XIII-2. Which came across as Final Fantasy channeling an episode of Dr. Who. I liked the concept(I like the concept of all the XIII games) but the execution had a lot of problems. I realize that FF Villians trying to destroy the world is pretty standard but at least most of them had some kind of reason for it that kind of makes sense. Either because they were personifications of Hatred(IV), Death(IX?), Chaos(I) or Entropy(III,V), or because they're just batshit crazy/gripped by a nihilistic BSOD(VI,VII,VIII,IX).Happyninja42 said:Not sure which FF game that is, but it sounds pretty typical for that series, meaning batshit crazy. xDDalisclock said:Or my favorite "I'm sad that my girlfriend keeps dying when someone messes with the future(by changing the present). I'm gonna mess up time myself, crash the universe and kill everything in existence in order to fix this problem". I'm sure that sounded more sane in his mind then it does to everyone else.Happyninja42 said:Spirits Within at least had a comprehensible plot, unlike most of the games, and it didn't involve a "I will save the world by destroying it to end all pain!! MMMUAHAHAHA I'M NOT EVIL!!" type badguy.
It takes a special kind of Crazy to say "I want to save by GF from dying over and over again because her destiny demands it, for some messed up reason, so I'm gonna kill everyone in the universe as well. If the universe ends, she won't die anymore" and have it make sense even by Insane Troll Logic standards. I get that he feels terrible watching her die(Liam O'Brien doing his voice is inspired, because he always sounds like he's sad) but his solution doesn't actually fix anything, it just makes things a lot worse for everyone else.