Final Fantasy XV

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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This is a fantasy based on reality...
Tagline
"Fools set the rules in this world. Just look around. It's undeniable."
Noctis

Final Fantasy XV is a 2016 action role-playing video game by Square Enix. The game was initially known as Final Fantasy Versus XIII.

The fifteenth entry in the stupefyingly popular (and increasingly delayed) Final Fantasy series, Final Fantasy Versus XIII was supposed to be a spiritual sibling of Final Fantasy XIII, but was not a sequel, prequel, or related to it in any way other than sharing mythos elements, and was supposed to take place in a different world. Versus XIII was part of a "ten year project" called Fabula Nova Crystallis Final Fantasy, which is a Pretentious Latin Title meaning "The New Tale Of The Crystal". This particular game was being developed by the same team who does Kingdom Hearts.

As the game's name changed, references to such project were mostly dropped from the final product.

The story of Versus XIII centered around Noctis Lucis Caelum, mafia prince of an isolated kingdom and protector of the last crystal, in a world where crystals are no longer used. Together with his loyal True Companions, Noct works to defend his homeland from neighbouring "barbarians" who seek its power for their own in the growing conflict. He also meets Stella Nox Fleuret, a young woman from the rival country of Tenebrae and his unwilling enemy. All this is overshadowed by legends of Etro, goddess of death, and her relationship with humans.

In the final product, however, though the basic premise of Noctis and his friends fighting for their homeland remained, Stella was completely replaced by Luna, a character with similar physical characteristics (blonde hair, white skin, female, thin figure), but who serves as ally in their fight against the The Empire of Nilfheim, who are the antagonists of Final Fantasy XV.

Final Fantasy XV, its final denomination, was released for PlayStation 4 and Xbox One. It has since been released on Windows. It also has a Pocket Edition, an abridged version of the same story on mobile platforms and for computers running Windows 10 which is basically a streamlined game with simpler graphics and gameplay but all the story content of the more powerful original game.

Music was composed by Yoko Shimomura, the composer for Kingdom Hearts.

Tropes used in Final Fantasy XV include:
  • Anti-Frustration Features: Including:
    • An easy mode difficulty.
    • Fast Travel so the open world is less tedious to travel.
    • Tutorial modes which can be revisited at any time.
    • Ability to skip to morning or night for certain quests while waiting at camp.
  • Absurdly High Level Cap: As of the latest patch, it's around 120. It's possible to low level beat the game, but if you want to do all the sidequests, they will require going as high on the level scale as possible, and experience needed for higher levels ramps up geometrically.
  • A Worldwide Punomenon: The game script is LOADED with puns, the point you'd swear the Dragon Quest writers wrote it, and given Square and Enix are the same company, they likely did.
  • Acceptable Breaks From Reality: While introducing various survival game elements, certain things are made easier regardless:
    • Like in Morrowind shops and quests are 24/7 available.
    • To make battle fair on the player, once you leave the arc radius of enemy vision, you're effectively gone in their view, if they could still actually see you, which makes it possible for the player to avoid being relentlessly pursued by things that are too strong to handle.
  • Actionized Sequel: This game abandons nigh all elements of Turn Based Battle. It does have a Wait mode that allows for a limited degree of it to return, but otherwise the battles are determined by Action RPG rules.
  • Adaptation Distillation: Pocket Edition is basically a streamlined, cut-down for mobile devices take on the main game, telling the same story and using most of the same audio and cutscene assets, but otherwise makes the game more feasible for play on mobile devices.
    • As a consequence of boiling the game down to it's essence yet making it play well on mobile devices, features of the main game like Elemancy, most options to manually drive the Regalia, and many other things like the fishing minigame were cut.
  • Aerith and Bob: The names of characters range from loaded with Gratuitous Latin to being very plain.
  • After The End: Post-Chapter 13 is the setup for the multiplayer-expansion Comrades.
    • Chapter 14 takes place after a ten-year Time Skip.
  • All Just a Dream: The Platinum Demo and Moogle Festival DLC have no real relevance to the game and quite divorced from it in any real sense.
    • A cruel version happens towards the end of Chapter 1. You see a depressing scene of Insomnia getting it's ass kicked by the Niflheim Empire, then it cuts abruptly to Noctis waking up,implying it was a dream. Then you discover it actually happened.
  • All There in the Manual: To an absurd extreme:
  • Altum Videtur: You can't swing a dead cat without running into something with a Latin name in this game.
  • American Kirby Is Hardcore: The Japanese cover is pretty laid back and chill, with the whole "four guys on a road trip" prominently feature. The American version has them prepared for battle.
  • Beef Gate: Daemons are intended as such by default, as they are far more dangerous than daytime monsters, thus meant to discourage low level players from gallivanting around the map at all hours.
  • Crossover: Got some temporarily available DLC that did this with Assassin's Creed, and Noctis would also become a Guest Fighter in Tekken 7.
  • Canis Latinicus: Aside from Incredibly Lame Puns, the game loves it's use of Latin.
  • Likes Older Women: A recurring element with female cast members. The guys practically drool over Cindy and Araena in every scene in-universe, and Lunafreya is older than Noctis by four years and he totally reciprocates her feelings for him, and did since they first met as children.
  • Low-Level Run: Much like Final Fantasy VIII, this is entirely possible.
  • Game Mod: The first game in the series to officially support this.
  • Homage: Prompto's DLC is one long Metal Gear Solid homage.
  • Obvious Beta: Both the prototype of what this game would be and even its first releases qualified as this, with the first responsible for the game being retooled heavily into what was actually released. The actual released product has received numerous updates since release to add further content and flesh out the initial experience, which was still underdone originally, especially in the second half of the game.
  • Shotgun Wedding: Noctis' is practically drafted into marrying Lunafreya. Given he already loves her, it's a Perfectly Arranged Marriage, so he's just fine with that, as is she. Too bad for both it was a ruse at their expense.
  • Spiritual Successor: This game bears a lot of similar themes as Final Fantasy VI, including an empire with Magitek weapons, a Kefka-esque villain, and even a "World of Ruin", which basically Eos after the Eternal Night falls on it.
  • The Night That Never Ends: The Big Bad is aiming for this, but it's only part of his true motivations. It's generally just a prelude to him finally killing you, then flipping off the gods once he's done.
  • Warp Whistle: The game has a limited form of fast travel mechanics.
    • The Regalia allows the player to do this to quest locations or at least close to their general area as well to outposts. They can also, while on foot, teleport back to where they parked the car.
  • Wide Open Sandbox: After the first few chapters the world is yours to explore in ever widening extremes. It becomes far more linear by the end of the game, though.
  • A Wizard Did It: Several elements of the in-universe physics make no sense without this trope.
    • The sun rises and falls in accordance with a "wizard" called the Oracle making sure it happens, but their effectiveness decreases over time by the start of the game thanks to meddling of another "wizard". The daemons the Niflheim Empire produce basically cause excess work for the Oracle's powers, reducing the amount of time the sun stays up.
    • To make any sort of sense how the sun works at ALL, it works like the real world, except you have to factor in the above mentioned for the VISIBILITY of the sun. The actual sun otherwise functions like it does in the real world save for this.
    • Havens tend to be monster safe despite the time of day, implied to be because, if you pay attention, they are infused with magical properties similar to the sun itself.
    • The planet itself is more self repairing of damage to itself, like from magic, than it ever would be in Real Life, essentially due to this trope.
  • Work Off the Debt: Cid purposely stiffs the party for the Regalia repair bill in the beginning, incensed over how they let it break down.
  • The X of Y: The Royal Weapons all have this naming scheme, since they are supposed to be special to the original owner.
  • You Don't Look Like You: While the anime and even Pocket Edition try to remain consistent to the game itself despite their differences in format, the Kingsglaive CGI movie is pretty bad at remaining consistent artstyle wise to the game. In fact, only Regis generally looks like his game version.