---
product_id: 48096360
title: "Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4)"
price: "€ 74.86"
currency: EUR
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
url: https://www.desertcart.gr/products/48096360-final-fantasy-xv-day-one-edition-ps4
store_origin: GR
region: Greece
---

# Open-world driving & exploration Dynamic real-time combat system Includes iconic Masamune sword DLC Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4)

**Price:** € 74.86
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> ⚔️ Dive into the ultimate fantasy journey where every battle, bond, and discovery counts!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4)
- **How much does it cost?** € 74.86 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.gr](https://www.desertcart.gr/products/48096360-final-fantasy-xv-day-one-edition-ps4)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Award-Winning Soundtrack:** Feel every moment amplified by Yoko Shimomura’s critically acclaimed, evocative score.
- • **Legendary Arsenal Unlock:** Get exclusive Masamune sword DLC to dominate battles with style.
- • **Immersive Real-Time Combat:** Master tactical strikes, warping moves, and powerful spells in an intuitive yet deep battle system.
- • **Unbreakable Bonds & Teamwork:** Experience emotional storytelling and cooperative moves that deepen your connection with Noctis’ party.
- • **Seamless Open-World Adventure:** Drive, explore, and discover the vast, breathtaking world of Eos with your closest friends.

## Overview

Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition for PS4 delivers an expansive open-world RPG experience featuring real-time combat, exclusive Masamune sword DLC, and a rich narrative centered on Noctis and his friends. Explore the stunning world of Eos by foot or car, engage in tactical battles, and immerse yourself in an award-winning soundtrack that elevates this epic quest to reclaim a kingdom.

## Description

Get ready to be at the centre of the ultimate fantasy adventure. Enter the world of FINAL FANTASY XV, and experience epic action-packed battles along your journey of discovery. You are Noctis, the Crown Prince of the Kingdom of Lucis, and your quest is to reclaim your homeland from the clutches of the imperial army. Joined by your closest friends, you will take the wheel and experience a voyage like no other, travelling through the breathtaking world of Eos encountering larger-than-life beasts and unforgiving enemies. You will learn to master the skills of weaponry and magic, channelling the power of your ancestors allowing you to effortlessly warp through the air in thrilling combat. DVD ROM

Review: Fans of Final Fantasy will read the first paragraph and die of shock. - I've only finished 1 Final Fantasy and that was X. I have played 7/8/9/X-2 but never finished them. So as you can tell I'm not a fan boy but because I'm a gamer I know 'of' Final Fantasy and it's many things that are common knowledge from Square Enix's flagship game that made them famous in the first place. I saw a trailer for this and before I watched it, scoffed heartily thinking it's going to be something that wouldn't interest me. But then I saw 4 dudes dressed in black, driving what looked like a Rolls Royce past a huge tortoise thing. Pre ordered soon after. Now as you all are aware or should be, this is a stand alone game, not the 15th edition of "Final Fantasy" The only things you'll find in common with the previous games are big yellow birds, a weird teddy, a cactus with a shocked expression, magic, summoning gods, something about crystals being really important and usually a love story doomed to fail due to sudden death. Everything from the characters, theme, time setting and many other things are new. FF has usually been a turn based game, this can be (through selectable options, similar to X-2) but the free flowing attack system is similar to Xenoblade and countless other jrpg's... seriously it's nothing new. What makes it brilliant is you only control you, Prince Noctis, they only time that is false is when you order your goons to use a special technique or to heal themselves with an item. When fighting, your friends will join you in attacks, act on their own accord and generally try to help you. This is a breathe of fresh air for a franchise like Final Fantasy and it's very engrossing, not hard to do but hard to master. You'll be actually wanting to do missions where you know you will fight just cause it's fun. And the developers know this, the best way to earn currency is to hunt dangerous creatures so it's a win win. People kept telling me the graphics are amazing. I disagree. I played this on the PS4 and the Pro on a HDTV and a 4K TV with HDR. There is a difference but it's not something that makes me drop my jaw. The scenery is pleasant with many nice places to explore with some variety so you'll never got bored travelling around to each mission. The best graphical thing in game is the hair, hands down. As a JRPG they really understood that the main characters needed awesomely animated hair. I haven't finished the game, from what I can tell I'm half way through, I am doing a lot of the side quests, which can get repetitive (Go to quest start, go to place, find item, encounter enemies, go back to quest giver, hand in item, repeat until you realise that they didn't put too much thought into this) so be prepared for some grinding... of the level kind. One mechanic I do enjoy is the stat boosting meals you can have when camping out or at diners. This ties in with our 4 hero's humble beginnings and what their interests are. So you'll find that Ignis (blonde with glasses, speaks like the butler from Richie Rich (If you get that, well done)) likes to cook and as you go through the game he'll announce he's come up with a new recipe with the same programmed responses. Gladio (big buff guy with Wiggo style side burns) likes the great outdoors and camping outside makes him better at finding rare items picked up during fights, Prompto (blonde hair, looks malnourished, sad backstory for comic relief) takes random photos throughout your journey. The 4 really get a long well and as you follow them as a unit you grow to like them as this band of friends going on a road trip to save the world. It's great, apart from Noctis who's just a stuck up whiney piece of royalty. He does have some redeeming features (He wields weapons of the ancients and can warp) but the fact that he likes to fish is something I realise is a tie in with Ignis's cooking but apart from that I dislike fishing. So as a game overall it's flawed in many different area's. But the fighting mechanic is so good it dominates all the other problems and it ties everything together. It's almost as though they've done it on purpose........... So for a studio that was struggling I feel like FF XV can help redeem Square Enix. It's an engrossing game and I keep coming back to it (I'm playing BF1, Need For Speed, The Division and Destiny as well as FF XV) so it must be good. To the hardcore FF fan this is either the best game they've done or the worst. But to the casual gamer with some knowledge of the franchise, this is a good game. it's a 8 or 9 out of ten so in 5 star format I guess its's a 5. I'd give it 4 and a half out of 5. Look out for Cindy.
Review: Absolutely Brilliant - Anyone who's been paying attention to Square Enix for the last decade or so should come to any new Final Fantasy game with a mixture of trepidation and excitement. Final Fantasy used to be the best JRPG series out there, but after IX or X the series went downhill rapidly with a series of disappointing games that pleased no one. Particularly XIII with its endless corridor, vapid characters, and needlessly convoluted and overexposited plot. Which means that a lot of people are relying on this game to restore the series to its roots and bring back the fun, adventure, and sense of exploration that used to define the series. No pressure, right? Obviously no game could live up to those lofty expectations, but XV is still a great game, and even a great Final Fantasy game. And a lot of that is because it doesn't play it safe and dish out a generic Final Fantasy designed to hit all the old nostalgia buttons and nothing else. It takes risks, some of them quite radical and unexpected. The chief of these is the open world. Making the game a sandbox was an obvious way to reassure after XIII's endless corridor, yet it also risked turning the game into just another Fallout clone with Anime characters. But it really works. A large part of it is that the game's built not around a quest so much as a road trip with a gang of friends. Naturally there's some rush off and save the world stuff that you need to do, but the real pleasure here comes from the little things. The discussion over meals, the comfortable banter, the endless photographing... It's like going on holiday with that cool crowd you always envied in school but never quite got in with. The three basic strengths of this game are the gameplay, the characters, and the visuals. Gameplay is first rate and offers something new to the whack and slash genre of fighting games. Noctis can summon weapons at will and teleport himself into attacks or out of combat. He has four different weapon types to choose from at the touch of a button and different weapons work better on different enemies. It's both an awesome visual and highly functional system. It's been vastly improved from the Duscae demo they released a year back. Weapons and magic are fully customizable and easily used in combat, although being realtime does limit some of the spells. Your teammates are not directly controllable, but you do need to monitor and coordinate them. They also help you out. Even though you've lost complete control it does feel like a group battle rather than just one player vs. the world. This game is all about character, to put it mildly. If they didn't work nothing else would. Fortunately, the characters are a lot of fun and have amazing Latin names. Noctis Lucis Caelum (Literally: Heaven of the Nightlight) is the prince of Lucis and your typical moody teenage Anime protagonist. That said, he's never so moody it's annoying and he has good reason to be morose given that his kingdom was just taken over by the badguys and his father killed leaving him to reclaim his throne and save the world. The other characters are a part of his retinue. Gladiolus (lit: Dagger) is his big brother type bodyguard, Ignis (lit: Fire) is his calculating tactician/butler, and Prompto (lit: with eagerness) is a schoolfriend/comic relief. And contrary to expectations the comic relief never becomes too much of a whiny git to entertain. Each of them fits a fairly clear archetype, and on their own they're not very memorable, but when together (and they always are) they form an awesome band of bros out having themselves a fantastic road trip. Oh, and saving the world on the side. Every effort is made to keep their character interactions real and fresh. They even give the characters a personal life outside of you, such as Prompto's interest in photography (which works well with the PS4's sharing system) and Ignis' fondness for cooking. You really feel like part of the band. The best thing I can say about these guys is that when you're separated from them at various points it hurts. You feel isolated and alone. I even found myself worrying about the fates of the other guys. And the reunions left me genuinely moved. That's a well done game. The visuals are one of the game's other high points, and a major difference from earlier games in the series. They worried us all by their obsession with realistically recreating parts of Tokyo for the capital city of Insomnia and giving our leads mundanely realistic costumes of black leather, but Insomnia barely features at all and the matching costumes make the quartet look like part of the same boy band. You do get modern gas stations, but they're right alongside chocobo farms and giant stone arches that make no sense. The monsters are inventive too, with my favorite being the lake monsters that look like hairy brachiosaurs. All of it is rendered in stunningly lifelike graphics that almost make you believe this is a real place. Real and magical sit side by side unnoticeably. It's perfect. If this game has a fault it's that the main plot isn't very well established. It feels a lot like XIII in that way. It's never clearly laid out why you're doing what you're doing (and the parts that are explained certainly aren't emphasized nearly enough) and too much of the lifting is left to the lore. Unlike XIII though, the plot is basic enough that it's not a problem. You know early on what the end goal is and if some of the stops along the way don't particularly make sense you never feel completely lost. A lot of people will probably comment negatively on the second part of the game. There reaches a point where the open world dries up and the game adopts a more linear approach. It's necessary, although I'll concede that it could probably have flowed more naturally. I didn't find this part fun, not because it was badly done but because it was painful. Things go wrong and the game starts to feel pretty harsh. It's a measure of the feeling you have for these characters that you're unhappy when they are. I didn't realize how much I cared about these guys until they started suffering. The ending is satisfying if bittersweet, and the character moments at this stage feel truly earned. There are a lot of other things I loved about the game, including the music, dungeon design, and various technical features. But it would take all day to describe them. It's a great game, far better than I feared it would be and up there with the core of brilliant Final Fantasies (basically, VI-X), even while being nothing like them. I think I even prefer it to X, although X had a stronger overarching plot. Well done guys and well worth waiting for.

## Features

- FINAL FANTASY XV Game Disc
- Bonus Downloadable Content – Masamune sword. Add the legendary Masamune to your arsenal and cut foes down to size!
- Engage In Action-Packed Battles: Customise your array of weapons and use each character’s unique assists in an exciting real-time battle system, that is both user-friendly and with depth to explore. Warp around the battlefield landing tactical strikes, special moves and conjure ever-more-powerful spells, as your party progresses in its experience.
- Embark On A Journey Without Limits: Take the wheel and drive from the capital to the back roads with your best friends, or venture out on foot to discover a vast landscape of teeming wildlife, dangerous caverns and living cities full of adventure.
- Experience Unbreakable Bonds: As Noctis, feel connections strengthen as you and your friends grow closer along the journey. Reclaiming ones homeland relies on strength and courage, and most importantly togetherness. Perform powerful cooperative moves in battle and revel in the teamwork displayed by Noctis and his friends.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN  | B00BT9DVDY |
| Best Sellers Rank | 19,980 in PC & Video Games ( See Top 100 in PC & Video Games ) 1,609 in PlayStation 4 Games |
| Customer reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (1,588) |
| Is discontinued by manufacturer  | No |
| Item model number  | 217498 |
| Language  | English |
| Product Dimensions  | 1.7 x 0.1 x 1.4 cm; 100 g |
| Rated  | Ages 16 & Over |
| Release date  | 29 Nov. 2016 |

## Images

![Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4) - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/91IQSCL7wtL.jpg)
![Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4) - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/816xsMUdctL.jpg)
![Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4) - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81kP8Wry1CL.jpg)
![Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4) - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71dJVLyvqDL.jpg)
![Final Fantasy XV Day One Edition (PS4) - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71NqvHQ51CL.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Fans of Final Fantasy will read the first paragraph and die of shock.
*by R***9 on 28 December 2016*

I've only finished 1 Final Fantasy and that was X. I have played 7/8/9/X-2 but never finished them. So as you can tell I'm not a fan boy but because I'm a gamer I know 'of' Final Fantasy and it's many things that are common knowledge from Square Enix's flagship game that made them famous in the first place. I saw a trailer for this and before I watched it, scoffed heartily thinking it's going to be something that wouldn't interest me. But then I saw 4 dudes dressed in black, driving what looked like a Rolls Royce past a huge tortoise thing. Pre ordered soon after. Now as you all are aware or should be, this is a stand alone game, not the 15th edition of "Final Fantasy" The only things you'll find in common with the previous games are big yellow birds, a weird teddy, a cactus with a shocked expression, magic, summoning gods, something about crystals being really important and usually a love story doomed to fail due to sudden death. Everything from the characters, theme, time setting and many other things are new. FF has usually been a turn based game, this can be (through selectable options, similar to X-2) but the free flowing attack system is similar to Xenoblade and countless other jrpg's... seriously it's nothing new. What makes it brilliant is you only control you, Prince Noctis, they only time that is false is when you order your goons to use a special technique or to heal themselves with an item. When fighting, your friends will join you in attacks, act on their own accord and generally try to help you. This is a breathe of fresh air for a franchise like Final Fantasy and it's very engrossing, not hard to do but hard to master. You'll be actually wanting to do missions where you know you will fight just cause it's fun. And the developers know this, the best way to earn currency is to hunt dangerous creatures so it's a win win. People kept telling me the graphics are amazing. I disagree. I played this on the PS4 and the Pro on a HDTV and a 4K TV with HDR. There is a difference but it's not something that makes me drop my jaw. The scenery is pleasant with many nice places to explore with some variety so you'll never got bored travelling around to each mission. The best graphical thing in game is the hair, hands down. As a JRPG they really understood that the main characters needed awesomely animated hair. I haven't finished the game, from what I can tell I'm half way through, I am doing a lot of the side quests, which can get repetitive (Go to quest start, go to place, find item, encounter enemies, go back to quest giver, hand in item, repeat until you realise that they didn't put too much thought into this) so be prepared for some grinding... of the level kind. One mechanic I do enjoy is the stat boosting meals you can have when camping out or at diners. This ties in with our 4 hero's humble beginnings and what their interests are. So you'll find that Ignis (blonde with glasses, speaks like the butler from Richie Rich (If you get that, well done)) likes to cook and as you go through the game he'll announce he's come up with a new recipe with the same programmed responses. Gladio (big buff guy with Wiggo style side burns) likes the great outdoors and camping outside makes him better at finding rare items picked up during fights, Prompto (blonde hair, looks malnourished, sad backstory for comic relief) takes random photos throughout your journey. The 4 really get a long well and as you follow them as a unit you grow to like them as this band of friends going on a road trip to save the world. It's great, apart from Noctis who's just a stuck up whiney piece of royalty. He does have some redeeming features (He wields weapons of the ancients and can warp) but the fact that he likes to fish is something I realise is a tie in with Ignis's cooking but apart from that I dislike fishing. So as a game overall it's flawed in many different area's. But the fighting mechanic is so good it dominates all the other problems and it ties everything together. It's almost as though they've done it on purpose........... So for a studio that was struggling I feel like FF XV can help redeem Square Enix. It's an engrossing game and I keep coming back to it (I'm playing BF1, Need For Speed, The Division and Destiny as well as FF XV) so it must be good. To the hardcore FF fan this is either the best game they've done or the worst. But to the casual gamer with some knowledge of the franchise, this is a good game. it's a 8 or 9 out of ten so in 5 star format I guess its's a 5. I'd give it 4 and a half out of 5. Look out for Cindy.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Absolutely Brilliant
*by A***N on 30 November 2016*

Anyone who's been paying attention to Square Enix for the last decade or so should come to any new Final Fantasy game with a mixture of trepidation and excitement. Final Fantasy used to be the best JRPG series out there, but after IX or X the series went downhill rapidly with a series of disappointing games that pleased no one. Particularly XIII with its endless corridor, vapid characters, and needlessly convoluted and overexposited plot. Which means that a lot of people are relying on this game to restore the series to its roots and bring back the fun, adventure, and sense of exploration that used to define the series. No pressure, right? Obviously no game could live up to those lofty expectations, but XV is still a great game, and even a great Final Fantasy game. And a lot of that is because it doesn't play it safe and dish out a generic Final Fantasy designed to hit all the old nostalgia buttons and nothing else. It takes risks, some of them quite radical and unexpected. The chief of these is the open world. Making the game a sandbox was an obvious way to reassure after XIII's endless corridor, yet it also risked turning the game into just another Fallout clone with Anime characters. But it really works. A large part of it is that the game's built not around a quest so much as a road trip with a gang of friends. Naturally there's some rush off and save the world stuff that you need to do, but the real pleasure here comes from the little things. The discussion over meals, the comfortable banter, the endless photographing... It's like going on holiday with that cool crowd you always envied in school but never quite got in with. The three basic strengths of this game are the gameplay, the characters, and the visuals. Gameplay is first rate and offers something new to the whack and slash genre of fighting games. Noctis can summon weapons at will and teleport himself into attacks or out of combat. He has four different weapon types to choose from at the touch of a button and different weapons work better on different enemies. It's both an awesome visual and highly functional system. It's been vastly improved from the Duscae demo they released a year back. Weapons and magic are fully customizable and easily used in combat, although being realtime does limit some of the spells. Your teammates are not directly controllable, but you do need to monitor and coordinate them. They also help you out. Even though you've lost complete control it does feel like a group battle rather than just one player vs. the world. This game is all about character, to put it mildly. If they didn't work nothing else would. Fortunately, the characters are a lot of fun and have amazing Latin names. Noctis Lucis Caelum (Literally: Heaven of the Nightlight) is the prince of Lucis and your typical moody teenage Anime protagonist. That said, he's never so moody it's annoying and he has good reason to be morose given that his kingdom was just taken over by the badguys and his father killed leaving him to reclaim his throne and save the world. The other characters are a part of his retinue. Gladiolus (lit: Dagger) is his big brother type bodyguard, Ignis (lit: Fire) is his calculating tactician/butler, and Prompto (lit: with eagerness) is a schoolfriend/comic relief. And contrary to expectations the comic relief never becomes too much of a whiny git to entertain. Each of them fits a fairly clear archetype, and on their own they're not very memorable, but when together (and they always are) they form an awesome band of bros out having themselves a fantastic road trip. Oh, and saving the world on the side. Every effort is made to keep their character interactions real and fresh. They even give the characters a personal life outside of you, such as Prompto's interest in photography (which works well with the PS4's sharing system) and Ignis' fondness for cooking. You really feel like part of the band. The best thing I can say about these guys is that when you're separated from them at various points it hurts. You feel isolated and alone. I even found myself worrying about the fates of the other guys. And the reunions left me genuinely moved. That's a well done game. The visuals are one of the game's other high points, and a major difference from earlier games in the series. They worried us all by their obsession with realistically recreating parts of Tokyo for the capital city of Insomnia and giving our leads mundanely realistic costumes of black leather, but Insomnia barely features at all and the matching costumes make the quartet look like part of the same boy band. You do get modern gas stations, but they're right alongside chocobo farms and giant stone arches that make no sense. The monsters are inventive too, with my favorite being the lake monsters that look like hairy brachiosaurs. All of it is rendered in stunningly lifelike graphics that almost make you believe this is a real place. Real and magical sit side by side unnoticeably. It's perfect. If this game has a fault it's that the main plot isn't very well established. It feels a lot like XIII in that way. It's never clearly laid out why you're doing what you're doing (and the parts that are explained certainly aren't emphasized nearly enough) and too much of the lifting is left to the lore. Unlike XIII though, the plot is basic enough that it's not a problem. You know early on what the end goal is and if some of the stops along the way don't particularly make sense you never feel completely lost. A lot of people will probably comment negatively on the second part of the game. There reaches a point where the open world dries up and the game adopts a more linear approach. It's necessary, although I'll concede that it could probably have flowed more naturally. I didn't find this part fun, not because it was badly done but because it was painful. Things go wrong and the game starts to feel pretty harsh. It's a measure of the feeling you have for these characters that you're unhappy when they are. I didn't realize how much I cared about these guys until they started suffering. The ending is satisfying if bittersweet, and the character moments at this stage feel truly earned. There are a lot of other things I loved about the game, including the music, dungeon design, and various technical features. But it would take all day to describe them. It's a great game, far better than I feared it would be and up there with the core of brilliant Final Fantasies (basically, VI-X), even while being nothing like them. I think I even prefer it to X, although X had a stronger overarching plot. Well done guys and well worth waiting for.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ This is the best game I've ever played.. but I still expected a lot more!
*by H***A on 10 December 2016*

(MASSIVE SPOILERS AHEAD - do not read unless you have clocked the game) I class myself as a Final Fantasy fan having played over ten titles. Loved VII, VIII, and X. Struggled out of boredom to finish XII and then didn't even bother with XIII. Since the first FFXV trailer in 2006 I've been eagerly anticipating the release of this title! I had pre ordered it on Amazon years in advance and on the day I received the copy I was ecstatic to say the least, even bought a new TV as the screen did not fit on my current one. The game starts off great and gets even better. I am a pro turn based gamer but I have to admit the actual gameplay is amazing with an engaging combat mechanism and countless extras you can do from racing your car in a high speed chase to shooting machine guns at robots. I actually loved the summoning mode (although initially confusing on how to trigger it), and appreciated how the archaeons would come in times of need in a tough battle giving you a sense of relief whilst struggling against a feared enemy rather than any tiny powered gimmick that you could call countless times in a minor battle against a little chicken fiend. All of this awesomeness is varnished with an outstanding soundtrack to match (hats off to Shimomura-san). A downside evident fairly on however is the lack of cutscenes. Final Fantasy is loved by many for its wonderful storytelling in its high quality scenes but this desperately lacked those moments. At first I thought it was as they had transferred all the early scenes to the Kingsglaive movie and that as you passed that point in the game, the story would pick up. It never did. The game was left with so many gaps in the story and events happening off screen it was hard to understand the plot let alone enjoy it. Despite ten years in making, after a certain point in the game it felt completely rushed and unfinished. Don't get me started on how annoying and tedious Chapter 13 was. The brief story telling they did have was still completely inadequate. It seemed as though all the epicness of the XIII versus trailers had been totally lost. The one scene where Noctis meets Stella had more chemistry than the entire game with Luna. I felt so little for Luna that after her death I actually hoped they'd bring Stella into it and Noctis would forget all about his penfriend who he was told he should marry. The character Noctis previously portrayed was a strong, confident prince now turned into an annoying spoilt brat. It would have worked if his character developed over time, but it hardly did. Then came the ending, leaving me completely disappointed. *your final warning, major spoilers ahead* With the ten year time jump, they had so much opportunity to give us some emotional heartfelt scenes. With the King returning ten years on after being thought dead (just like Simba). The moment his friends first see him alive and are completely stunned with joy. The moment he meets Iris, and Cid, and all his old friends. The moment he returns to the now refugee camp of Lestallum and his people heartily cheer his return with a newfound hope. None of that happened however and you were left with a complete anti-climax. Then came Insomnia, the home I was so longing to explore and renovate back to its former glory. It however served nothing but a stage for the final boss. Why can Square Enix not finish a game without killing off the hero? I get that tragedy works in bringing tears and all but not when they do it every single time. If you think about it, the whole game was a waste as Ardyn actually got what he wanted and Noctis lost everything. How ridiculous. An epic scene towards the end would have been the first Versus XIII trailer ever. They could have left it as Noctis losing all his friends from Chapter 13 and then returning to Insomnia. Sitting on the throne in depression, thinking he had lost everything. Empire sending in all their troops after him and he comes outside and kills a few handfuls of them without any emotion and then returns to his throne as he did, now yielding the power of the ring (which for some reason had become a weak toy in the game compared to all its power in Kingsglaive when wielded by Nyx). That would have really pleased us with the trailer nostagia. Then continued with whatever story and ended with him restoring Lucia back to its days of former glory as a bad ass king. Allowing you to explore the open World once more in the present day. Despite all these criticisms I still enjoyed the game. After clocking it I'm still finding loads of new stuff to do even though i had completed all the sidequests previously. I'm looking forward to the updates now. I know this would probably be very cliche and annoying but I actually want Square Enix to release another game via DLC suggesting Chapter 9 onwards was all just a bad dream and rehash the entire second part of the story to how it should have been.

## Frequently Bought Together

- Final Fantasy XV: Day One Edition (PS4)
- FINAL FANTASY VII REMAKE (PS4)
- Final Fantasy X/X-2 HD Remaster (PS4)

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