REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

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REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

At the beginning of Final Fantasy VII Remake sets the scene in Midgar city where Cloud Strife and his team decide to return using an odd form of passage they bounce off some arena and parachute to the tenements down.

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

It’s more vulnerable than the train, but it gives one hell of a picture. If you have played the original Final Fantasy VII launched 23 years back in 1997 you will notice the radical changes like Gliding through the smoggy skies, gazing at the humanity down there, it will make you crazy just how much has evolved over the last 23 years.

Final Fantasy VII was the most difficult game to renew as it was the most controversial games in the past and the most beloved game among the masses. the most important point that strikes the developers mind is that it should be better than the original once otherwise, it will never gonna work.

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

When it was launched 23 years back on the first PlayStation, it transformed the line-up endlessly with rich computer graphics details and a centre on more substantial, more comprehensive stories. Trying to collect that energy, which appears instinctive tied to the late ’90s and the beginning days of 3D gaming, appeared like an especially challenging job.

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

You can expect the same nostalgia to arrive with the Final Fantasy VII Remake. It turns the adventure into something more mysterious joyful and modern, without succumbing much of that vintage charm. It’s not the whole reality — Final Fantasy VII Remake entirely surrounds the opening Midgar segment of the story, Some new viewpoints feel unnecessary and some are fresh which will make you jump and some moments can be frustratingly dated. It’s rumpled and beautiful, exciting and complicated which is to say, the Final Fantasy VII Remake is 100 per cent Final Fantasy VII.

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

As with the original, Final Fantasy VII Remake focuses on a legionnaire and genetically improved super-soldier called Cloud Strife. At the origin of the game, Cloud has been hired by Avalanche, an environmental organisation trying to blow up a reactor it deems is destroying the planet. Originally, the battle is clear: there’s a stereotypically evil megacorporation named Shinra that is absorbing out power named Mako from the planet earth to control the huge city of Midgar, and Avalanche is a super organisation trying to put a halt to it. There are great mystic races, a lifeforce that holds the planet united, and a superpowered human called Sephiroth who wants the end of the world

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

The plot is bit confusing, but the Final Fantasy VII Remake explains it all with precision. The Gameplay is specifically focused on Midgar, a gritty metropolis that survives only because Shinra abuses the planet.

Overall, the story makes a lot of moments that make you realise the sense of the story.

One of FFVII‘s most questionable views includes Cloud cross-dressing to creep into a less-than-reputable company. This scene does not come out well in the original one but the Final Fantasy VII Remake completely transforms it with fun and mystery and garnishes it with a rhythm-based dancing sequence that keeps the original’s penchant.

One of the features of the game that benefits the most from this modernization is the environment. Midgar was always meant to be a sprawling cityscape, Developer took the advantage of the PlayStation hardware and made some lavishing graphics that will make you go stunned. It’s a town with a different layout: from a fundamental pillar extend eight separate plates, each powered by a separate reactor.

The Final Fantasy VII Remake is more than a narrative modification. The developers at Square Enix have revived much of the gameplay as well. The usual example is combat. The 1997 version of the gameplay was a vintage war based, where you and your competitors would take turns hitting, healing, and casting spells. The Final Fantasy VII Remake is much more action-packed. Fights occur in real-time, and at its most basic level.

Overall, the combat just feels mesmerizing. It’s quick and interesting and complicated enough that conventional battles don’t become tiresome. It’s particularly great during some of the amazing, multipart boss encounters, which demands an extra coat of strategy.

For most parts, the game is refreshingly new satisfying all your desire to play and fantastic action-packed adventure game but for some parts, it’s a little bit disappointing as those parts look aged and are frustrating.

REVIEW : Final Fantasy 7 Remake (PS4)

Boss fights can also be an irritant. While several are original and compelling, some excite the worst features of JRPGs, with competitors raised by massive health bars that take forever to bring down.

IT’S WORTH REEXPLORING EVEN FOR LONGTIME FANS

Perhaps the most striking thing about Final Fantasy VII Remake is that it creates a game that you have played several times over the last 23 years into something exciting and new. While the essence remains unrefined, some unique bonuses and tweaks make it worth reexploring even for longtime fans. There’s indeed a new narrative twist about the fortune that unlocks more questions. It’s not transparent when we’ll get the following episode — the game concludes with the ominous line “the unknown journey will continue” — but the Final Fantasy VII Remake concludes in a surprisingly pleasing way, considering it doesn’t tell a full story.

There’s a minute that many players encountered early on in the original game. Up until that point, the entire story had been restrained in Midgar; then, unexpectedly, you leave the city and understand just how huge the world is. It’s almost shocking. So far, Final Fantasy VII Remake has fortunately captured that initial feeling.

REVIEW OVERVIEW
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review-final-fantasy-7-remake-ps4Perhaps the most striking thing about Final Fantasy VII Remake is that it creates a game that you have played several times over the last 23 years into something exciting and new. While the essence remains unrefined, some unique bonuses and tweaks make it worth reexploring even for longtime fans. There's indeed a new narrative twist about the fortune that unlocks more questions. It's not transparent when we'll get the following episode — the game concludes with the ominous line "the unknown journey will continue" — but the Final Fantasy VII Remake concludes in a surprisingly pleasing way, considering it doesn't tell a full story. There's a minute that many players encountered early on in the original game. Up until that point, the entire story had been restrained in Midgar; then, unexpectedly, you leave the city and understand just how huge the world is. It's almost shocking. So far, Final Fantasy VII Remake has fortunately captured that initial feeling.

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