More interesting is that traditional levelling has been done away with. This is particularly handy as battles often require you to switch up tactics like Lulu’s range of black magic spells or you might need Wakka’s ball-throwing attack to hit those annoying airborne enemies that are out of reach for Auron’s blade, which should also mean you don’t lean on just a few core characters only to find the rest of your party woefully under-levelled later. There is however an attempt to change things up in X, first in the battle system, which replaces the Active Time Battle system in previous entries, which allows you to switch characters in and out of your party while speed can also mean some characters can take more turns than another. This is still nonetheless a Final Fantasy game, meaning there’s plenty of party-based turn-based random battles to get through. X is an especially sweeping tale told with even more cinematic flourish, evident in the frequent and seamless use of pre-rendered cinematics all suitably upscaled to full HD – which explains how an old game still manages to have one of the largest file sizes for the Switch to date. While the overall cast is not nearly as grating as I remember it, the flat delivery and awkward pace of Yuna’s lines still stick out (possibly owing to the challenge of getting the English script to match the lip sync made for Japanese voices), while Tidus often falls short of the mark when he’s supposed to hit an emotional range that’s not just being a goofy jock who can make a girl laugh – the less said about that laughing scene, the better.īecause ultimately, X is heavy on emotion, particularly when it comes to doom and melancholy – death and destruction is commonplace in Spira while its people fear technology – so it’s hard not to feel like it’s a little undone by some surfer dude who strolled in from a fish-out-of-water comedy.Īt least it still holds up visually, certainly more so than the entries before it. More than just embarking on a fateful pilgrimage to defeat the invincible entity called Sin (just by the name you can expect there are plenty of religious overtones), their story blossoms into one of gaming’s greatest on-screen romances, this despite some at times ropey voice-acting. The reason X is so fondly remembered is undoubtedly the relationship between star Blitzball player Tidus and Summoner Yuna. The HD Remaster contains both X and X-2 and shows that after all these years, it’s still a stunning and emotional experience that feels right at home on Switch. Final Fantasy X is arguably one of the most beloved entries, a watershed for the series giving voice to its cast that had previously relied on just its iconic blue text boxes. Although Final Fantasy spin-offs have appeared on Nintendo platforms in intervening years, it’s only now that the mainline series is finally making its way back to where it all began way back on the NES.
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