Review final fantasy xv royal edition năm 2024

The best version of Final Fantasy XV so far. Plenty of content and DLCs included to spend hundreds of hours leading Noctis and his mates to restore the kingdom of Lucis. Even it still needs to improve the story, the game feels more elaborated and well developed than one year and a half ago. Perfect chance for a second opportunity.

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Final Fantasy XV Royal Edition brings a nice set of content to a two-year old experience, which includes an extended map, a new/awesome action in Armiger Unleashed, new vehicles to work with and a more open world feel to it all. Be forewarned, though, for those experiencing it for the first time you will also get the flaws that still exist from the 2016 release. The new content does help motivate the continuation of the game and does a solid job of engaging the player, far more than the initial release, but it also sprinkles in lingering thoughts of what could have been, if there had been more time and money spent with the game.

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The Royal Pack is a well-realized bundle of miscellany that refines the core Final Fantasy XV experience while reminding us that it's still an incomplete game sixteen months after launch.

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Final Fantasy XV's Royal Pack welcomes some new features. Battles with the new bosses (as well as the entire Insomnia map), the first person mode and the boat in Altissia make the package worthwhile. Unfortunately, its price doesn't justify the package.

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Thanks to the Royal Edition, Final Fantasy XV feels now a complete experience that includes all the expansions, as well as some new contents that are exclusive for this version. You should definitely buy it if you never had the chance to explore the world of Eos.

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We know that Final Fantasy XV: Royal Edition won't be the definitive edition of the game, since more DLC is scheduled. This is the most complete and most beautiful edition of the game thus far, but it's asking you to buy into a very good but still flawed experience that is slowly but surely catching up. If you truly can't wait until the real complete edition surfaces, you'll have a decent experience at the very least. Otherwise, pass on this title and wait another year. The mammoth project that is FFXV will eventually come to a satisfying conclusion.

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Final Fantasy XV Royal Pack expansion feels like a significant addition to the main game by improving its end game content, but it comes at the expense of alienating a major portion of its audience who now have to pay for it in order to get the same experience as the newcomers with Royal Edition.

Posted in: Games, Review, Video Games | Tagged: Final Fantasy, Final Fantasy XV, Final Fantasy XV Royal Edition, game review, Square Enix


Square Enix's Final Fantasy XV has been out on consoles since November of 2016, and despite the year and half since the game's initial release, it still manages to be an exciting, enjoyable journey into inevitable heartbreak and depression thanks to the newly released Royal Edition. The question of the new edition is pretty simple: Does FFXV still hold up in 2018 as much as it did in 2016? After all, FFXVRE is an attempt to create a "definitive version" of the game, one designed to be Final Fantasy XV at its absolute greatest, with all the bells and whistles and improvements made over the game's pseudo-live lifecycle.

Which brings up the cultural significance of FFXV in the first place. It was the first widely popular Final Fantasy in years, appealing to fans of the franchise as well as people who had never picked up a JRPG before. Part of that is because FFXV proves that Final Fantasy games are no longer JRPGs. XV doesn't fit into the JRPG genre in the slightest. It's got active combat, has only one combat menu, which is stripped down and can be accessed in real-time, and focuses on open world exploration more than linear storytelling. Final Fantasy XV is more like The Witcher III than it is the original Final Fantasy. And that's a good thing for the series.

While so many eastern developed RPGs have gone back to trying to recreate the golden age of JRPGs like Chrono Trigger, Square Enix has taken their largest series property and dragged it to the western mainstream. Sure, SE has plenty of games, even spinoffs in the FF series, trying to recreate the old JRPG feel, but there is something landmark about XV being the exact opposite of that. It was a Final Fantasy designed for worldwide mass appeal.

Even I occasionally mock the game as the "boy band Final Fantasy", but that doesn't get in the way of the story's ability to rip your heart out of your chest and then stomp on it while laughing at you. The combat is still exacting and enjoyable, the exploration is still fun if grindy as all hell, and the graphics are still pretty lush and top of the line.

The Royal Edition doesn't change a lot — it just adds content that players received over the game's Season Pass lifecycle, including the four single-player expansions and the multiplayer mode Comrades. Plus some other cosmetics changes. Oh, and the fact that it never saw the original version of Chapter 13. The one that had players up in arms for months post-release. While Chapter 13 is still not my favorite sequence of the game — it feels like a very different game than what we'd been playing for about 60 hours previous — the new version of it certainly does feel a bit less restrictive than it had originally.

While creating the "definitive" version of a game is much easier now — all you have to do is package in all the various DLCs and slap a new label on it — recreating the original feeling of the game is hard. Especially for an audience that has already played it. However, the strength of Final Fantasy XV is such that the opening minutes of the game still get me every time. There are some games that just stick with you — sequences that always knock you right in the feels — and FFXV does that. The impressive part is that it hits just about everyone right where it hurts.

So yes, Final Fantasy XV holds up in 2018. Yes, the Royal Edition is the best way to play the game on console right now. And yes, you should absolutely go out and pick up the Royal Edition or Royal Pack upgrade if you already have the base game. You won't regret it.


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Review final fantasy xv royal edition năm 2024

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What is the difference between ff15 normal and royal edition?

FINAL FANTASY XV ROYAL EDITION INCLUDES: An all-new dungeon - Insomnia City Ruins: Expanded Map. New features such as first person mode, new gear, and new bosses. Armiger Unleashed – after you collect all 13 royal arms, a more action-oriented mode of the Armiger is unlocked.

What is the difference between FFXV Royal Pack and Royal Edition?

While the full-game bundle Royal Edition includes all the Season Pass DLC, the Royal Pack does NOT include Episode Ignis, Episode Prompto, Episode Gladio or the multiplayer Comrades expansion. The Royal Edition represents a pretty solid savings for those who haven't yet purchased the game.

Does ff15 Royal Edition have everything?

Final Fantasy XV is a fun game, I love the main cast of guys and this version includes everything except for Episode Ardyn. I found the DLC included in this package far more interesting and unique than the main experience.

How many hours is Final Fantasy 15 Royal Edition?

When focusing on the main objectives, Final Fantasy XV: Complete Edition is about 27½ Hours in length. If you're a gamer that strives to see all aspects of the game, you are likely to spend around 115 Hours to obtain 100% completion.