Yes. Final Fantasy VII and VII for the PC are known to work incorrectly on Windows XP and Vista. There are some patches available to work around these issues. Even with this resolved, Final Fantasy VII and Final Fantasy VIII require a video card with DirectX 5 hardware interfaces. This shouldn't be a problem with dedicated NVIDIA or ATI graphics cards, but integrated Intel, NVIDIA, and ATI chipsets may remove these interfaces.
No, it isn't. You have Final Fantasy III (known by others as Final Fantasy VI)
Final fantasy 6 is also known as final fantasy 3. Final fantasy 3 is available in the wii virtual console in wii shop in the super Nintendo section. I Hope this helped.
No. In North America, the game that was known as Final Fantasy III was actually Final Fantasy VI, and the real Final Fantasy III was unreleased until 2006. Chrono Trigger is not part of the Final Fantasy series in anyway, despite the fact that it was bundled with Final Fantasy IV in 2001's Final Fantasy Chronicles. Chrono Trigger is part of the Chrono series, and was originally released on the NES.
Final Fantasy
The North American version of Final Fantasy 3, also known as Final Fantasy 6 in Japan, was originally released on the Super Nintendo in 1994. The original Japanese Final Fantasy 3 was only released in North America on the Nintendo DS system in 2006.
Final Fantasy XI, which is also known as Final Fantasy XI Online was released in North America on October 28, 2003. In order to play this game, you must have a monthly subscription to it.
Squal Leonhart from Final Fantasy VIII is the main S-E protaganist known for wielding a gunblade.Yazoo and Loz from FFVII:Advent Children carry gunblades.Genesis from Final Fantasy:Crises Core carried a gunblade.Seifer Almasy, the antagonist from FFVIII also used a gunblade.Gilgamesh from Final Fantasy XIILightning from Final Fantasy XIIIOther similar weapons to gunblades in the series exist, but Squal was the first and most commonly known as a gunblade user.
No, it's partially the other way around. The Japanese Final Fantasy 4 became Final Fantasy 2 in the US, as the original 2 and 3 were skipped. So the original NES release of 'Final Fantasy 2' in the US, was actually Final Fantasy 4. Nowadays, the original FF2 has been released in various formats, and FF4 is now known by its correct name in the US, due to the GBA and DS rereleases.
Square (now known as Square Enix).
It was originally released as Final Fantasy 3 back in 1994, but has been released under the correct name many times since.
FF10 is an abbreviation which is sometimes used to refer to Final Fantasy 10, also known as Final Fantasy X. Final Fantasy is a series of role playing video games and this, the 10th in the series, was originally released in 2001.
The 'Final Fantasy 2' released in the US for the SNES, was actually Final Fantasy 4. The original FF2 and FF3 were not released outside of Japan, which is why they chose to name it like that. However these days, the original FF2, FF3 and FF4 have been released on various formats, so are all now known by their correct names worldwide. So if you were to get Final Fantasy 2 for the PSP, this is the actual Final Fantasy 2, and not FF4.