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Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion review: polished story filler that’s a missed opportunity after FF7 RemakeZack it off

Zack it off

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Square Enix

Image credit:Rock Paper Shotgun/Square Enix

Zack looks sheepish as he holds his hands together, prayer-like, in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion

When Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII first came out in 2007 as part of Square Enix’s somewhat indulgent (and merely so-so) FF7 Compilation project, it was intended to fill in the backstory of one of the main game’s most mysterious and spoilerific character twists. Namely thatFF7hero and perpetual mopey boy CloudStrifewasn’t quite who he thought he was, and that he actually owes a lot of his life (literally and figuratively) to the peppy, squat-loving ShinRa go-getter Zack Fair. (And if you’re mad about me spoilingthat25-year-old story beat, wait until you see what they’ve done withFF7 Remake).

It’s with FF7 Remake in mind, though, that many of you will probably be wondering where this swanky new remaster of FF7’s PSP prequel fits into the increasingly up for grabs timeline of Squeenix’s ongoing Remake trilogy. And just as the original Crisis Core was almost impossible to talk about without entering major spoiler territory for the main game of Final Fantasy VII, so it goes forCrisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion. For the spoiler-averse, I’ll say this. If you don’t already know the backstory of Zack and his relationship with arch mega villain Sephiroth, this is a perfectly fine action game that’s received a lot of welcome polish for a 15-year old PSP title, but is probably still best experienced through a comprehensive YouTube retrospective as opposed to forking out £40 / $50 for it. For everyone else out there, though, let’s get into it.

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Where should you start with Final Fantasy 7?

Cover image for YouTube video

Or rather, is there even anything to getinto? Alas, if you were hoping for some sort of explanation about FF7 Remake’s canon-breaking ending, you’ll be disappointed here. As a prequel, Reunion would have been the perfect opportunity to seed many of the ideas later explored in FF7 Remake, but this is very much a straightforward remaster of the PSP original. No noodly ending rewrites, nothing.

In many ways, it shows remarkable restraint on creative director Tetsuya Nomura’s part (who’s also the main instigator behind the entire FF7 Remake trilogy), although given that Crisis Core’s main villain still spends 99% of his screen time quoting bad poetry at you while gesticulating with a large, purple apple in his hand, maybe that’s not saying much. It’s possible, of course, that this is intentional. After all, just as FF7 Remake sort of requires you to have played the original FF7 to know how they’ve meddled with its seemingly immutable lore, you could argue that Crisis Core is now the skeleton key that unlocks them both, not just in how it sets up vital plot points for the latter stages of vanilla FF7, but also how they’re then twisted and morphed in the final moments of Remake.

I wasn’t kidding about the big purple “Alas, poor Yorick” apple…

Genesis holds out a purple apple in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion

The end result, however, is ultimately the same. Even now, there’s little reason to seek out Crisis Core Reunion unless you’re really in it for the Sephiroth ‘was actually once a good guy’ fan service. I never played Crisis Core on the PSP, but I’ve absorbed enough FF7 nonsense over the years to know who its key players are and how they connect to its overarching story. Actually playing Crisis Core did nothing to change or improve my opinion of these characters, and unlessFF7 Rebirthis going on a wild tangent somehow, I’m not sure there’s much benefit in getting to know the rest of its supporting cast who (for obvious reasons) don’t make it past the end credits.

…nor its mildly terrible dialogue.

Sephiroth looks at Genesis in an underground lab in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion

Angeal stands dramatically against an industrial landscape, a single wing extended, in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII  - Reunion

Sadly, they did not extend the same courtesy to editing that script, hence why emo poetry boy Genesis still comes across as a overwrought caricature of a villain rather than any real threat. Its excessive use of cutscenes and flashbacks to deliver its apparently critical backstory also gets in the way of it trying to be a good game a lot of the time, too. You can barely take three steps toward an objective marker before being thrown into yet another cutscene - although I’m fully willing to admit that this maybe feels even more exasperated in 2022 given the compact size of its PSP-hampered maps.

This guy is some Kingdom Hearts-level nonsense design…

An enemy that looks like it’s stepped straight out of Kingdom Hearts in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion.

Dropkicking enemies alongside a giant Chocobo is the one redeeming feature of Crisis Core’s combat.

Zack jumps in the air alongside a chocobo, preparing to stamp down on the ground in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion.

When the right numbers reduce the cost of magic attacks to zero, for example, you know it’s time to whale on your Firas and Thundagas like there’s no tomorrow. Similarly, you can also gain brief spells of invincibility or boosted magic defences, and if Zack’s feeling particularly pumped about a character he’s just met - say, Aerith or Sephiroth - their character-themed limit breaks are more likely to come up in the wheel’s rotation. It’s exactly this kind of spontaneous havoc that can breathe new life into age-old JRPGs, but its over reliance on cheap as chips items to replenish your magic and action point bars (as opposed to being done through the combat itself) means it’s very easy to exploit, leading to repetitive magic spamming and ether bottle chugging that effectively robs it of all its improvisational brilliance.

Zack fights Wutai baddies in an orchard in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion.

Zack fights a large metal scorpion in an industrial setting in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion.

Zack fights robots on a highway in Crisis Core - Final Fantasy VII - Reunion.

So yes, while there are some bits of Crisis Core worth salvaging for a modern, overdue tune-up, Square Enix and co-developers Tose Co Ltd simply don’t go far enough in bringing this up to date for a post-Remake audience. Some may find the straightforward nature of this remaster rather comforting after Nomura effectively ripped up the rulebook with Remake, but personally, I’d rather something new and bold than a game that simply retreads old ground again. And in Crisis Core’s case, its very old ground, its key story beats having been repeated, regurgitated and repurposed so many times over the years that every man and their moogle now knows what Zack’s deal is without having spent a single minute playing his actual prequel. And if you don’t, save yourself the trouble and watch a TLDR retrospective on YouTube (I can recommenda good one). You’ll get all the benefit of what Crisis Core means to the wider FF7verse without the pain of actually having to sit through all like its button-mashing combat, turgid side missions and naff, Shakespearean apple boy speeches. Does run beautifully on Steam Deck, though, I’ll give it that.