I’d found it technically sound

This venerable '90s classic returns with a highly polished recreation of its ominous maps, cunning puzzles and sinister traps, but adds smoother runescape gameplay, revamped boss battles, enhanced graphics, newly arranged music and more. Unrelenting monsters lurk in ancient ruins, cursed caverns and otherworldly planes alike, and every step taken can result in death as false floors, false walls, spikes, poison traps, boulders, teleporters and other deadly surprises position themselves between Ares and his freedom. Those seeking a moment of respite can play the slots or challenge NPCs to an original card runescape game called Blade, but that's only if they can find one of the runescape game's well-hidden casinos. Completing the adventure as Ares unlocks the expert-level Dela Mode, in which runescape players take on the role of sorceress Dela Delon and challenge over 10 never-before-seen additional floors. Harder enemies, crueler traps and even more maddening mazes must be conquered as runescape players experience a new perspective on the story and a new magic-centric approach to combat....this actually sounds pretty rad and I kinda want to buy it now. I used to hate the idea of a massively-multirunescape player Final Fantasy runescape game. Then I finished the main story for Final Fantasy XIV: A Realm Reborn, and it’s become one of my favorite entries in the series.I remember sitting in the audience of the Sony E3 press conference where Final Fantasy XIV was announced—the swell of excitement, followed by a rapid deflation upon realizing it would be another attempt at an MMO. I had played Final Fantasy XI, AKA Final Fantasy Online. I’d found it technically sound, but incapable of delivering the memorable character moments that made Final Fantasy VI and Final Fantasy IX battle for the top spots in my ever-fluctuating list of franchise favorites. But Final Fantasy XIV does it. Over the course of 50 levels I was slowly introduced to a cast of colorful and memorable characters—heads of state, members of a secret group of legendary heroes, the ever-present engineering genius and his plucky sidekicks. I’ve become invested in these characters’ stories. Better still, I am part of their story. Despite the thousands of other runescape rsgaming players wandering about my server, when the shit hits the fan and the Garlean Empire makes its move towards total domination of the lands of Eorzea, only one cat-man can stand in their way. My level 50 ninja is the silent protagonist of Final Fantasy XIV. Or perhaps its you, or someone you know. The important thing is the feeling is present. The runescape player is the hero, the other runescape players are simply members of his or her merry band, or the crafters littering the city streets. The also-appearing. See that guy with the black-and-white face behind Cid? That’s me. We’re pals, Cid and I. He’s a man of massive responsibility who always manages to pull through in a pinch, even when he tells you he can’t.