Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Final Fantasy IX sold over 2.65 million copies in Japan by the end of 2000, making it the second-highest selling game of the year in the region. [52] Although it was a top-seller in Japan [53] and America, [54] Final Fantasy IX did not sell as many copies as VII or VIII in either Japan or the United States.
Final Fantasy IX, a PlayStation role-playing game consisting of four CD-ROMs, [1] features a cast containing various major and minor characters. Players control a maximum of four characters for combat at once, with eight main playable characters in the party and other, temporary characters.
Quina Quen (クイナ・クゥエン, Kuina Kūen) is a character in the video game Final Fantasy IX, being one of the playable characters that can be used. They are a Blue Mage, a Final Fantasy class that gains enemies' powers by defeating them, and is invested in eating food. They have an ambiguous gender, referred to with both male and ...
Includes Final Fantasy through Final Fantasy IX on PlayStation (except Final Fantasy III on PlayStation Portable), Final Fantasy X through Final Fantasy XII on PlayStation 2, and Final Fantasy XIII on PlayStation 3. [180] Includes a code redeemable for in-game Moogle Earrings in Final Fantasy XIV. [180]
Final Fantasy IX, a 2000 role-playing game originally released on the PlayStation video game console; F9 (film), alternatively known as Fast & Furious 9, an American action film; Firefox 9, a web browser; Garou: Mark of the Wolves, the ninth installment of the Fatal Fury fighting game series released in 1999
Kuja is a fictional character and the main antagonist of the 2000 video game Final Fantasy IX. A member of the same race as the protagonist, Zidane. He exhibits narcissistic and egomaniacal traits, with his plot at first being to overthrow his creator, and then to destroy all life. He appears in other games, such as Dissidia Final Fantasy.
With ports and remakes of older games, dialogue can be changed or added by the team, as in the case of Final Fantasy VI. [23] The title can also be altered for various reasons. Final Fantasy IV and VI were released in North America as Final Fantasy II and III. This was due to the fact that the original II and III on NES had not received a ...
Final Fantasy is a series of role-playing video games developed and published by Square Enix (formerly Square).Its first game premiered in Japan in 1987, and Final Fantasy games have subsequently been localized for markets in North America, Europe and Australia, on nearly every video game console since its debut on the Nintendo Entertainment System.