Although I can’t say that Bub hated it (although I swear, killing Caius was probably his favorite thing about the entire game, and his end goal, even though he didn’t seem to hate Caius… he just wanted him dead), I could tell that he preferred Final Fantasy XIII to Final Fantasy XIII-2. And although I liked Final Fantasy XIII a lot, I’m not even going to lie — I loved the fact that Final Fantasy XIII-2 was almost immediately open-world.
Sure, you had to do certain things to advance the plot… but you could also do a whole lot of optional things, and there was no timer on it like a certain game that I’m going to talk about in the next post you’ll see that you probably already know the name of. You could do what you needed to do to advance the plot of the game, and you could do whatever optional things you wanted to do, at your leisure. And that’s exactly what I loved about Final Fantasy XIII-2. That, and the fact that Serah was the lead heroine of the game. I’m not even going to lie. I loved that about the game as well. You also only had two (three, if you wanted to fill the third space up with a creature that you caught, which is wise… we eventually caught a Silver Chocobo as soon as we could and leveled it up) characters to worry about leveling, which takes a bit of stress out of leveling a whole bunch of characters. Although Final Fantasy XIII had an enjoyable cast, you had to make sure that all of them were equally battle-ready, because sometimes you controlled them at different times.
Actually, in most games you need to make sure that your entire cast is equally hardy for battle.
At first, I tried to defeat the final boss in this game without equipping my Bub for the final fight. I just wanted to see if I could do it on my own. All it took was Caius slamming Serah and Noel’s faces into the ground for me to realize that it was a foolish idea. So I went and leveled a bit more, then did the proper thing, equipped my Bub, and Bub proceeded to teach Caius a thing or two about insulting his mom, followed by slamming Caius’ dragons’ faces into the ground whittling down their HP until all three of them were at zero just to teach him another lesson. Because you don’t ever insult his mother even when his mother tries to go it solo.
And that gets us to Lightning Returns, which is where we are at in our Final Fantasy gaming saga.
Another great game by Square-Enix.
Final Fantasy has been knocking it out of the park crafting games that don’t really have anything wrong with them lately. And I know that I’ve been… saying it a lot lately, but of all of the games that we play on a regular basis, this was another one that had so much going for it that I couldn’t really think of anything wrong with it. Some people may complain about how linear Final Fantasy XIII was and use that against it, but playing games with an autistic child, I’ve come to appreciate linear games more and more now — they’re harder to get lost in, so it’s easier to appreciate the story in, and you can focus more on things like making sure that your characters are better equipped for battles. And that was definitely one thing that we took advantage of while playing this game. Since getting lost was not really something that we had to worry about, I could pay more attention on making sure that our characters were as ready as they were ever going to be for boss battles. Because let me tell you, coming by in-game currency was actually probably the most difficult thing in this game, although it was not outright impossible. You just had to manage your currency a bit better than in other games, where you could just grind monster after monster and have enough after awhile to splurge if you were a bit patient. Or patient enough. Because it really depends on the specific game itself, let me say.
Bub’s favorite character was clearly the chocobo that hung out in Sazh’s hair.
My favorite character in the Final Fantasy XIII franchise should be incredibly obvious.
This was a game where “characters coming together for a common cause, and not all of them knew each other,” really worked, as did the “us against the world,” trope without it actually turning into a trope. I’m actually glad that this turned into a trilogy, and this game played so well that it advanced without turning into long, boring hours spent grinding or going from one place or the next. Soon enough, you were halfway through the game, and then before you know it, as the plot was progressing and you were learning more about each character and the plot, you were nearing the end, then at the end. And the world was saved…
This was also another one where Bub and I walked up to the entire boss without knowing that it was actually the final boss. But because I had equipped my Bub, we kind of… waltzed on her (well, he did), managed to defeat the entire boss in fifteen minutes, realized that it was actually the final boss, and then I swear that I wanted to actually die laughing once the end scenes began to roll and I realized what we had actually done. We have a habit of walking up to final bosses without realizing that we’ve done so, and as long as my Bub is equipped, screwing them up. It’s in our nature as long as we tag-team them together…
Bubby fon Ronsenburg for… whatever!
As I’ve stated in previous posts, one of the promises that I made years ago was that as long as Bub wanted to play them with me, I was willing to play all of the Final Fantasies that I had with him working our way up to present day. At the time, the oldest Final Fantasy that we had was six, although between them and present day, we did acquire five, so we will eventually go back and play that once we are done with the one that we are on right now. (I’ve heard a lot of good things about it — there isn’t a bad Final Fantasy game out there, even though some of them do have things that could have been improved on — so would never turn down one in that I would refuse to play it, although I wouldn’t shy away from pointing out the flaws in any game if asked.) So far, we’ve played Final Fantasy XII on both the PlayStation 4 and the Nintendo Switch.
Can you guess another game that makes Bub really happy and calms down meltdowns? Can you?
Hint: he has the actual nickname of “Bubby fon Ronsenburg” and his favorite character is Basch.
Quite frankly, Final Fantasy XII is one of my all-time favorite Final Fantasies. Not only has Bub’s face lit up several times as we have played it together, but it has one of the most amazing and well put-together casts that I’ve ever seen (and, I mean, Final Fantasies always have good casts in general, but this one took the cake for me), an amazing story, and everything just flows so smoothly that before you know it, the game is almost over because progression is seamless. Every character fits into the plot and the story, and no one’s there “just because”. There’s an equal proportion of story progression and you being able to wander around, level up, and do optional sub-quests at your leisure. I can see why Bub likes this game as much as he does.
There is literally nothing bad about this game that I can see from any level. That has to say something.
I didn’t think he’d like this, but…
Since Final Fantasy X-2 has been said by many to be a “girl’s game” (although, to be honest, I don’t really think it is), I didn’t think that Bub would like it as much as he did. But I was pleasantly surprised to find out that Bub liked Final Fantasy X-2 as much as he did the game that came before it — so much, actually, that we have the same problem that we do with its predecessor, that we own multiple copies of it and I need to figure out which copies we can pawn or sell while maintaining enough copies to have spares in case consoles malfunction or otherwise stop working. (And as a child, I remember a family friend getting me this game for Christmas, just to open the game on Christmas day and see that it had been tampered with, that the game disc had been removed and an AOL disc had been placed there instead. Apparently someone working for the store had tampered with all of the new games that they could get away with, because multiple people were bringing games back for the exact same reason. My parents had to give the game cartridge back to my friend’s mother so that she could turn it back in and I could get a copy of the game.)
Not only did I love the game, but Bub loved it too! He didn’t have a clear favorite character, but he loved collecting dressspheres with me, and we did manage to collect all of them in one go and score a high enough completion percentage of the game to bring Tidus back. That was all I cared about, quite frankly.
At one point in the future I may replay it just to take on this game’s Ultima Weapon, just to do it myself.
Having equipped my Bub for the final boss battle, it was almost pathetically easy to defeat the whole thing.
This was a personal favorite of mine for the “girl power” thing, though. You don’t often see that in video games, so to see that in a game was really refreshing, and it really made playing it worth the while for me.
We’ve come back to this one a lot.
Like with Final Fantasy VII, Final Fantasy X has been a game that we have come back to numerous times over the years because it has been such a staple in Bub’s gaming history. Hilariously, this is also probably the game that we own the most copies of — we’ve gotten it whenever it has come out on what has then been the newest console at the time because this is one of the games that calms Bub down the most when he is melting down, so we have copies of it ranging from the PlayStation 2 all the way to the Nintendo Switch. (I may need to do something about that in the form of pawning or selling older copies, but not so many that if a console breaks down, we’re left unable to play the game in the event that he does melt down. So I need to think about which consoles are the most advantageous to keep a spare copy of the game on…)
Predictably, his favorite character was Auron. He used to walk around the house with one arm hanging in his shirt emulating Auron, and occasionally I still catch him doing it, usually around the time we’ve replayed the game. It’s adorable! And whenever I don’t quite know where he was at in the house, playing “Otherworld” loud enough for him to hear it almost always gets him to come out and in my general direction. I usually play The Black Mages’ version of it because it’s a household favorite. I’m a fan of The Black Mages.
I actually had Monster crawling to “Maybe I’m A Lion” when he was a baby! I remember that with fondness!
But equipping my Bub each time has made it progressively easier to defeat Braska’s Final Aeon, I swear…
This is one of the few games that I can’t think of a single thing about it that I dislike, seriously. I mean that.