Final Fantasy VIII is an ambitious and divisive work with its revolutionary Junction system and central romance between Squall and Rinoa. Cinematic staging pushes PS1 limits and Uematsu's soundtrack is splendid. A major JRPG despite its controversies.
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RPG1 player12+
Description
Eighth Final Fantasy, a romance and military adventure where SeeD cadet Squall Leonhart meets Rinoa and challenges sorceress Ultimecia across time. Created by Square, released in 1999 in Japan, the United States and Europe. Junction system tying monsters and magic to stats, six playable characters, Triple Triad card mini-game, over forty hours across four discs and Nobuo Uematsu's score. European multilingual editions.
Final Fantasy VIII review
MAX
Art direction
★★★★★
"Iconic"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
MAX
Story
★★★★★
"Masterful"
Realistically proportioned characters, pre-rendered settings of striking detail and cinematic staging: the game aims for a realism unheard of at the time. The fluidity of the cutscenes and the elegance of the design elevate every scene. This visual ambition, sleek and polished, pushed the limits of the hardware.
Bold and cinematic, Nobuo Uematsu's score opens on the striking, Latin-choir "Liberi Fatali" and culminates in the ballad "Eyes on Me" sung by Faye Wong. Between the fury of battle and romance, the music embraces an unprecedented scope. This lyrical ambition marked a turning point for the series.
A lone mercenary unable to open up to others, a young man is drawn into a war of sorceresses and a romance that shakes him. More intimate than its forebears, the tale dares a love story at the heart of a conflict of dizzying stakes. Its ambition and unabashed romanticism made it a cult and much-debated entry.
The Japanese and Asian version of Final Fantasy VIII, rarer than its abundant Western runs and sought by those wanting the first pressing in its original language. This native edition appeals to fans attentive to the provenance of a pillar of Square's golden age. Its local run supports a value above the very common PAL and American versions.
Memorable bosses
Spectacular to a fault, the battles lean on cinematic summons and a junction system that pushes you to tame the enemy's own power. Against the sorceress Ultimecia, in a finale of wild ambition, or the dreaded Omega, each duel turns into a showcase of staging. This controlled grandiloquence left its mark on a generation of players.
A cult cover
Locked in a single embrace, Squall and Rinoa form the logo drawn by Amano: two silhouettes melting into each other that place romance at the story's heart from the outset. The grace of the gesture and the paleness of the ground convey the adventure's lyrical sweep and melancholy. Pared-down and moving, it ranks among the saga's most tender covers.
Is Final Fantasy VIII still worth playing in 2026?
Final Fantasy VIII is an ambitious, divisive Square work with its revolutionary Junction system and central Squall Leonhart and Rinoa Heartilly romance. The cinematic staging pushes PS1 limits with FMVs of incredible quality and Yusuke Naora's marking art direction. Uematsu's score stays sublime, particularly Eyes On Me and Liberi Fatali. The title divides but deeply marks its lovers. An essential classic today.