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View Full Version : Which game had the best set of villains/antagonists?



Psychotic
05-15-2014, 08:54 PM
Too often people only refer to the main villain, so is Sephiroth better than Kefka? etc. when I think there's so much more to the games than just the final boss. For example, the Empire in VI were truly rotten and just as much a thorn in your side - if not more! - than Kefka. And who can forget Ultros? So which game had the best group? It might be that you thought Zeromus was pretty lousy, but the likes of Golbez, the Four Fiends and Kain's Heel Turn made up for it. On the other hand you might have thought Seifer was incredible but the rest of VIII's villains weren't all that impressive.

I probably missed a few good villains on the poll so feel free to prod me to add them. Also I appreciate stuff like having Shinra and The Turks is a little weird as the Turks are part of the Shinra but hopefully you understand what I'm going for here.

Shorty
05-15-2014, 09:39 PM
I know it's cliche, but Sephiroth is kindof the classic FF villain to me. I think Shinra and the Turks are great antagonists within the story and I love the mystery of JENOVA.

I've only completed FFVIII but was 99% finshed with FFX before ragequitting and I didn't think that the villains or antagonists of those games were very strong. Additionally, I haven't completed FFIX yet, but Kuja doesn't strike me as a particularly nasty villain on the scale of bad guys. All he's done so far in my game is commit a bit of amusing mischief for no real reason.

So FFVII it is. Of the games I've played, the complete package for me, villain-wise.

Jinx
05-15-2014, 09:41 PM
Agreed with Shorty, FFVII. You've got the Shinra (and the Turks by extension) and Sephiroth. They represent different things but they're both equally scary. I think the Shinra are probably the best villain in the whole series because they are so realistic to what's going on in our own world.

Ayen
05-15-2014, 09:44 PM
Tough one. I really like Shinra, Galbadia and Alexandria. Beatrix is a smurfing bawse!

Jinx
05-15-2014, 09:45 PM
If you're adding more villains, you should definitely add Lani to FFIX!

Psychotic
05-15-2014, 09:53 PM
If you're adding more villains, you should definitely add Lani to FFIX!Why not!

Colonel Angus
05-15-2014, 10:27 PM
Even though I love the villains in VI (Ultros, Kefka, etc.) I had to go w/ XII.

The Judges, the Empire, even the random beasts skulking around the world were all excellent. From the HUGE dragons, to the horrific undead, this game had the goods. :zombie:

Raistlin
05-16-2014, 03:11 AM
FFXII for me too, though it depends on the criteria. Sephiroth was pretty awesome when I was 10, but his story reeks of too much lost potential (which is true for almost all of discs 2 and 3). Sephiroth still probably wins "most badass," Kefka wins "most batshit crazy," but FFXII's Judges win most well-rounded and engaging -- and are the sort of villains I'd most like to see more of.

Quindiana Jones
05-16-2014, 03:14 AM
Yeah, FFXII had the most engaging and interesting normal baddies for me.

Pumpkin
05-16-2014, 03:26 AM
I'd say IX, but it's not firm.

NeoCracker
05-16-2014, 06:54 AM
Top Three, Ranked from least favorite to most!

FF VI - Kefka, additedly, pulls most of the weight on this one for me. Utlros was good as well, though only for comic relief. And while the comedy is appriciated, doesn't really add much to the overall. The Empire, while being pretty Generic, were still done very well. Their reach and power were displayed quite well, and Ghestal had some great moments in terms of direct villlainy and being underhanded.

FF IV - As far as Story and motivation, I like Zemus. His turn to Zeroumus was... odd to say the least, but Zemus himself made a pretty efficient villain. Though Golbez and the Four Fiends are really the show stealers. A great variety of enemies, all of which come across as threatening for entirely different reasons. I think the threat of Baron may actually have been better presented the the threat of the FF VI empire on a whole. So while I think Kefka may be the single best villain among the two games, the overarching villany of FF IV gets wins this one.

FF IX - Kuja is already my favorite FF Villain. While he may be vain, narcasistic, and a terrible person all around, I kind of love his motivations. His entire motivation is to fight against a fate he has no control over, and what really makes him scary compared to other FF villains is not his wit, it's not his calm demenour or plans, it's the how insanely volatile his emotions can be.

Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

And then you have Beatrix, who is a total bad ass. Like, oh dear god is she awesome.


I will give some credit to VII here though. While Sephiroth is the weak link of the games villains, Hojo is fucking awesome up until that bit at the end where he's all 'Seph is my son and Imma help him!'. That was just... awkward. Had it not been for that moment, Hojo and SHinra may have put this game as a contender for my number 3 spot.

Parker
05-16-2014, 10:38 AM
I don't care too much about Sephiroth/Jenova etc but the way Shinra was handled was pretty good and added something a little more gritty and interesting to a game about magic dudes with big swords

Loony BoB
05-16-2014, 11:05 AM
Definitely FFVII. Shinra and Sephiroth are, for me, streets ahead of the rest of the series when it comes to villainy. If anyone were close, it would be Kefka, but he's just not that close.

Karifean
05-16-2014, 11:32 AM
I agree. Final Fantasy VII had such good villains.

The Man
05-16-2014, 02:11 PM
FFVI has Ultros, so it wins. Honourable mentions to, in chronological order, V, VII, and IX.

Wolf Kanno
05-16-2014, 06:20 PM
You know, I can't really answer this one cause I rarely like all of the villains. Mainly cause the series has a bad habit of always having one villain that tends to overshadow the whole lot of them in their own games so it's difficult to think of a cast where every villain was equally menacing or interesting. My knee jerk reaction to this question was actually Xenogears but it is not an FF. :eep:

I'll think about it I guess.

Bolivar
05-16-2014, 07:58 PM
VII

Skyblade
05-17-2014, 12:54 AM
FF IX - Kuja is already my favorite FF Villain. While he may be vain, narcasistic, and a terrible person all around, I kind of love his motivations. His entire motivation is to fight against a fate he has no control over, and what really makes him scary compared to other FF villains is not his wit, it's not his calm demenour or plans, it's the how insanely volatile his emotions can be.

The thing is, I thought Strega from Persona 3 did the whole "insane rebellion against fate" thing way better.


Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


And then you have Beatrix, who is a total bad ass. Like, oh dear god is she awesome.

I cannot contest this.

Jinx
05-17-2014, 01:01 AM
Shit, can someone change my vote to FFVII?

Wolf Kanno
05-17-2014, 02:16 AM
Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


I disagree, considering they are two species fighting for survival, I feel under the circumstance, genocide is acceptable to the alternative of extinction. Technically the real Terrans are wiped out anyway, as the beings that Zidane are from are simply shells being prepped to be imbued with the Terran souls.

Skyblade
05-17-2014, 06:44 AM
Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


I disagree, considering they are two species fighting for survival, I feel under the circumstance, genocide is acceptable to the alternative of extinction. Technically the real Terrans are wiped out anyway, as the beings that Zidane are from are simply shells being prepped to be imbued with the Terran souls.

Acceptable from a practicality standpoint, perhaps. That doesn't mean it's not evil, or that Garland isn't a mass-murdering lunatic.

Wolf Kanno
05-17-2014, 08:10 AM
Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


I disagree, considering they are two species fighting for survival, I feel under the circumstance, genocide is acceptable to the alternative of extinction. Technically the real Terrans are wiped out anyway, as the beings that Zidane are from are simply shells being prepped to be imbued with the Terran souls.

Acceptable from a practicality standpoint, perhaps. That doesn't mean it's not evil, or that Garland isn't a mass-murdering lunatic.

It does if your world view doesn't believe in good or evil. ;)

54746

Psychotic
05-17-2014, 02:44 PM
Shit, can someone change my vote to FFVII?Can't do that, but I've edited the numbers.

I voted FFVII. I think Shinra is an epic villain and a great and original idea rather than the same old Evil Empire routine, a corporation that damages the planet for prophet and effectively rules the world was a real departure from previous entries in the series. The Turks and Don Corneo were both really fun comic relief villains too.

Skyblade
05-17-2014, 03:42 PM
trout, can someone change my vote to FFVII?Can't do that, but I've edited the numbers.

I voted FFVII. I think Shinra is an epic villain and a great and original idea rather than the same old Evil Empire routine, a corporation that damages the planet for prophet and effectively rules the world was a real departure from previous entries in the series. The Turks and Don Corneo were both really fun comic relief villains too.

For "profit", Psychotic. Completely different meaning.

NeoCracker
05-17-2014, 08:51 PM
FF IX - Kuja is already my favorite FF Villain. While he may be vain, narcasistic, and a terrible person all around, I kind of love his motivations. His entire motivation is to fight against a fate he has no control over, and what really makes him scary compared to other FF villains is not his wit, it's not his calm demenour or plans, it's the how insanely volatile his emotions can be.

The thing is, I thought Strega from Persona 3 did the whole "insane rebellion against fate" thing way better.


Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


And then you have Beatrix, who is a total bad ass. Like, oh dear god is she awesome.

I cannot contest this.

...But Strega wasn't rebelling against fate. They welcomed the coming of Nyx with open arms, a thing that was going to happen regardless of whether or not they were there. That's like, the exact opposite of rebelling against fate. Also, what does Persona have to do with comparing the villain groups of FF titles like, at all? :p

Also, the act may be evil, but I have a hard time lumping Garland himself as evil. In his hands he held the lives of all of his people, so what was he suppose to do? Decide to let them all die? It's comparable to two hunters, both with families to feed who have been without food for some time. You see some game to hunt, you know the other guy's family will die without that food, yet so will yours. Are you going to call the hunter evil for fighting for the food?

Skyblade
05-17-2014, 09:07 PM
FF IX - Kuja is already my favorite FF Villain. While he may be vain, narcasistic, and a terrible person all around, I kind of love his motivations. His entire motivation is to fight against a fate he has no control over, and what really makes him scary compared to other FF villains is not his wit, it's not his calm demenour or plans, it's the how insanely volatile his emotions can be.

The thing is, I thought Strega from Persona 3 did the whole "insane rebellion against fate" thing way better.


Garland is absolutely wonderful as well, he fights to protect his people above all else. He's not evil, he simpley chose the lives of his people over the lives of Gaia.

Um, yes, he is evil. Choosing to commit genocide to save your people is not a good act. It may be understandable, but it is definitely evil.


And then you have Beatrix, who is a total bad ass. Like, oh dear god is she awesome.

I cannot contest this.

...But Strega wasn't rebelling against fate. They welcomed the coming of Nyx with open arms, a thing that was going to happen regardless of whether or not they were there. That's like, the exact opposite of rebelling against fate. Also, what does Persona have to do with comparing the villain groups of FF titles like, at all? :p

Strega was all about rebelling against their personal fates. Their entire arc was dealing with the side effects of the medication and the knowledge that their own personal demise was coming. Similar to Kuja, it was about how they chose to live their lives, what they chose of the time that remained them, and whether they accepted the oncoming death or not.

And it doesn't strictly relate, but when I see a refined and well executed version of a concept, it generally lowers my overall impression of the unrefined ones that I have seen before. In Kuja's case, that concept is pretty much all he has going for him, so with my opinion of that lowered, there's not really a lot left to care about.


Also, the act may be evil, but I have a hard time lumping Garland himself as evil. In his hands he held the lives of all of his people, so what was he suppose to do? Decide to let them all die? It's comparable to two hunters, both with families to feed who have been without food for some time. You see some game to hunt, you know the other guy's family will die without that food, yet so will yours. Are you going to call the hunter evil for fighting for the food?

Yep. No looking for other options, just a case of "these people don't matter, let's kill them all"? Yeah, sorry, that's evil. Hell, you could lump every group of conquerors in general under that banner. They all look out for their own people (however they define those people) at the expense of all others. That is not a morally defensible position.

In the hunter analogy, if you immediately jump to braining the other guy to take the food, you're evil. You could always look for more game, or some fruit growing somewhere, etcetera.

Pumpkin
05-17-2014, 09:12 PM
I think they're trying to say that this could be considered a morally grey area. Some people obviously consider it more so grey than others though :P

I can see it in a way. People can get selfish in times of need. It's kind of like if you and your child are starving and another person and their child are starving. Someone finds a piece of bread. You can bet a lot of people are going to fight for that bread for their child because its their child and they can't worry about the other persons child. This is kind of like that but on a much larger scale.

Not saying he's not evil, just looking at it from different perspectives

Wolf Kanno
05-17-2014, 11:35 PM
Strega was all about rebelling against their personal fates. Their entire arc was dealing with the side effects of the medication and the knowledge that their own personal demise was coming. Similar to Kuja, it was about how they chose to live their lives, what they chose of the time that remained them, and whether they accepted the oncoming death or not.

And it doesn't strictly relate, but when I see a refined and well executed version of a concept, it generally lowers my overall impression of the unrefined ones that I have seen before. In Kuja's case, that concept is pretty much all he has going for him, so with my opinion of that lowered, there's not really a lot left to care about.

I feel this is an unfair comparison though. I mean P3 came out six years later on technological hardware better suited to tell a more nuanced story. To try to compare it just feels a bit unfair to IX, it would be different if IX was the superior written one cause then you would have to wonder what the hell happened with RPG writing but I have to side with NeoCracker that saying a game made years later, on better hardware did the idea better and thus I have to look down on previous attempts because they weren't as good feels a bit... unfair to say the least.




Yep. No looking for other options, just a case of "these people don't matter, let's kill them all"? Yeah, sorry, that's evil. Hell, you could lump every group of conquerors in general under that banner. They all look out for their own people (however they define those people) at the expense of all others. That is not a morally defensible position.

In the hunter analogy, if you immediately jump to braining the other guy to take the food, you're evil. You could always look for more game, or some fruit growing somewhere, etcetera.

Someone's been watching a bit too much of the Doctor. ;)

You're assuming that they haven't already exhausted alternative solutions to no avail. Let's modify this situation. You have two families a father and child in each, stuck on a spacecraft bound for home but an accident struck it off course. The ship has been corrected but it will take a month to reach it and you have just enough food for one child to survive the trip home and that's by rationing what is left to it's bare minimum for survival and just to make this clear, this may also be assuming the child will be eating the other three passengers in case we wish to go there. Which child will live? The one whose father secures their survival.

I can't fault the father in wishing to protect their child in this case, while I disagree with their actions it is not that their intent is malicious. Murder that is not malicious or petty but through necessity is not the same as murder through malicious intent. Our society's laws reflect this grey area of the law and morality. This is the thing bout Garland, he's not out to destroy Gaia cause he's a conqueror, it's just that his people's survival depends on very precise circumstances and to be fair to him, the backstory of IX explains that the initial attempt of planet fusing failed which was back before real civilization had formed on Gaia, in other words he tried to assimilate it before evolution on the planet had reached a certain point and basically botched it because the Terran's technology is breaking down. A similar ethical quandary would happen if our own species traveled to an Earth-like planet and decided to stay, we would technically be forever changing the evolutionary course of life on the planet for our own selfish needs.

Perducci
05-18-2014, 12:12 AM
FFVI has Ultros, so it wins.

Basically this.