http://darkhours.livejournal.com/ ([identity profile] darkhours.livejournal.com) wrote in [community profile] goshdarnspam2009-09-17 11:34 pm
Entry tags:

C&C FRIENDAN' MEME

theleagueoffriendsmeme

There's a lot of people in this City. Maybe you've secretly wanted to know some of those people a little better. Or you just love attention. Maybe you just want to show off. Whatever your desire, here is the meme you want to check out! Reply with this form and then go reply to other people's demanding they be your friend. Try to avoid death threats or letter bombs as persuasive tactics, if it's at all possible.

COPY&PASTE:
terra: (rufus)

[personal profile] terra 2009-09-18 04:54 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, no, don't mistake me, I prefer Woolseyisms are almost as delicious as O Smithian and what he did to Kefka was certainly an improvement. Though, I'm the only diehard FFVI fan who doesn't have some kind of Kefka Cult membership card, I swear. It's like, the one game where I care for the heroes so much more than the villain, I want Edgar to hit on meee

I'll play it eventually, I just wait till the price drops!! I know what it is, I'm just cheap.

[identity profile] alternian.livejournal.com 2009-09-18 05:00 am (UTC)(link)
What they did with the World of Ruin is something of such a grand scale that I have yet to see another game match it. They took the entire game world and completely changed it, the NPC dialogue, the music... To simulate a true "world is over and nobody is very happy" scenario.

Sure there's a ton of stuff that doesn't really make any kind of sense (If someone can explain Ultros I'd like to see it) but the whole thing is timeless. From Zanzibar to the Ghost Train, there's not an inch of that game that doesn't totally rock hard.



ALSO CAN I FRIEND YOU :D
Edited 2009-09-18 06:27 (UTC)
terra: (nash ii)

[personal profile] terra 2009-09-18 08:08 pm (UTC)(link)
I think pretty much my love for FFVI can be summed up in the opera scene, which is, y'know, sort of the most famous thing in the game. The way you see it from two perspectives, both Celes' and Locke's, was just revolutionary, the play-within-a-play trope that would be resurrected for most FF games after that, but never so successfully. Not only was there an opera composed entirely for this game-- and "The Dream Oath" is still, I believe the only opera composed for a video game-- but all the scenery's magnificence, the Wagnerian conceits, all of that just pales before character drama that is Celes earning her own song.

And then a giant octopus shows up.