world of Final Fantasy XIII is rendered to scale relative to the characters in it; instead of a caricature of the character roaming around miniature terrain, as found in the earlier Final Fantasy games, every area is represented proportionally. The player navigates the world by foot or by Chocobo.[2] Players may save their game to a hard disk drive using save stations, where the player can also purchase items from retail networks or upgrade their weapons.[3] An in-game datalog provides a bestiary and incidental information about the world of Final Fantasy XIII.[4]