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Final Fantasy II (USA)

Super Nintendo (SNES)
🇬🇧
Reviewed in
1991
90
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✪ Reviewed on May 29, 2026
84

Japanese Final Fantasy II, the first true narrative JRPG with defined characters. The use based stat system stays original.

Your verdict
Category
RPG 1 player 12+
Description
Epic Square RPG in which Cecil, a dark knight, atones for his crimes and saves the world. Published by Square, released in the USA in 1991. Five-member party with distinct abilities, Active Time Battle combat system, journey from Earth to the Moon and immortal music by Uematsu. American version of Final Fantasy IV, a timeless masterpiece.

Final Fantasy II review

MAX
Art direction
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
"Masterful"
Finely reworked sprites and settings of deep hues: the epic recovers all the magic of the golden age of the 16-bit RPG. Castles, caverns and lunar skies compose a universe of hushed elegance. This polished art direction carries with grace a tale that has become legendary.
Gameplay
"Excellent"
Fun
"Pleasant"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾0,64 MB 📅23/11/1991
Published by Square

Final Fantasy II (SNES) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

The 1991 US SNES localisation of Square's 'Final Fantasy IV', renumbered for the US market because Japanese FF II and III had not travelled. The Rev 1 preserves several bugs fixed in later revisions, making it a target for purists. US boxed CIB in an intact box with the Map of the Blue Planet poster and manual has become a structuring target for US Square SNES collectors, and the cote climbs hard, sustained by physical scarcity and historical status.

Memorable bosses

A dramatic tale carried by the ATB, this adventure punctuates its progress with memorable bosses: the four elemental Archfiends, the enigmatic Golbez and the terrifying Zeromus as a climax. Real-time combat means juggling attack, magic and summons under pressure. Poignant staging and Uematsu's themes give these clashes an intensity that left its mark on the console RPG.

Is Final Fantasy II still worth playing in 2026?

Final Fantasy IV, also released as Final Fantasy II in the United States, marks the arrival of the Active Time Battle system and of JRPG storytelling truly carried by its cast. Cecil's redemption arc, the gallery of companions and the melodramatic staging still hold up. The Japanese Easy Type version offers a more accessible path. The original US translation is very softened, but the core stays solid. Recommended to any fan of founding JRPG stories.

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