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Blade Of Fire received mainly positive reviews but with a few negative reviews. The Times said of it, "Hill is great at battle-scenes, and his benign werewolves and vampires are a pleasing twist on the legendary monsters." Despite that The Times wasn't over-enthusiastic about the sequel.
Final Fantasy VIII was the first title to have extensive communication between the Japanese and North American teams during the process. Lead translator Richard Honeywood wrote a text parser that would automatically convert text from English ASCII to Shift JIS format required by the game engine's compiler, streamlining the translation process ...
The Icemark Chronicles is a series of books consisting of The Cry of the Icemark, followed by Blade of Fire, and Last Battle of the Icemark [1] and the prequel called Prince Of The Icemark. The books were written by Stuart Hill from Leicester. Fox 2000 Pictures optioned the film rights to the book.
Final Fantasy VIII: PlayStation: February 11, 1999: Square: Co-published with Square in PAL, China, Hong Kong and Singapore only [b] Syphon Filter: PlayStation: February 16, 1999: Bend Studio: Published by 989 Studios in North America and by Sony Computer Entertainment in PAL only Final Fantasy VI: PlayStation: March 11, 1999: Square: Co ...
The six main playable characters in Final Fantasy VIII are Squall Leonhart, a loner who avoids vulnerability by focusing on his duty; Rinoa Heartilly, an outspoken and passionate young woman who follows her heart; Quistis Trepe, an instructor with a serious yet patient attitude; Zell Dincht, an energetic martial artist with a fondness for hot ...
Medea Clytemnestra Strong-In-The-Arm Lindenshield [1] is a fictional character and the chief antagonist from Stuart Hill's fantasy trilogy of books called The Icemark Chronicles.
Kazushige Nojima (野島 一成, Nojima Kazushige, born January 20, 1964) is a Japanese video game writer.He is best known for writing several installments of Square Enix's Final Fantasy franchise—namely Final Fantasy VII and its spin-offs Advent Children and Crisis Core, Final Fantasy VIII, and Final Fantasy X and X-2—in addition to the Kingdom Hearts series, [1] the Glory of Heracles ...
At the beginning of Final Fantasy VIII, Squall is known as a "lone wolf" because he never shows his feelings [22] and seems unresponsive to his associates. [23] His superiors including his teacher Quistis Trepe consider him challenging to deal with but respect his talents. [24] [25] Squall is stoical and his taciturn nature used for comic relief.