Final Fantasy VII Rebirth

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Final Fantasy VII Rebirth
File:Final Fantasy VII Rebirth logo.webp
Developer(s)Square Enix Creative Business Unit I
Publisher(s)Square Enix
Director(s)
Producer(s)Yoshinori Kitase
Designer(s)Teruki Endo
Programmer(s)Satoru Koyama
Writer(s)Kazushige Nojima
SeriesFinal Fantasy
EngineUnreal Engine 4
Platform(s)PlayStation 5
Release
  • WW: February 29, 2024
Genre(s)Action role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is an upcoming action role-playing game developed and published by Square Enix. It is a sequel to Final Fantasy VII Remake (2020), and the second in a planned trilogy of games remaking the 1997 PlayStation title Final Fantasy VII. As with its predecessor, the gameplay will combine real-time action with strategic and role-playing elements. Set immediately after Remake's events, players will control the mercenary Cloud Strife and a party of characters principally comprising the eco-terrorist group AVALANCHE, who band together to embark on a journey across the Planet to prevent the megacorporation Shinra from exploiting its life essence, the Lifestream, as an energy source, and to defeat their former elite soldier Sephiroth, who intends on becoming one with the Planet to achieve greater power.

Remake was positioned as the start of a series of standalone titles recreating FFVII's overall narrative, though it remained unconfirmed how many games would be used to tell the full story. The game entered production in November 2019 prior to Remake's release, and was announced in June 2022. The game's development is being led by Tetsuya Nomura as creative director, as well as Motomu Toriyama and Naoki Hamaguchi both as game directors, respectively reprising their duties from Remake.

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is scheduled to be released for PlayStation 5 in February 29, 2024. A third, untitled game to complete the story is in development.

Gameplay

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is the second in a planned trilogy of games remaking the 1997 PlayStation game Final Fantasy VII. It begins after the events of Final Fantasy VII Remake (2020), following the party's escape from the metropolis of Midgar.[1][2]

Players will primarily control Cloud Strife, a former Shinra soldier who joined the eco-terrorist group AVALANCHE to fight the Shinra Corporation, who had been draining the planet's life energy and is now drawn into a conflict with the legendary SOLDIER Sephiroth, who was thought to be dead.[3][4] Like Remake preceding it, Rebirth reimagines multiple elements of the original game, including the utilization of real-time polygonal graphics as opposed to the original game's pre-rendered environments, as well as significant expansions to character development and the overall narrative structure.[5][6]

Exploration and combat scenarios both take place in real-time, with the game's overworld also expanding into a comparatively more open-ended environment compared to the linear progression of Remake's Midgar. Objective markers appear in the heads-up display at all times, highlighting main story quests and various ongoing sidequests to complete along with their respective distances from the party in the overworld. In addition to walking on foot, the party are able to hitch rides on Chocobos as a means of faster traversal by equipping the specialized Chocobo Lure Materia. Rebirth builds on the hybrid of action-focused melee combat and the Active-Time Battle (ATB) system introduced in Final Fantasy VII Remake, involving players assuming control of a party composed of characters that can be freely switched between at any point in gameplay, and using a mix of conventional physical attacks during combat, as well as casting magic and consuming dedicated items for offensive, defensive and resuscitative purposes, from a dedicated menu while the gameplay is suspended around them. The "Synergized" mechanic first featured in the downloadable content (DLC) "Episode InterMISSION" campaign for Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade (2021) is integrated into Rebirth's battle system, enabling party members to sync up their attacks at the expense of the speed at which an ATB bar fills.[7]

Plot

Setting and characters

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is a direct continuation of the overarching narrative first introduced in Final Fantasy VII Remake (2020), and reimagines the plot, world and cast of the original Final Fantasy VII (1997). The game takes place on a non-descript world simply known as "The Planet", and centers on the journey of the principal characters as they seek to both end the tyranny of the Shinra Electric Power Company, who control the megalopolis of Midgar with their weaponization of the ethereal power source known as the Lifestream, and defeat the once-thought-dead Sephiroth, a legendary veteran of Shinra's elite SOLDIER unit of enforcers, who is attempting to summon the destructive magic known as Meteor and wound the Planet, to an extent that he may join with the Lifestream and attain godhood.

The central protagonist and leader of the game's main party of characters, is Cloud Strife, a former member of SOLDIER's 1st Class platoon who is now working as a mercenary assisting the eco-terrorist group AVALANCHE, who oppose Shinra's immoral exploitation of the Planet and its resources. Accompanying him are two members of the group: Barret Wallace, the brazen, loudmouthed yet empathetic leader, and Tifa Lockhart, the bartender of the 7th Heaven bar in Midgar who is a compassionate, yet shy practicing martial artist, and a childhood friend of Cloud. Joining them on their journey are Aerith Gainsborough, a flower merchant previously residing in Midgar's Sector 7 Slums, and the sole survivor of the ancient Cetra; Red XIII, an intelligent quadruped from Cosmo Canyon who was previously held captive by Shinra as an unwitting lab rat, and Yuffie Kisaragi, an expert Materia thief and ninja from Wutai who resolves to join the team out of a desire to fully realize Shinra's downfall after losing her partner Sonon Kusakabe in a failed attempt to extract the "Ultimate Materia" from Shinra's headquarters.[8] Supporting characters will be met with and play a role in the game's story at different intervals. Chief among these is Zack Fair, a friend from Cloud's past who helped both of them escape Shinra's ranks after being experimented on with the cells of the extraterrestrial life-form JENOVA, who was also Aerith's boyfriend and the previous wielder of the Buster Sword. Also appearing in the game will be Bugenhagen, the elder of Cosmo Canyon, and Elena, a new recruit of the Turks seeking to apprehend Cloud and his allies.[9]

Development

During the promotion of Final Fantasy VII Remake (2020), Square Enix confirmed that the game would not cover the original's complete story, but rather act as a standalone first game in "a multi-part series, with each entry providing its own unique experience".[10] Game director Tetsuya Nomura cited a "massive undertaking to reconstruct Final Fantasy VII from the ground up with the current technology", in regards to why a remake was not possible for some time. He went on to elaborate, that fully remaking FFVII's content in a single installment would necessitate cutting various elements of the original game to suit the target hardware and gameplay design, by which point a remake of the game would be considered pointless. He additionally expressed a desire to expand on the original game's depiction of Midgar for one title, wanting for players to explore various areas of the city that were previously inaccessible in the original, and with heightened detail due to the increased power of newer generation hardware. While Nomura understood the nostalgia behind the original game's story, he envisioned the game as a reimagining that would in turn, "get the fans of the original version excited".[11]

Producer Yoshinori Kitase likened the remake's "multi-part" structure to Final Fantasy XIII (2009) being followed by Final Fantasy XIII-2 (2011) and Lightning Returns: Final Fantasy XIII (2013), stating that Final Fantasy VII Remake's structure would differ from that of XIII's due to the game's nature as a remake of a pre-existing narrative centered on a central protagonist like Cloud Strife, as opposed to the multiple perspectives focused on across the XIII trilogy. He also anticipated each game in the Remake series to be approximately as long as one of the Final Fantasy XIII games.[12] The Final Fantasy VII Remake project would subsequently be revealed by Kitase to encompass a trilogy of titles, between Remake, its sequel and a third, final entry.[13][14] The development team had initially entertained the idea of remaking FFVII across two games as opposed to three, citing the indecision on direction as being a primary reason for their lack of clarification on how many parts the remake would be. Kitase explained that this was due to the difficulties in determining development scheduling due to the lack of understanding regarding the project's overall scope.[15] The follow-up to Remake had begun active development by November 2019 prior to the game's initial release on PlayStation 4.[16] According to Nomura, the title was being designed with newcomers in mind.[17]

Nomura later stated in July 2020 that the intent was to produce a higher quality game than its predecessor, while also ensuring it was released "as quickly as possible".[18] In regards to the technical improvements made in Remake's enhanced 2021 port, Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade, Nomura noted that while environmental effects such as fog were added to the port in order to, "further enhance the sense of realism and immersion in the world", he advised fans to wait for future entries that would take proper advantage of the PS5's hardware and features in both gameplay and graphics.[19][20] Game director Naoki Hamaguchi separately expressed a desire to leverage the new gameplay and battle mechanics introduced in the downloadable content (DLC) episode INTERmission, such as team-up attacks performed by Yuffie Kisaragi and Sonon Kusakabe, in the next game, as he felt they made for a "different feel in battle strategy".[21]

Rebirth was revealed alongside Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII Reunion, a remaster of the PlayStation Portable game for modern platforms that rebuilt the title in Unreal Engine 4, and implemented numerous quality-of-life improvements to gameplay and presentation to bring the game in parity with Final Fantasy VII Remake, notably sharing the English voice cast from the aforementioned game, who replaced the original actors from other media in the Compilation of Final Fantasy VII metaseries.[22][23] Reunion was part of the Final Fantasy VII Remake project and acted as a prequel to the main trilogy, with the remaster designed to familiarize players with the story of Zack Fair ahead of his appearance in Rebirth where he would play a more significant role.[24][25] In April 2023, lead battle programmer Satoru Koyama spoke on the potential of incorporating improved party A.I. in the battle system for Rebirth and its sequel, remarking on its potential to multitask between physical attack techniques and magic casting, while expressing a desire to surpass the 'gambit' system used for the non-controlled party members in Final Fantasy XII (2006).[26]

Marketing and release

Rebirth was announced by Square Enix as the second installment of the Final Fantasy VII Remake project, alongside Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII Reunion and the Steam version of Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade, in June 2022 during the publisher's Final Fantasy VII 25th Anniversary Celebration livestream.[27][28][29]

In June 2023, the official social media handles for the game began posting a series of developer messages regarding the title's progress. Game director Naoki Hamaguchi promised that Rebirth would feature a "wide and multifaceted world with a high degree of freedom" with multiple story routes, in comparison to the more structured, linear progression throughout Midgar in Final Fantasy VII Remake.[30] A gameplay trailer was presented on June 9 during that year's Summer Game Fest live show hosted by Geoff Keighley, unveiling the game's exploration and combat mechanics, teasing various story elements, as well as detailing characters set to appear in the game.[31][32]

Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is scheduled to release for PlayStation 5 in early 2024.[33][34]

References

  1. ^ Hirun Cryer (2021-06-10). "Final Fantasy 7 Remake Intergrade ending adds a new scene to the original finale". gamesradar. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  2. ^ "Final Fantasy 7 Remake director suggests future instalments could focus on 'smaller sections'". VGC. 2020-04-28. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  3. ^ Webster, Andrew (2020-04-09). "Redesigning Midgar, Final Fantasy VII Remake's gritty cyberpunk metropolis". The Verge. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  4. ^ Shanley, Patrick (2020-04-21). "'Final Fantasy VII' Remake Sells 3.5M Copies Over Launch Weekend". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  5. ^ "FINAL FANTASY VII REBIRTH announced | Square Enix Blog". square-enix-games.com. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  6. ^ "Final Fantasy VII Rebirth Continues Retelling The RPG Classic In Winter 2023". Kotaku. 2022-06-16. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  7. ^ "Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth Launches In Early 2024 On Two Discs; New Trailer Debuts". GameSpot. Retrieved 2023-06-08.
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  11. ^ Blake, Vikki (2015-12-07). "This Is Why the Final Fantasy 7 Remake Is In Multiple Parts". IGN. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
  12. ^ "Final Fantasy 7 Remake Still Releasing In Multiple Parts". GameSpot. Retrieved 2022-06-17.
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  15. ^ Square, Push (2022-07-09). "Final Fantasy 7 Remake Devs Considered a Two-Game Series Instead of a Trilogy". Push Square. Retrieved 2023-05-02.
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  17. ^ VII, FINAL FANTASY (June 16, 2022). "We're delighted to present messages from Final Fantasy VII Rebirth creative director Tetsuya Nomura, director Naoki Hamaguchi and producer Yoshinori Kitase. #FF7R". Twitter. Retrieved June 16, 2022.
  18. ^ Square, Push (2020-07-21). "Final Fantasy VII Remake 2 Now In Development, 'You'll Be Waiting a Little While', Says Square Enix". Push Square. Retrieved 2023-04-25.
  19. ^ "PS5『FF7 リメイク』&スマホ『FF7』関連作を野村哲也氏にインタビュー。ユフィを使ったバトルやヴァイス登場の由来、PS5の機能の活用に迫る | ゲーム・エンタメ最新情報のファミ通.com". ファミ通.com (in Japanese). Retrieved 2022-06-17.
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  30. ^ Square, Push (2023-06-03). "Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth Will Offer a 'High Degree of Freedom' on PS5". Push Square. Retrieved 2023-06-04.
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  32. ^ Bailey, Kat (2023-06-08). "Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth Revealed in Summer Game Fest Trailer Alongside Release Window". IGN. Retrieved 2023-07-29.
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  34. ^ ""DISCOVER A VIBRANT AND VAST WORLD IN FINAL FANTASY VII REBIRTH, COMING IN EARLY 2024 TO PLAYSTATION 5" - Square Enix Press Hub". press.uk.square-enix.com. Retrieved 2023-07-26.

External links