That can be as simple as swapping around what treasures show up where in dungeons, to complex things like making the game create entirely new levels, worlds, and scenarios never dreamed of by the original programmers. ![]() Randomizers are, of course, programs that take a game - in this case the original Final Fantasy for the NES - and shuffle and "randomize" portions of the game to make entirely new experiences. It's a solid, deep randomizer, one that sucked me in two years ago and I'm still going back and playing it, again and again, even now. That said, I do want to make sure that everyone knows this randomizer exists so they can take a chance on it and try it for themselves. It feels a little self-serving to write a full article about something I work on and help maintain. One we haven't discussed up until now was the randomizer for the original NES title, Final Fantasy.Īdmittedly, there's a reason for that: I'm an admin of the FFR Community Discord as well as a contributor to the randomizer itself. ![]() ![]() We've covered a number of randomziers on this site (and its sister site, Castlevania: The Inverted Dungeon), with a fair bit of focus leveled at the Final Fantasy games and their randomizers, including Final Fantasy IV: Free Enterprise and Final Fantasy V Career Day.
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