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Review

Theatrhythm Final Fantasy Review

Solid Rhythm Gameplay Meets A Legendary Tracklist
by Tim Turi on Jun 28, 2012 at 09:20 AM
Reviewed on 3DS
Publisher Square Enix
Developer indies zero
Release
Rating Everyone 10+

Final Fantasy games are adored for their music just as much as their stellar stories and RPG gameplay. Just one measure of any Nobuo Uematsu composition is enough to get your nostalgic juices flowing. Theatrhythm allows players to enjoy a plethora of Final Fantasy tunes by tapping along to the rhythm on their 3DS. The basic formula is simple and fun, despite some useless experience based-progression garnish.

 All the favorites are here, from the rousing 8-bit battle theme you killed your first goblin to in the original Final Fantasy to the distorted guitars of Final Fantasy XIII. Your job is to tap and flick the stylus to the melody as colorful notes pass by on the screen. The game recognizes every move without flaw. You only have your own lack of rhythm to blame if you fail a song, but that shouldn’t happen often given that the game is easy to a fault on all but the most challenging difficulty level.

Theatrhythm allows you to customize a battle party of popular characters, including charming cartoony versions of favorites like Cloud and Terra. They don’t do much aside from prance across fields and aimlessly hack away at monsters, but they look adorable doing it. Your party acquires experience points and items as you progress, but I didn’t notice any significant change to the core gameplay despite my characters leveling up and automatically tossing around potions and other items. The hollow progression feels like an excuse to play the iconic victory fanfare at the end of each piece. Despite feeling useless, the superfluous layer of complexity doesn’t detract from the fun.

Players can jump around the series timeline to play a collection of three tracks from a specific game, take on tunes at higher difficulties in challenge mode, or team up with a buddy to tackle random ditties in the chaos shrine. Up to four players can play together locally in chaos shrine mode, but sharing the burden of missed notes is more nuisance than fun and can lead to quick game overs. 

As a big Final Fantasy fan and enthusiast of video game music in general, I love being able to appreciate these classics in a new way. I’ll always get a chill listening to the intense orchestral version of “One-Winged Angel” or the happy-go-lucky chocobo theme. The tacked-on progression system may be unsatisfying, but it doesn’t stop Theatrhythm from being a fun, simple rhythm game with an amazing musical library.

8
Concept
Tap and flick along to dozens of the best Final Fantasy tunes ever
Graphics
The cutesy and colorful art style suits all the characters and monsters well
Sound
New and original versions of the greatest tunes the Final Fantasy universe has to offer, which is saying a lot
Playability
Simplistic to a fault at times, but the highest difficulty tests your rhythm and precision
Entertainment
A great time for any video game music fan or appreciator of rhythm games
Replay
Moderate

Products In This Article

Theatrhythm Final Fantasycover

Theatrhythm Final Fantasy

Platform:
3DS
Release Date: