I can be abusive if you like, I mean I am defending FF7 and having an argument on the internet, it just doesn't feel right if I don't personally attack you.Ratty said:Thanks for being civil. I'll just say though I still can't agree that it's always case of "Seinfeld is Unfunny" when people dislike it. Because at the time I played it I was a jRPG novice. The only games in the genre I had played beforehand were FF6 and FF9. The latter of which did come out later but purposefully eschewed almost all elements of FF7.elvor0 said:I'll echo the first dude who quoted you, it's a classic case of Seinfeld is Unfunny. Now I'm all for opinions, but the game isn't bad. A game doesn't reach this level of hype, legendary status or consistant best of lists for being bad. I'm not saying it's teh best game EVAR either, it's not even near the top of my top Final Fantasies. But it is a good and influential game. Overhyped? Sure it is, but just you didn't like it, that doesn't make it objectively terrible. If it was, it wouldn't be as popular as it is.Ratty said:Oh boy a backlash to the backlash.
Look, I don't begrudge anyone enjoying or even loving FF7. But from where I'm standing the story, characters, character models and midi quality (though not the song compositions themselves) are all pretty objectively terrible.
Yes it was an important work, but most of its popularity I lay at the "wow" factor of the graphics and cool novelty of anime style outside Japan when it came out. A work being important or a benchmark doesn't mean it's necessarily good. And it certainly doesn't mean it will always appeal to modern tastes.
As for the "backlash" against it that's a natural result of more people actually playing the thing now sans-nostalgia goggles. Since it's more widely available via PSN and Steam. After years of hearing it hyped up a lot of new players are understandably underwhelmed to put it mildly. I played through it 13 years after it came out and found it to be terribly convoluted tripe with exactly 3 characters who were at all likeable. The game was so bad it put me off jRPGs entirely for a long time.
There's also nothing wrong with it not appealing to modern tastes(though I don't buy that, it hasn't aged that badly), but you can't begrudge a game that came out in 1997 for looking bad, having poor sound quality, or the more rabid fans for overhyping it to unatainable expectations. Should we not know by now to not believe the hype?
Even when it came out, people didn't marvel at the character models, they were awful, there was better looking stuff out there. People marveled at it because /nothing/ had even been done like that, yeah sure if you play it 13 years after it came out, or these days, its hype is so legendary, giving you the expectations so high that it can never possibly live up to them. It's just become retroactively ungood because you've played it so long after it came out to have played stuff that immitates or downright copies elements of it.
What about the people who played it for the first time when it came out? They didn't have nostalgia goggles going for them, they stayed for the new gameplay, story, characters and writing.(The Midi music is on the PC version only btw, the PSX version has proper music which is perfectly good). There is a /reason/ the game has legendary hype and it's not because it's tripe. Of course if you believe all of the hype you're going to be dissapointed.
Like I said I just found and find the characters to be really unlikeable, the story to be needlessly convoluted and the gameplay to be incredibly mediocre. It's exactly the kind of mopey thing that appeals to teenage angst. I still think a lot of the love the game gets can be put to people who had never played an RPG before being blown away by how big the world was (the pre-rendered backgrounds are nice) and the seeming newness of the in-retrospect very derivative anime style and setting of the game to non-Japanese gamers.
I do agree that you can't blame a game for looking its age, I play and love lots of games as old or older than FF7, including a lot of PS1 games. But unlike other titles in the genre which transcend their technical limitations by virtue of telling a great story or having memorable characters or simply being fun, FF7's lack of visual punch just highlights its failing in the aforementioned areas. Which are what really count.
PS- And it is entirely possible for popular and influential things from the past to be objectively terrible. Just look at Twilight, or The Birth of a Nation. Ok the last one might be a little low, but you know what I mean.
Oh well call me too presumptuous in my initial post. It's usually people that have played a good amount (or are predisposed to dislike it) of JRPGS who come back to rag on it on the basis that "I've seen it all before". And differing opinions aside, I'm sure we can agree that's unfair.
I didn't find the story overcomplicated, it was more complex than is normal, but it wasn't that difficult to follow, I did miss a couple of points, but that was because I was 8 when I played it for the first time, and yeah I'll admit it did blow me away, before that the only two games I'd played were Tomb Raider and Crash Bandicoot. I'd never seen or imagined anything like it before and I'd be lying if that didn't colour my impression at the time. It certainly has pacing and structural problems, but I wouldn't say it was too complex.
The story and characters are certainly not angsty though. I don't understand why that gets bought up, any chance of explaining where your views on that one? It's always puzzled me. It's very true of the extended universe,(especially in Advent Children and Kingdom Hearts) which makes no sense, there's no reason for Cloud to be grumpy before or after FF7. Clouds not exactly the happiest bloke in the world, but he's not mopy or angsty, he's a bit grumpy, but then he is suffering from PTSD, delusions and repressed memories. Calling him emo and angsty just isn't fair. We don't call massacre survivors "emo and mopey" do we? Squall, he was angsty and mopey; but even then he was basically a teenager trained to be a soldier from about the age of 10.
On popularity, there's a difference though, the things that stay popular after their boom tend to be the ones that are good. FF7 is 17 years old at this point. Does anyone still talk about S-Club 7, or the Spice Girls other than mocking them? Twilight hasn't been around too long, reached it's peak 4 years ago and now you barely hear about it, other than people mocking it.