
The International versions, which only appeared in Europe and Japan, enhance the originals.

What you’ll likeįinally, we in the Americas get the complete collection of these RPGs. But decade-old design decisions and character fashion choices (butt cheeks showing on women!) serve as a reminder of how far role-playing games have advanced since FFX came out in 2001.

The PS3 version I played looked great, ran well, and didn’t have any bugs in more than 80 hours of playtime.įans of Final Fantasy will love returning to Spira, reexperiencing the adventures of the summoner Yuna, the misplaced hero Tidus, and their friends as they battle Sin, a giant monster (and as series veterans know, it holds a big surprise) that thrashes the world on a regular basis. And it does so well, with its world of Spira at times looking even better than what you might find in the Final Fantasy XIII games (note - designers, bright colors do look good in HD!).Īnd at $40, this collection for the PlayStation 3 and the Vita (cross saves work, but you need to buy separate editions of both - it’s not a cross-platform buy) coming out March 18 finally brings all of the International content that American players whined about missing a decade ago. The remaster of the iconic Final Fantasy X and its screwball sequel, Final Fantasy X-2, brings one of Square Enix’s most important role-playing games into HD.
