Games The
first installment of the series was released in Japan on December 18, 1987. Successive games are numbered as volumes rather than sequels; subsequent games have stories unrelated to previous ones. Many
Final Fantasy games have been
localized for markets in North America, Europe, and Australia on numerous
video game consoles,
personal computers (PC), and
mobile phones. As of June 2023, the series includes the main installments from
Final Fantasy to
Final Fantasy XVI, as well as direct sequels and
spin-offs, both released and confirmed as being in development. Many of the early games have been remade or re-released on multiple platforms.
Main series {{Timeline of release years Three
Final Fantasy installments were released on the
Nintendo Entertainment System (NES).
Final Fantasy was released in Japan in 1987 and in North America in 1990. It introduced many concepts to the console RPG genre, and has since been remade on several platforms. The last of the NES installments,
Final Fantasy III, was released in Japan in 1990, but was not released elsewhere until a
Nintendo DS remake came out in 2006. It introduced the "
Active Time Battle" system.
Final Fantasy V, released in 1992 in Japan, was the first game in the series to spawn a sequel: a short anime series,
Final Fantasy: Legend of the Crystals.
Final Fantasy VI was released in Japan in 1994, titled
Final Fantasy III in North America. The
PlayStation console saw the release of three main
Final Fantasy games.
Final Fantasy VII (1997) moved away from the
two-dimensional (2D) graphics used in the first six games to
three-dimensional (3D) computer graphics; the game features
polygonal characters on
pre-rendered backgrounds. It also introduced a more modern setting, a style that was carried over to the next game.
Final Fantasy IX, released in 2000, returned to the series' roots, by revisiting a more traditional
Final Fantasy setting, rather than the more modern worlds of
VII and
VIII. Three main installments, as well as one online game, were published for the
PlayStation 2.
Final Fantasy X (2001) introduced full 3D areas and
voice acting to the series, and was the first to spawn a sub-sequel (
Final Fantasy X-2, published in 2003). The first massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) in the series,
Final Fantasy XI, was released on the PS2 and PC in 2002, and later on the
Xbox 360. It introduced real-time battles instead of
random encounters. The game is also the first in the main series to utilize a world used in a previous game, namely the land of
Ivalice, which was previously featured in
Final Fantasy Tactics and
Vagrant Story. In 2009,
Final Fantasy XIII was released in Japan, and in North America and Europe the following year, for PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It is the flagship installment of the
Fabula Nova Crystallis Final Fantasy series and became the first mainline game to spawn two sub-sequels (
XIII-2 and
Lightning Returns). It was also the first game released in Chinese and
high definition along with being released on two consoles at once.
Final Fantasy XIV, a MMORPG, was released worldwide on
Microsoft Windows in 2010, but it received heavy criticism when it was launched, prompting Square Enix to rerelease the game as
Final Fantasy XIV: A Realm Reborn, this time to the
PlayStation 3 as well, in 2013.
Final Fantasy XV is an action role-playing game that was released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One in 2016. Originally a
XIII spin-off titled
Versus XIII,
XV uses the mythos of the
Fabula Nova Crystallis series, although in many other respects the game stands on its own and has since been distanced from the series by its developers. The sixteenth mainline entry,
Final Fantasy XVI, was released in 2023 for
PlayStation 5.
Remakes, sequels and spin-offs Final Fantasy has spawned numerous
spin-offs and
metaseries. Several are, in fact, not
Final Fantasy games, but were rebranded for North American release. Examples include the
SaGa series, rebranded
The Final Fantasy Legend, and its two sequels,
Final Fantasy Legend II and
III.
Final Fantasy Mystic Quest was specifically developed for a United States audience, and
Final Fantasy Tactics is a
tactical RPG that features many references and themes found in the series. The spin-off
Chocobo series,
Crystal Chronicles series, and
Kingdom Hearts series also include multiple
Final Fantasy elements.
Dissidia Final Fantasy was released in 2009, a
fighting game that features heroes and villains from the first ten games of the main series. It was followed by a
prequel in 2011, a
sequel in 2015 and a
mobile spin-off in 2017. In 2003, the
Final Fantasy series' first sub-sequel,
Final Fantasy X-2, was released.
Final Fantasy XIII was originally intended to stand on its own, but the team wanted to explore the world, characters and mythos more, resulting in the development and release of two sequels in
2011 and
2013 respectively, creating the series' first official trilogy. Enhanced 3D remakes of
Final Fantasy III and
IV were released in 2006 and 2007 respectively. The first installment of the
Final Fantasy VII Remake project was released on the PlayStation 4 in 2020. The second and latest installment of the remake trilogy,
Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, was released on the PlayStation 5 in 2024.
Film and television Square Enix has expanded the
Final Fantasy series into various media. Multiple anime and
computer-generated imagery (CGI) films have been produced that are based either on individual
Final Fantasy games or on the series as a whole. The first was an
original video animation (OVA),
Final Fantasy: Legend of the Crystals, a sequel to
Final Fantasy V. The story was set in the same world as the game, although 200 years in the future. It was released as four 30-minute episodes, first in Japan in 1994 and later in the United States by
Urban Vision in 1998. In 2001,
Square Pictures released its first feature film,
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within. The film is set on a future
Earth invaded by
alien life forms.
The Spirits Within was the first animated feature to seriously attempt to portray photorealistic CGI humans, but was considered a
box office bomb and garnered mixed reviews. A 25-episode anime television series,
Final Fantasy: Unlimited, was released in 2001 based on the common elements of the franchise. It was broadcast in Japan by
TV Tokyo and released in North America by
ADV Films. In 2005,
Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children, a feature length
direct-to-DVD CGI film, and
Last Order: Final Fantasy VII, a non-canon OVA, were released as part of the
Compilation of Final Fantasy VII.
Advent Children was animated by Visual Works, which helped the company create CG sequences for the games. The film, unlike
The Spirits Within, became a commercial success.
Last Order, on the other hand, was released in Japan in a special DVD bundle package with
Advent Children.
Last Order sold out quickly and was positively received by Western critics, though fan reaction was mixed over changes to established story scenes. Two animated tie-ins for
Final Fantasy XV were released as part of a larger multimedia project dubbed the
Final Fantasy XV Universe.
Brotherhood is a series of five 10-to-20-minute-long episodes developed by
A-1 Pictures and Square Enix detailing the backstories of the main cast.
Kingsglaive, a CGI film released prior to the game in Summer 2016, is set during the game's opening and follows new and secondary characters. Square Enix released a short anime in 2019 called
Final Fantasy XV: Episode Ardyn – Prologue on YouTube. Produced by
Satelight Inc, it provides insight into the antagonist's past and background story for
Final Fantasy XVs final DLC. Square Enix released
Final Fantasy XIV: Dad of Light in 2017, an 8-episode Japanese soap opera based, featuring a mix of live-action scenes and
Final Fantasy XIV gameplay footage.
Sony Pictures Television was working on a live-action adaptation of the series in June 2019 with Hivemind and Square Enix. Jason Brown, Sean Daniel, and Dinesh Shamdasani from Hivemind were producing while Ben Lustig and Jake Thornton were attached as writers and executive producers.
Other media Several video games in the series have either been adapted into or have had spin-offs in the form of
manga and novels. The first was the novelization of
Final Fantasy II in 1989, which was followed by a manga adaptation of
Final Fantasy III in 1992. Later years have seen an increase in the number of non-video game adaptations and spin-offs.
Final Fantasy: The Spirits Within has been adapted into a novel, the spin-off game
Final Fantasy Crystal Chronicles has been adapted into a manga, and
Final Fantasy XI had a novel and manga set in its continuity. Seven
novellas based on the
Final Fantasy VII universe have also been released. The
Final Fantasy: Unlimited story was partially continued in novels and a manga after the anime series ended. The
Final Fantasy X and
XIII series have also had novellas and audio dramas released.
Final Fantasy Tactics Advance has been adapted into a
radio drama, and
Final Fantasy: Unlimited has received a radio drama sequel. A
trading card game named
Final Fantasy Trading Card Game is produced by Square Enix and
Hobby Japan, first released Japan in 2012 with an English version in 2016. The game has been compared to
Magic: the Gathering, and a tournament circuit for the game also takes place. == Common elements ==