
Category Archives: RPG
Shadowbringers

A Realm Reborn (Base Game) Release on PS3, PS4 and PC: August 27, 2013
Heavensward (First Expansion) Release on PS4 and PC: June 23, 2015
Stormblood (Second Expansion) Release on PS4 and PC: June 20, 2017
Shadowbringers (Third Expansion) Release for PC and PS4: July 2, 2019
Developer and Publisher: Square Enix
Genre: MMO JRPG,

~possible spoilers in this section~
Square Enix as a company has always excelled at narrative storytelling. This is especially evident in the Final Fantasy franchise. Its fourteenth installment has quickly become one of the top massively multiplayer online games on the market, and this is largely due to the fact that it boasts a thoroughly engaging narrative and succeeds at making the players both care about the world and feel important within it.
In past expansions, the story seemed to shift away from the player character and focus more on regional leaders such as Lyse and Hien. In this expansion the player character becomes (arguably) the most important person in the game. As the “Warrior of Darkness” only we can save the First, a world that is not our own. We were summoned by one of the expansion’s new regional leaders, the Crystal Exarch. Throughout the story, he becomes one of the most interesting characters in the game, but at no point does he take the spotlight away from the Warrior of Darkness.


Our new moniker comes with the change in setting. The original game and all the previous expansions occurred in a place known as “the Source”. In Shadowbringers, we travel to one of its shards, “the First” shard to be exact. Many players were hesitant to be excited for an expansion taking place in an alternate reality. We remember all too well the poor execution of World of Warcraft’s Warlords of Draenor expansion. However, Square Enix seems to have done the impossible, because this alternate reality expansion was, hands down, the best expansion to date. We were even given “meanwhile in the Source” cutscenes every now and then that were filtered though fan favorite character, Estinien. Though, the change I was most relieved by was shift in focus away from Alphinaud and Alise. There were whole sections of the game where they were sent off to do something on their own. In my opinion, these two characters are some of the most annoying in the game, and I was glad for their absence. They were heavily focused on in previous expansions, but not enough was revealed about their background and travel to Eorzea to continue making them interesting. Not only are they twins, but their personalities are so similar they might as well be the same person. Its seem Square Enix has tried to differentiate between by having them approach problems in their own specific ways, but that’s not enough.
While for the most part the story was utter perfection, there were some nit picky things that stood out. The biggest issue was the fact that every zone had the same basic storyline: seek and destroy the Lightwarden. Granted, every zone was different, but the themes were much the same not only in this regard but also in its reliance on Talos. These large golem-like magical machines were the backbone of the player’s success in two different zones, and in both it was a matter of how to get them operational. Lastly a small issue that bugged me was the fact that the player had to take an elevator to Top Rung, one of the areas in Kholusia. It was easily big enough to hold at least fifty people. Why then, did only Alphinaud, Alise, and the Player take the first trip to the top? And why did it take a large chunk of quests for everyone else to finally make their way up? Don’t get me wrong though, the fact that these are the biggest story complaints I could make means that the story as a whole was one of the best I’ve ever seen in an MMO.



The other area in which Square Enix excels is its aesthetic. This expansion has some of the most beautiful zones in the game thus far. Il Mheg and Lakeland boasted pastel palettes filled with bright pinks and purples, while the Tempest featured giant bioluminescent plant life that served as precarious walkways. However, not all the new zones were perfect. It became evident quickly that this new world was supposed to reflect the source, with most zones having an equivalent. Il Mheg harkened to Coerthas, the Rak’tika Greatwood to the Black Shroud, Kholusia to La Noscea, and Amh Araeng to Thanalan. While Il Mheg and Rak’Tika were unique masterpieces, Amh Araeng and Kholusia felt more like a copy and paste. In a Realm Reborn we became intimately familiar with the desert zone of Thanalan. In Stormblood we helped liberate the desert zone of Gyr Abania. So why, Square Enix, did it seem like a good idea to put another desert zone in the game? Coerthas is a snow-covered hellscape, but Il Mheg was a beautiful flower covered pixieland. Amh Araeng didn’t need to be a literal mirror of Thanalan. It could have been a subterranean underdark-inspired zone, or a volcanic wasteland. I can only say that I sincerely hope we don’t have to step foot in another desert for the next three expansion.




The other feature that helped set the tone in each zone was the ambient music. No matter where you went, it was beautiful and relaxing, except Northern Kholusia. The music for that area was so intense it sounded like you were eternally in combat. Though the combat music wasn’t much better. Similar to the title screen, the combat music was some kind of rock/metal hybrid, but not in a good way. It was jarring and loud and filled me with way more anxiety than it should have. Calm down Square Enix. Maybe give each zone its own combat music so that it fits into the setting better, or just keep using that one from A Realm Reborn. Every expansion doesn’t need new combat music.
The thing every expansion actually needs, is new cosmetic options for the player character, but Shadownbringers failed to deliver. Final Fantasy XIV has always had a player base that cares about their appearance, and most of the time, Square Enix caters to this. We have gotten new class armors, new primal themed weapons, new primal mount drops, new hairstyles, new classes, and new races every expansion. This time around, however, most of these things were huge disappointments, the biggest being the new race options. Long before the expansion release, developers announced the new race of bunny-humanoids known as the Viera. Audiences were shown a video of exclusively female Viera prancing around on what appeared to be the beastial rabbit feet players would expect, as that is a familiar trait from previous iterations of the Viera. This turned out to be a cleverly disguised lie. Instead of having the extremely arched rabbit feet that require them to wear stilettos, the Viera have normal human feet. The racial armor they were shown in just so happened to feature stiletto heels. It appears the race’s physical differences from other races have been reduced to a simple fashion choice.
This wasn’t the only upset regarding the Viera. It is a well known fact that male Viera do exist in Final Fantasy lore. They are simply a very reclusive pocket of the Viera population that live separately from the females. For this reason, and a statement about the cost and commitment of developing new races, developers decided not to include male Viera as a playable race. They opted instead to add the beastly Hrothgar as a the male exclusive equivalent. This obviously upset a lot of fans, as it was an unexpected and, in many cases, unwelcome addition. It meant no male Viera in the foreseeable future, or ever. They claim they added the Hrothgar because the Lupin race from Stormblood received a warm reception, and they felt the player base needed a wider variety of racial options. Thus, instead of making male and female Viera, or male and female Hrothgar, they split them into two gender locked races.
There are arguments for both, and while I am personally biased, because I was very much looking forward to the male Viera, I can see the opposing argument’s points. However, that isn’t going to stop me from presenting the other side of the facts. Final Fantasy XI was learning experience for Square Enix, and fans alike. In many ways Final Fantasy XIV was a re-do for the company, and a chance to redeem themselves in the eyes of the players. Its early success led it to quickly become one of World of Warcraft’s top competitors. One of the things fans begged the developers for in XI was a male Miqo’te (known as Mithra in FFXI), so one of the first things XIV addressed was adding them, as well as the female Roegadyn (then known as Galka), into the game. Now, faced with the exact same decision, the developers chose to repeat the mistakes of the past. There is a reason the Miqo’te make up the majority of active players in the game, and the Roegadyn are the least played according to the FFXIV census. The players don’t want super masculinized beast races, they want hot animal people with six packs and ears. Lets not forget that this is a Japanese RPG. Why give the players something they didn’t ask for and in so doing deprive them of what they were literally begging for. It would have taken the exact same amount of time, money, and effort to make the male Viera instead of the Hrothgar. Perhaps later on down the line, coming out with the male and female Hrothgar as the final playable race. Lets not forget that the number one MMO on the market, World of Warcraft, has thirteen playable races to FFXIV’s eight, and that isn’t even including WoW’s eight “allied races” with more on the way. Maybe they can make a trade of information and Blizzard can teach Square Enix how to pump out the races in exchange for help with writing an actual storyline.


Now that that is out of the way, we can talk about the other ways Square Enix dropped the ball on customization. For one thing, there is no Aesthetician in the Crystarium, the expansion’s new main city. Why? I know there is the whole alternate reality thing, but surely people get haircuts in the First. It should have been handled similarly to how the retainers were. They are replaced by a pixie, and the aesthetician could have been replaced by someone from the First.
The developers also chose not to give the two new classes, Dancer and Gunbreaker, primal weapons from previous expansions. Since the first expansion we have gotten five new classes, and all have access to weapons from all the previous primals. For example, the Red Mage released with the Stormblood expansion, but there are Ifrit, Garuda, and Titan rapiers even though those primals are from A Realm Reborn. This time around, the new classes only have access to weapons from current content. While this may seem trivial, it was something the players were expecting, as it had been done for every other class. If it was going to be done away with, it should have been replaced by something. As it stands, the only weapons the Dancer and Gunbreaker have access to are the ones received while questing, and the underwhelming class set weapons.
Speaking of the class sets, they were not an improvement on their Heavensward or Stormblood counterparts. While all the classes received new outfits, they were just slightly altered copies of previous outfits. The Dancer outfit was new, but it was gender specific which is unusual for FFXIV’s normal androgynous approach to outfits. The female version is red, while the male version is black. As a male Miqo’te player, I would much rather wear the red version.



The story of any FFXIV expansion makes the leveling process quite enjoyable. There are also a plethora of ways to get to max level. Other than the main scenario quests, you can do side quests, FATEs, or Dungeons. With the new Trust system, you can even do dungeons solo. Which has its pros and cons. For me, I liked the new system because, as a DPS, it allowed for instant cues, and as an inexperienced healer and tank, I can learn the fights without holding up other players. The only concern this presents is a watering down of the MMO experience which centers around playing with other players, but it is ultimately up to each individual to decide. The Trust system itself worked surprisingly well. The NPC tanks and healers do their part and they all follow the mechanics to the letter.
Another feature that made leveling easier was the fact that aether currents were not gated behind story content like they were in Stormblood. You could access all the attuneable currents the moment you set foot in the zone, other than the ones that were quest rewards. This allowed players to fly quite early on. The downside to this was that the currents weren’t placed in very “fun” spots. In Stormblood there were at the top of tall towers that player had to hop from ledge to ledge to get too, or across a narrow beam. At the very least they were very high up. In Shadowbringers, they were generally just thrown in random places and were not hard to get to or a challenge in any way.


The worst parts of the leveling process, however, were the side quests. If you are a player like me and you do the side quests to level because that makes the most sense from a role playing standpoint, you might have run into similar problems. Firstly, there were way too many quests in some places. You would turn in one main story quests and suddenly there are fifteen side quests to pick up. Only about six can be tracked at once, so you end up doing a few, turning them in, and then going back out to the same places to do other quests. This becomes pretty monotonous after a while. Not to mention the fact that most of the quests send you back and forth all over the map, and this is all before you can fly. One quest in particular, “And Then There Were None”, in Il Mheg had me go back and forth between the pixies and a beaver family no less than five times. And many of the other quests required me to type specific phrases into the chat. As a PC player, this wasn’t a huge deal, but my partner plays on the PS4 without a keyboard and those quests were painstaking to complete.

Technical difficulties are to be expected with the launch of any MMO content, especially with the rush of players trying to play it. As a whole, Shadowbringers did an excellent job managing this influx. After sitting through the Warlords of Draenor launch disaster, it takes a lot to upset me. The only thing that frustrated me was frequently being disconnected (through no fault of my internet) and then being told my “Character is logged in on another instance.” This was especially frustrating when I was in a dungeon because I would come back to find myself kicked from the group, or if I was in a Trust I would have to start all over.
Most of the technical issues seemed to stem from a lack of forethought on the developers part and had nothing to do with the launch. For example, if you die in a Trust dungeon, your entire party dies, even if you were not the healer. For some reason, the NPC healers are incapable of resurrecting you. The new classes also have far too many abilities. As a Dancer, I don’t need six AOEs, two of which are basically the exact same thing. It seems all the classes received additional AOEs. At this point, we should be simplifying rotations, not making them more clunky.
Lastly, while the new Primal fights were spectacular, there are a few issues that need to be addressed. Firstly, the DPS check in Titania is almost impossible to accomplish without a melee DPS limit break. When I completed it, we had only caster DPS plus myself as a Dancer. This meant that all of us had AOE limit breaks, not single target. We wiped four times before completing the fight. There need to be safeguards in the que to ensure there is at least one melee DPS in that fight. Second, in the final Hades fight, his wings cover most of the battlefield. They hug so tight it became very difficult to see what was happening at times, thus making an already difficult fight needlessly harder and no longer fun to play.

Overall this expansion was the best one yet. It had an amazing story and beautiful new zones, as well as the new classes, which were brilliantly executed. So much so that I might switch my main class to a Dancer. I think the best thing Square Enix can do is listen to its existing player base and give them what they ask for, not appeal to an audience they haven’t yet captured with races like the Hrothgar. Despite these missteps, this truly was a masterfully executed expansion and I grant it the rank of:

Stormblood
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A Realm Reborn (Base Game) Release on PS3, PS4 and PC: August 27, 2013
Heavensward (First Expansion) Release on PS4 and PC: June 23, 2015
Stormblood (Second Expansion) Release on PS4 and PC: June 20, 2017
Developer and Publisher: Square Enix
Genre: MMORPG

The teams at Square Enix have always been some of the best storytellers in video games. That passion for narrative unsurprisingly reappeared in Final Fantasy XIV: A Realm Reborn and continued into the games two expansions: Heavensward and Stormblood. Many players would agree that FFXIV is one of the best, if not the best, MMO on the market, and its narrative focus is one of the biggest reasons for that.
The problem with being the best is a tendency to make a mold and stick to it. Stormblood is a wonderful addition the FFXIV universe, but it isn’t that much different from past expansions. When it rolled out in June, the only “new” feature it boasted was the ability to swim in select zones. Everything else was simply a new version of things players had seen before. The biggest example is the new primals (bosses). Every expansion has its primals and there is no denying how fun, or sometimes infuriating in a good way, those fights can be.
These fights are something players have come to expect and will no doubt be in every expansion to come. The issue with the primals this time around is that they were poorly worked into the story. The main story focus of liberating Ala Mhigo and Doma felt like it took a short commercial break while the Warrior of Light was made to deal with yet another primal threat…twice. Lakshmi especially felt like the developers said, “Oh shoot we forgot to write in a second primal fight, lets throw one in randomly right before the end where it makes the least amount of sense.” At this point the Warrior of Light receives a crash course on the beast tribe called the Ananta before being thrown in head first to fight their “Lady of Bliss”.
The new zones of the Expansion are Gyr Abania and Othard. Othard is wonderfully rendered and contains areas that are clearly inspired by places like Japan, China, and Mongolia. The new main city, Kugane, while the most beautifully done thus far, is also the most loosely tied into the story. It is not part of Doma, the area of focus in the region, and it is not controlled by the games villains. Hopefully this issue with go away as the patches introduce more story into the game. Right now it feels like it was put into the game simply because the expansion needed a main city, even though all the necessary vendors for end game gearing and content are in Rhalgr’s Reach.
While Othard was new and well done, Gyr Abania was not. The graphic detail and size of the zone were breathtaking, however, the scenery and aesthetic were far too similar to things the game has already done with Thanalan, a base game zone. It gave players another desert climate area with a lot of snake and bug themed monsters. It didn’t feel new or inspired.
The new classes, Red Mage and Samurai, were some of the best thus far. I personally have played mainly as a Bard thus far and am now considering switching my focus to the Red Mage class. Red mages are a hybrid mage class using both White and Black magics. They can be devastating attackers while also being excellent healers despite being classified as DPS. Samurai are a pure DPS class that truly pack a punch with their devastating combos.
Both classes were well done and deserving of applause. The only issue they present is the fact that they are both DPS classes. Heavesward introduced a Tank, Healer, and DPS class while Stormblood only added to the already long list of DPS classes. This makes the long dungeon queue time for DPS even longer.
The developers made the decision to make Class Armor a class quest reward as they did in A Realm Reborn. In Heavensward it was changed to make the armor obtainable by purchase with hard to get tomestones (in game currency obtained through finishing dungeons). It is good to see that the team can admit a mistake and correct it.
For the most part class ability additions and changes were good, except the the removal of the Summoner ability Sustain, which allowed players to heal their pet. As a Summoner, I found my tank pet was constantly dying and once re-summoned would have a hard time regaining aggro. I worry that changes like this are going to become common as the class ability pools get too large and the devs have to start stripping away old abilities that may have been crucial to the way a class is played.
Finally, the expansion introduced a new mentor system that allowed long time players to help coach and mentor returning or new players. This system sounds wonderful in theory but was not in reality. Personally I have been in numerous dungeons with player who have the mentor icon but don’t know any of the mechanics and don’t speak at all in chat. They aren’t willing to communicate and isn’t that what being a mentor is? The selection process for mentors needs to be much more rigorous.

Mostly what I want from the next expansion is a break from the norm. Take risks, introduce things that are completely new. For example World of Warcraft introduced Garrisons in Warlord of Draenor and Artifact Weapons in Legion. Garrisons weren’t very successful but at least they took the risk. So my main feedback points are as follows:
- Put the Warrior of Light back in the spotlight. Side characters are more than welcome to share it, but Lyse just took it away completely.
- Stop relying so heavily on post-expansion patches for the bulk of new content and story. If that isn’t possible, the patches need to be closer together. Its almost October and we are still waiting on the first major patch.
- Stay true to the base classes, find a different way to add new things to them without taking the abilities away completely. Maybe try the subclass route the World of Warcraft took.
- Summoners need more egis! Or at the very least a much wider array of skins to choose from. Where is my Shiva, Rhamu, Leviathan, Ravana, Bismark, Sophia, Sephirot, Zurvan, Susano, and Lakshmi skins!
- Continue to be a great game that I will never get tired of.

This game is still the best MMO on the internet. I struggled to find fault with it, and that is a good thing. It has a rich story full of unique characters and I have been in love with it since day one. If this were a review of the entire game it would easily be ranked 4.8 or 4.9. But since this is just a rank for Stormblood, and the expansion itself didn’t introduce any game changers or break the mold in any way I give it the rank:

