Final Fantasy has been remade several times for different platforms and has frequently been packaged with
Final Fantasy II in various collections. It had access to almost three times as much storage space as the Famicom version but suffered from problems not present in Nintendo's cartridge media, including noticeable loading times. There were also minor graphical upgrades, improved music tracks, and sound effects. In 1994,
Final Fantasy I・II, a compilation of
Final Fantasy and
Final Fantasy II, was launched for the Famicom. This version was only released in Japan and had very few graphical updates. The
WonderSwan Color remake was released in Japan on December 9, 2000, and featured many new graphical changes. The 8-bit graphics of the original Famicom game were updated, battle scenes incorporated full background images, and character and enemy
sprites were redrawn to look more like the ones from the
Super Famicom Final Fantasy games. and featured several changes such as more detailed graphics, a remixed soundtrack, added
full motion video sequences, art galleries of
Yoshitaka Amano's illustrations, and a memo save function.
Final Fantasy I & II: Dawn of Souls is, like
Final Fantasy Origins, a port of the first two games in the series and was released for the
Game Boy Advance in 2004. The
Dawn of Souls version incorporates various new elements, including four additional dungeons, an updated bestiary, and a few minor changes. Square Enix released a version of
Final Fantasy for two Japanese mobile phone networks in 2004; a version for
NTT DoCoMo FOMA 900i series was launched in March under the title
Final Fantasy i and a subsequent release for
CDMA 1X WIN-compatible phones was launched in August. Another version was released for
SoftBank Yahoo! Keitai phones on July 3, 2006. The games have more refined graphics compared to the original 8-bit game, but not as advanced as many of the later console and handheld ports. Square Enix planned to release this version for North American mobile phones in 2006, but it was delayed to 2010 and released in collaboration with
Namco. It retains the game difficulty and "spell level"-based magic system from the original Famicom version. Other elements such as updated graphics, spell names, and monster names are borrowed from the
Game Boy Advance /
WonderSwan Color versions, not including the additional dungeons, monsters and items present in the GBA version. Game data is saved as in the original Famicom version (by using Tent, Sleeping Bag, and Cottage or by going into an inn), but there are now three save game slots and a "Temporary Save" option available in the game. For the 20th anniversary of
Final Fantasy, Square Enix remade
Final Fantasy and
Final Fantasy II for the
PlayStation Portable. The games were released in Japan and North America in 2007, and in European territories in 2008. The PSP version features higher-resolution 2D graphics, full motion video sequences, a remixed soundtrack, and a new dungeon as well as the bonus dungeons from
Dawn of Souls. The script is the same as in the
Dawn of Souls version, aside from the new dungeon. This version was later released for the Nintendo 3DS (on the Japanese eShop only) with the addition of
stereoscopic 3D. Square Enix released the original NES version of the game on the
Wii's
Virtual Console service in Japan on May 26, 2009, in North America on October 5 and in the PAL region as an import on May 7, 2010. Square Enix released the
iOS version of
Final Fantasy on February 25, 2010, based on the PSP port with touch controls, worldwide. A
Windows Phone version was released on June 13, 2012, which is based on the iOS version. Square Enix released
Android port on July 27, 2012, largely based on the iOS version though lacking the new dungeons of the 20th-anniversary edition. The game (alongside 29 other games) was included in the NES Classic Edition / Nintendo Classic Mini: Nintendo Entertainment System released by Nintendo in November 2016. The first game in the
Pixel Remaster series,
Final Fantasy, alongside
Final Fantasy II and
III, was released on iOS, Android, and Windows PC through Steam on July 28, 2021. This enhanced version was released as part of the
Final Fantasy Pixel Remaster compilation series for
Nintendo Switch and
PlayStation 4 in 2023, and for
Xbox Series X/S in 2024. ==Reception==