23rd April 2003, 6:25 PM
Remove what FF stuff? The only thing they did was rename the game when it came to America. The chocobos were already in there.
Well it's a remake on the scale of Rebirth. It does seem they may be chaning the gameplay though. Still, the core is there. The standard combat with the various computer controlled allies, with the same charge meter for super attacks. The special abilities, the mulitple weapons. At the core, it's all there. However, everything has been remapped (not totally, but enough that you can easily tell), and the menu has been redone (big deal, the ring system is nicer than the other menu). I'd still like an original mode to be added though, with all gameplay restored to it's original state.
Oh, based on Final Fantasy Adventure means exactly what they said. This is a remake of Final Fantasy Adventure. Final Fantasy Adventure is nothing more than the US name of Seiken Densetsu 1. They renamed it so it would sell on name recognition in America.
Well it's a remake on the scale of Rebirth. It does seem they may be chaning the gameplay though. Still, the core is there. The standard combat with the various computer controlled allies, with the same charge meter for super attacks. The special abilities, the mulitple weapons. At the core, it's all there. However, everything has been remapped (not totally, but enough that you can easily tell), and the menu has been redone (big deal, the ring system is nicer than the other menu). I'd still like an original mode to be added though, with all gameplay restored to it's original state.
Oh, based on Final Fantasy Adventure means exactly what they said. This is a remake of Final Fantasy Adventure. Final Fantasy Adventure is nothing more than the US name of Seiken Densetsu 1. They renamed it so it would sell on name recognition in America.
"On two occasions, I have been asked [by members of Parliament], 'Pray, Mr. Babbage, if you put into the machine wrong figures, will the right answers come out?' I am not able to rightly apprehend the kind of confusion of ideas that could provoke such a question." ~ Charles Babbage (1791-1871)