enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. List of fantasy worlds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fantasy_worlds

    A vast disc of land resting on four elephants which stand on a giant turtle. Setting of the Discworld series. The Colour of Magic. 1983. N V M G T. Draenor (Outland) Blizzard Entertainment. Homeworld of the orcs and ogres in the Warcraft franchise. Connected to Azeroth via the dark portal.

  3. Midgar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midgar

    Midgar (Japanese: ミッドガル, Hepburn: Middogaru) is a fictional city from the Final Fantasy media franchise. It first appears in the 1997 video game Final Fantasy VII, and is depicted as a bustling metropolis built, occupied, and controlled by the megacorporation Shinra Electric Power Company (神羅電気動力株式会社, Shinra Denki Dōryoku Kabushiki gaisha).

  4. List of fictional settlements - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fictional_settlements

    A fictional town located in the fictional Midwestern state of North Yankton, based on North Dakota. The town's name alludes to Bismarck, the state capital of North Dakota, named after the German military leader and statesman Otto Von Bismarck. Midgar Final Fantasy VII: A fictional arcology controlled by the Shinra Corporation.

  5. Ivalice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ivalice

    Ivalice (イヴァリース, Ivarīsu) is a fictional universe setting primarily appearing in the Final Fantasy video game series. The world was created by Yasumi Matsuno and has since been expanded upon by several games as the Ivalice Alliance series. Ivalice is described as a complex world with a very long history, and the stories of Final ...

  6. Final Fantasy VII - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Fantasy_VII

    Final Fantasy VII takes place on a world referred to in-game as the "Planet" and retroactively named "Gaia". [7] [8] The planet's lifeforce, called the Lifestream, is a flow of spiritual energy that gives life to everything on the Planet; its processed form is known as "Mako". [9]

  7. Final Fantasy IX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Fantasy_IX

    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.

  8. Final Fantasy Tactics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Final_Fantasy_Tactics

    Final Fantasy Tactics [a] is a 1997 tactical role-playing game developed and published by Square for the PlayStation video game console.Released in Japan in June 1997 and in the United States in January 1998 by Sony Computer Entertainment, it is the first game of the Tactics series within the Final Fantasy franchise, and the first entry set in the fictional world later known as Ivalice.

  9. Spira (Final Fantasy) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spira_(Final_Fantasy)

    Spira is the fictional world of the Square role-playing video games Final Fantasy X and X-2. Spira is the first Final Fantasy world to feature consistent, all-encompassing spiritual and mythological influences within the planet's civilizations and their inhabitants' daily lives. The world of Spira itself is different from the mainly European ...