The Cursed Ring changes your armour resistance into absorbance, at the cost of lowering your stats. So if your armour had fire resistance, when you wear the Cursed Ring, it turns into fire absorbance, and fire attacks will heal instead.
Yes, the final fantasy all the bravest does work.
Final Fantasy 9 will play on PS1, PS2, or the PS3 version that has backward compatibility.
The maker is not doing hes best. He must work harder so we can play final fantasy sonic x7
Any memory card labeled as compatible with the PS1 should work with Final Fantasy VII.
simple put no
Learn Japanese and find a way to join Square Enix, work your way through the ranks, and become part of a development team for a Final Fantasy game.
All machina-type enemies in Final Fantasy X are immune to Petrification, so no, Kimahri's Stone Breath won't work on that enemy.
Yes. For Final Fantasy I, II and III you need an NES emulator and the rom. You will need an SNES emulator for IV, V and VI and a PSX emulator for VII, VIII and IX. PS2 will work for XII, XIII.
XIII will and probobly XIV Signed, Phoenix
They have a benchmarking tool you can run that will tell you if you are able to run it.
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.
Not quite. It was 'Square Co. Ltd' who created Final Fantasy, and produced the series up to Final Fantasy 11. In 2003, Square merged with a rival company, Enix, and only then was known as 'Square Enix'. Square Enix continued work on Final Fantasy 11, as well as producing 12, 13 and 14, at present.