![]() ![]() Doga is probably the most developed out of the group of characters that joins your party briefly. The NPCs who join your party at different parts of the game are also pretty underdeveloped. ![]() You learn about the four characters at the start of the game and afterwards they remain pretty much silent except for some dialogue here or there about what you have to do next. Like the story, character development is pretty minimal. The first of such characters is Princess Sarah, who wishes to uncurse a city in the early part of the game. Sometimes other characters will join your party and help you out at the start of battle. Most of the game will be you exploring dungeons, towers, and temples. There are a few twists along the way, but they are few and far in-between. Afterwards you must travel around the vast world and find the other three Crystals and receive their light before you are ready to fight the avatar of darkness. After that, the Crystal blesses you with its light and you are granted the first job classes in the game. The first hour of play will be basically you meeting up with the other three characters. Before the Light Crystal bestows its power onto you, it asks you to find the other three warriors. Basically you as Luneth fall through a hole and are told by a Crystal that you must fight the encroaching darkness with three others. Like I said before, the story is very bare bones. What sets Final Fantasy III apart from Dragon Quest and other similar old school RPGs are it’s many jobs and job levels. You’ll be going from place to place, exploring dungeons and towns until you finally reach the final area.Įxpect standard RPG fair: turn based battles and random encounters in each area you explore. The story is very minimal, there are no twists and turns, and the charm relies heavily upon exploration. Spells still have levels and points, rather than an MP pool. Other than jobs, not much else has changed since the original. III doesn’t punish the player for switching jobs, so I recommend fooling around and finding the party that works for you. Unlike the original Final Fantasy, III introduced a job system, where each character can take any job and can switch between different jobs. This game has a very old school vibe, so those who hate old school RPGs, will probably want to stay away from FFIII. Gameplay:įinal Fantasy III plays much like the original Final Fantasy. As the Four Warriors of Light, they must travel around the world, seeking out the other three Crystals to gain the power to fight off the encroaching darkness. When the group manages to defeat the Djinn, the Crystal gives them its blessing and the four officially become the Warriors of Light. Luneth is joined by his childhood friend Arc, and then a blacksmith’s daughter, Refia, and finally by a charming knight from Sasune, Ingus, as he tries to lift the curse of the Djinn. Luneth isn’t quite sure what he has to do, but his adopted father, Topapa, gives him his blessings and tells Luneth to do as the Crystal says. After exploring the cave and fighting a fearsome foe, he finds a Crystal, which tells him to find the other three children chosen by destiny and then teleports him outside the cave. Unluckily for him, he trips and falls into a hole. Luneth, an orphan raised by Topapa the village elder of Ur, is a curious little fellow, and he decides to go explore the cave that opened up after the recent earthquake. But this, the Gulgan said, was only an omen of something much worse to come, and only the four Warriors of Light, blessed by the Crystals of Light, can save the world. The Gulgan prophesied the coming of an earthquake so fierce that it would swallow the Crystals and spew monsters from the depths of the earth.
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