Final Fantasy VI Advance

From the Nintendo Wiki, a wiki covering all things Nintendo
This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Eeyore the Iowan Goat (talk | contribs) at 21:44, March 15, 2022. It may differ significantly from the current revision.
Jump to navigationJump to search
Final Fantasy VI Advance
Developer TOSE
Publisher Square Enix (Japan)
Nintendo (other countries)
Platform(s) Game Boy Advance
Release date Game Boy Advance:
Japan November 30, 2006
USA February 5, 2007
Europe July 6, 2007
Virtual Console (Wii U):
Japan December 22, 2015
Genre Role-playing game
Rating(s)
ESRB: - Everyone 10+
Mode(s) Single-player
Media
Game Boy Advance:
Game Pak
Input
Game Boy Advance:
Previous title Final Fantasy V Advance

Final Fantasy VI Advance is a Game Boy Advance video game that serves as a remake of Final Fantasy VI. It was first released in Japan in 2006 and then in North America, Europe, and Australia in 2007. The game was developed by TOSE and published by Square Enix in Japan and by Nintendo in other countries. Final Fantasy VI Advance is the last game that Nintendo published for the Game Boy Advance. It was later ported to the Wii U Virtual Console in 2015, exclusively in Japan.

Unlike the earlier Final Fantasy remakes−Final Fantasy I & II: Dawn of Souls, Final Fantasy IV Advance, and Final Fantasy V AdvanceFinal Fantasy VI Advance did not receive its own Nintendo Player's Guide, likely due to being released at the very end of the Game Boy Advance's lifespan.

Changes

  • Dragons' Den, a new dungeon, has been added. here you'll be able to fight an enemy that was present in the SNES version's coding, but was never actually implemented into the game - the Kaiser Dragon.
  • New items for each character.
  • A Bestiary and a remade Soundtrack included. Once you defeat the game, you'll have the Music room.
  • A new Soul Shrine.
  • The translation is more similar to the Japanese text than before, with name changes and such (example - gil, the game's currency, was called GP in the American SNES version, while with the GBA remake it's now called gil, which it was in Japan and all other Final Fantasy video games).
  • New espers including Leviathan, Gilgamesh, Cactuar, and Diablos have been included.

This article is a stub. You can help the Nintendo Wiki by expanding it.