Final Fantasy VII Remake Zero Punctuation review Yahtzee Croshaw

Final Fantasy VII Remake – Zero Punctuation

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This video contains spoilers for Final Fantasy VII Remake.

This week on Zero Punctuation, Yahtzee reviews Final Fantasy VII Remake.

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TRANSCRIPT

I know most people come here for knob gags or because you refuse to believe I’m actually still doing this every week but for those of you coming for purchasing advice, be apprised of two things before you buy Final Fantasy 7 remake. Firstly, if you go in the shop and make the “Ooh this FINAL fantasy’s going on an awfully long time” joke then I think the staff are now legally permitted to push you down a fire escape. And secondly, if you saw the title “Final Fantasy VII Remake” and from the words “Final Fantasy VII” and “Remake” are now expecting a remake of the game Final Fantasy VII then you might be disappointed.

Final Fantasy VII Remake ends at the bit where you leave the first city, or about one third of the way through the first disc of the original PS1 game. Although it takes about forty more hours to get there ‘cos it’s padded like an A-cup on school picture day so there’s been some contention over whether this is false advertising or a new take on the subject matter with better character exploration. I think a lot of this could have been cleared up if they’d titled the game “Final Fantasy VII Remake: Episode One.” But maybe they didn’t want to commit. I mean, at the rate they’re going, by the time they get to the last episode it’ll probably get pushed back by the heat death of the universe.

I hope they are doing more episodes ‘cos the plot as it stands is painfully unresolved. The bulk of what we get might as well be retitled “Cloud Strife versus the Manic Pixie Dream Girls.” You are Cloud Strife, the original pretty anime sword boy whose entire life consists of being worked by one manic pixie dream girl after another while he grumps like a teenage boy being forced to escort his sister to the zoo. It starts with him being dragged into an eco terrorist group by manic pixie dream girl no.1, big-titted childhood friend girl who, if this were a dating sim, I would have classified as “the freebie.”

He gets manic pixied by her for a few chapters before another terrorist bombing goes awry, he falls off a high thing and lands almost literally in the lap of manic pixie dream girl no.2, flower seller with mysterious past who drives the rest of the plot. All of this is adhering closely to the original, and it was just as much a lurching tonal shift back then, when one moment we’re having a desperate climactic battle with the evil corporation’s murder robot in an exploding facility, and the next we’re helping manic pixie dream girl no.2 with her grocery shopping.

And watching her give out flowers and be kind to all the orphan children as the townsfolk murmur about how perfect and wonderful and generally too pure for this sinful Earth she is. But that doesn’t bother me, laid on as it is thicker than a mammoth skin rug, what does is that the storytelling feels confused. Not confusing – confused. There’s this whole new chapter between terrorist bombing one and two in which Cloud gets latched onto by Manic Pixie Dream Girl 1.5, and it’s all over the place like a living room full of aborted Lego projects. First there’s a motorbike chase and then a motorbike boss fight with a mulleted dude who feels threatened by your motorbike prowess and nicer hairdo.

Then we have to sneak around someone’s mums house and the pace slows right down before speeding right back up again when we go to a facility to battle some evil corporate soldiers, and then oh no, mullet dude shows up for another boss fight, and then oh no, evil robots come to kill us, but oh yay, mullet dude smashes the robots because he respects us now, but then he fucks off and oh no, the robots are still working so what was the fucking point of any of that, then oh yay, a rival terrorist cell shows up to cover our escape, but oh no, they’ve taken Wedge, but oh yay, Wedge comes straight back. And then a prolonged sequence ensues where our heroes pull Wedge’s trousers down and inspect his buttocks. As I say, confused, like they were tag teaming out the writers every ten minutes and they weren’t allowed to talk to each other.

And at some point someone must have said “Hey, you know Sephiroth? The iconic villain of the game who all the fangirls irrigate their inner thighs over? Isn’t he, like, barely in the first bit of the game? Doesn’t his proper introduction only happen right after the bit where our game stops?” “Well I wish you’d brought this up sooner, Clemence. Alright, let’s have the main character hallucinate Sephiroth a bunch of times, then at the very end as you’re leaving the city a magic portal to space will appear and you have to go through and fight Sephiroth on the moon. Any questions?” “Yes, several.” I don’t know what the fuck’s going on at the end, there.

I feel sorry for anyone playing this game with no knowledge of the original. “Blimey, my pretty anime sword boy daydreams about Gwyneth Paltrow a lot.” I’ve got no nostalgia for the original game – I think I was in the room when someone was playing it once, and I was more interested in the Twix I was very slowly eating at the time – and I found the remake to be a mixed experience. I was having fun while I was in the gambling town and Cloud had to dress up as a lady and becomes somehow irresistable to men despite looking like a frumpy Amish spinster who spent last night sleeping with her head in the feeding trough.

But that’s a cultural thing, I’m English, and therefore the funniest things in the world to me are men dressing as ladies and the concept of social mobility. I like when the game is padding itself out with new story stuff like having to beat a hairdresser in a dance off before he’ll consent to do your bangs. I don’t like it when it pads itself by copy pasting the same sewer tunnel nineteen times and then collapsing the floor underneath our fat anime arse so we have to slog through the nineteen identical sewer tunnels to get back to the place we were just fucking at, this happens more than once. As for the combat, I was liking it up to a point.

You attack, block and dodge in real time until you’ve filled a meter and then you get to pause to contemplate what special move will best exploit the enemy weaknesses, it felt like a nice way to balance the chaotic battling with thoughtful strategy. But over time as the challenge ramps you need to rely more on your party members, and your party members are as much use as an anti-capitalist protestor on the floor of the New York stock exchange. I was wondering why they had so much trouble building up a single special move in the time it took me to get three special moves deep, and then I spotted the dude with the gun arm, old Mr. Introverted Japanese Person’s Idea Of What Black People Are Like, firing round after round into a nearby handrail.

I have to keep taking over to show them how to do it, it’s like teaching a roomful of six year olds how to type. So once again a hybrid combat system in a modern JRPG fails to convince me that its way is better than the old method of having the characters stand in a neat row and take it in turns. It might not have been spectacular, but it was a damn sight more polite. I guess ‘spectacle’ is all that matters in JRPGs these days, that’s why half the time in combat the deep shadows and particle effects mean I can barely tell what the fuck’s going on. You know what was really spectacular, viewers? An epic three disc adventure on the PS1 that was long because it had lots of stuff in it.

And Final Fantasy 7 Remake only managing to be as long as it was because a lot of it’s copy-pasted like a suspiciously well-written undergraduate thesis feels like a slap in the face to those of us who remember a time when we could have nice things. And isn’t that the story of my fucking life right now. Hey, remember when games had actual depth? SLAP! No you don’t. Hey, remember when you could go out to that frozen yoghurt place you like? SLAP! No more of that. Hey, remember when you could get off on light BDSM? No slap! Oh you tease.


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Author
Yahtzee Croshaw
Yahtzee is the Escapist’s longest standing talent, having been writing and producing its award winning flagship series, Zero Punctuation, since 2007. Before that he had a smattering of writing credits on various sites and print magazines, and has almost two decades of experience in game journalism as well as a lifelong interest in video games as an artistic medium, especially narrative-focused. He also has a foot in solo game development - he was a big figure in the indie adventure game scene in the early 2000s - and writes novels. He has six novels published at time of writing with a seventh on the way, all in the genres of comedic sci-fi and urban fantasy. He was born in the UK, emigrated to Australia in 2003, and emigrated again to California in 2016, where he lives with his wife and daughters. His hobbies include walking the dog and emigrating to places.