• What Final Fantasy Tactics Advance Means to Me

    It was 2003, I had just begun my second year of university, and my life could have been better.

    I was going to school for no other reason than to make my parents happy, and because I didn't know what I wanted to do with my life yet, I picked something interesting sounding (which I soon regretted) and decided to roll with it. I floated through coursework and classes hardly paying attention and rarely doing any of the reading. When I wasn't at school, I was working in retail, or writing letters to a crush I had who had moved away (this was before the internet was as widespread as it is today).

    Needless to say, things could have been better.

    I enjoyed playing video games, though, and I had a subscription to Nintendo Power, which was still a thing back then. I was flipping through one when I stumbled across an ad for a game called Final Fantasy Tactics Advance.


    It was just about to be released, and Nintendo Power was giving you the option of pre-ordering it so they would send you the game and the strategy guide in the mail the day it came out.

    I don't know why the ad gave me pause. Final Fantasy, although obviously a well known franchise, was not something I had been particularly familiar with at the time outside of some occasional messing around with FFVI and FFVII. But I had greatly enjoyed Super Mario RPG by the same company, and I needed a new Game Boy Advance game to play, so I figured what the heck and sent in for a copy.

    The game arrived soon after, with the strategy guide, in a cardboard box. I eagerly unwrapped it and popped the cartridge in the GBA slot.

    Aaaaand I was hooked.

    This world, most of the classes, and the idea of a tactical RPG were all brand new to me and I ate it all up. I loved playing with the job system. I loved multiclassing all my characters. I loved running around the map and fighting rival clans, because why not? The strategy guide became battered and dog-eared as I consulted it frequently to learn where to find which weapon to learn which move to master which job. I built up what I considered to be an ultimate team, smashed through the storyline, and by the time all was said and done, I had put about 150 hours into it.


    After this I decided that I needed more, so for the next couple of years I went on a gigantic Final Fantasy binge. Into the Game Boy Advance went Dawn of Souls and the respective ports of IV and VI. Into the old PlayStation went VII (so I could finally give it a proper playthrough), VIII and IX. I bought a PlayStation 2 specifically for FFX. I devoured the series.

    When FFXII came out, I was especially excited. This game would return us to Ivalice, the first Final Fantasy world I had truly fallen in love with. I would once again see my favorite incarnation of the Moogles-- as a true race of creature-- as well as all the others I had come to love, such as Nu Mou and Bangaa. I got the special edition for Christmas and eagerly popped it in to my PS2, expecting the video game experience of a lifetime. But the game failed to really spark my imagination, and perhaps because I had pinned such high hopes on it, I soon fizzled out on it. And, with it, went most of my interest in the Final Fantasy series.

    After that I moved on to other games and when I looked back at Final Fantasy I thought of it as a fad in my life that I had once binged on but had since moved on from. I had fond memories of many of the games, and occasionally I would replay them for nostalgia, but on a personal level Final Fantasy no longer resonated with me.


    This last summer I was browsing GameStop and happened across a copy of FFTA 2. It was $19.99. I pondered this. When FFTA 2 had first been released I was sort of past my Final Fantasy phase and I had never gotten it.

    I thought about it. I almost didn't get it.

    But then I made an impulse decision and bought it.

    All it took was a few minutes to fall in love with Ivalice again.

    For weeks I played nonstop, carefully unlocking all the job classes (there were even MORE this time around!) discovering secrets (I didn't have a strategy guide!), laughing at the absurd humor, and eating up every last bit of that familiar soundtrack. It wasn't long at all before I looked at my playtime and realized I had put more time into FFTA 2 than I had into the first FFTA.

    Ivalice and the Final Fantasy series, it would appear, is still a magical place. Even to a grizzled old vet like me. Perhaps there are still lands yet to explore.

    This article was originally published in forum thread: What Final Fantasy Tactics Advance Means to Me started by Pike View original post
    Comments 4 Comments
    1. Mahad's Avatar
      Mahad -
      I haven't checked the original thread for this post (What Final Fantasy Tactics Advance Means to Me), however I still got a smile reading through it all. Final Fantasy Tactics Advance was my very first foray into the Final Fantasy series and remains close to my fan's heart; I've still got the cartrigde, stored in the same case as my copy of FFTA 2. FFTA was the first in many ways for me (such as, the first game I ever bought for myself), and to this day Ivalice remains my favorite world in the series. I was also disappointed by how FFXII failed to do justice to the world, but that's something I've come to terms with. And man, thinking back about the time when gaming magazines where a thing, the nostalgia is almost too much.

      Anyways, I loved every bit of your post, so thank you for posting!
    1. Colonel Angus's Avatar
      Colonel Angus -
      Great article! I didn't notice, but did you play the original FF Tactics?
    1. Pike's Avatar
      Pike -
      Yeah, I didn't ever put much time into it. I preferred the more "modern" Ivalice world.

      Can't lie, I was also put off by it a little by how much hate FFTA got from many of the FFT fans. Being one of my first FFs, FFTA was the one that sent me searching for FF forums, and talking about FFTA on those was always a headache Things are better now, but at the time it was rough.
    1. Mahad's Avatar
      Mahad -
      Quote Originally Posted by Pike View Post
      Yeah, I didn't ever put much time into it. I preferred the more "modern" Ivalice world.

      Can't lie, I was also put off by it a little by how much hate FFTA got from many of the FFT fans. Being one of my first FFs, FFTA was the one that sent me searching for FF forums, and talking about FFTA on those was always a headache Things are better now, but at the time it was rough.
      You ought to give The War of the Lions a try if you ever a get a chance (if you haven't already and have access to a psp). It's a remake of the original and although very different in mood from the more recent FFTAs, it's a fantastic game. Of course, if the modern aspect of the more recent titles is what appeals to you, it won't be all that great to look at (but if you manage to get past that....)

      And I completely understand your feeling about the FFT fans. It never made sense to me, but whatever.
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