The Ultimate Final Fantasy 7 Iceberg Explained



Perhaps the most well-known RPG of all time, the game that put the playstation console on the map and forever changed the landscape of role playing games. A story featuring one of the most notorious character losses in history, some of the most influential game music of all time, and a villain that ranks among the most popular within all of gaming.

This is the ultimate final fantasy 7 iceberg.

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Watch the Ultimate FF9 Iceberg: https://youtu.be/bZMhm9tipsc
Watch the Ultimate FF6 Iceberg: https://youtu.be/8bdHpbHfYt0

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49 thoughts on “The Ultimate Final Fantasy 7 Iceberg Explained”

  1. I feel remorse for the people of Midgar. Most seemed to be living out their life not bothering anyone/anything. Yet eventually their tax money, places of worship (I assume) homes, and places of business were all destroyed/ maybe abandoned.

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  2. Pretty sure that the "1/35 Soldier" item is referring to a scale miniature, similar to wargaming miniatures, Gundam models, and even model vehicles & trains. So 1/35 scale would mean that the item is 1 35th the size of a regular person.

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  3. Ah yes I remember that secret ending of Dirge! I remember there were rumors that they were going to make a Sephiroth game called Final Fantasy VII: One-Winged Angel that ended with him fighting Genesis one last time connecting it with Dirge. Sadly never got it, but that made my teenage art so excited at the time.

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  4. The FF7/10 Shinra connection could be alternate universes/timelines of the same world. One where Shinra was able to figure out how to use the lifestream to make everything go steampunk, and one where something held him back and everything went a different direction.

    I always figured Yuffie and Vincent weren't in the final scene just because they couldn't be sure you had found either character. They didn't want people to finish the game and have strangers in the ending that they hadn't seen before.

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  5. Some of these are connected to/explain others. Specifically, the differences in the story of the remake are because it's actually a different story.

    See, the Lifestream exists independent of time in the world. If you are able to navigate the Lifestream, you can look at and move to different points in time as easily as walking to different stores in a mall. Most people can't, they get totally disoriented and confused like Cloud did. Aerith has always been somewhat connected to it because she's Cetra, so she can just see that stuff sometimes. Sephiroth was able to handle it and learn it after he died, presumably from Jenova's cells.
    That's why Aerith had the vision of Meteor at the beginning, and why those two know things about the original game. So the remake isn't just retconning the story, it's Sephiroth using the Lifestream to go back and try some things differently.

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  6. I like the idea of 7 and 10 being i the same universe, I'd even say 7 is 10's past, again through the Shinra name connection. It sort of make sense, 7 see's the end of Midgar, the world has been reclaimed by nature, the world of 10 if cannon to 7 would be more or less the same, humanity slowly rebuilding their homes, cities, and cultures just like we see in 10 and how we're intorduced to Waka

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