I think it's in Memoria. When you first enter, you go up the stairs, right? Then there's a save point. After the save point, there's some columns. On the right side of the screen, move Zidane to the inside of the columns. If you move around a little, there should be a "!" so hit X and there's your Obelisk. Hope that helps you.
Final Fantasy 7 for ps1 is a 3-disc game. At a certain point in the game it will prompt you to insert disc 2 and later disc 3. Make sure to get Knights of the Round before fighting the final character.
The song is called Otherworld. It can be found in disc one of the Final Fantasy X OST.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3APp6eBJqKU
Final Fantasy XIII, for the Sony PlayStation 3, uses only one disc. There is no need to change discs. However I assume that you are talking about the Xbox360 version that does use 3 discs. In that case you would insert disc one and play the game until it tells you to insert disc 2. Once disc 2 is in always insert that disc to continue the game. Do the same with disc 3.
The first disk ends once you reach Burmecia and lose to Beatrix
I do believe that is possible but you should save anyways just in case.
beat disc 1. itll say end of disk 1 do you want to save. then change disks. its right after aerith dies.
Scratch what I said earlier, as there is one coming for the Wii, and it is the sequel to Crystal Chronicles, and it is being called Crystal bearers. Keep an eye out for it, though there aren't any games coming out for the 360, though, except for FF XI expansions. The main series looks set to remain on Sony's PlayStation hardware.
When you are required to change discs, a message will appear and tell you to exchange discs. You then press the eject button on your Xbox 360 Console and put the next disc in. This is the same for most multi-disc Final Fantasies.
After some events in Rocket Town, late in Disc 1, Cid will join you. He is a mandatory character and cannot be missed.
It actually isn't! While a majority of the story may seem to be on disc 1, a considerable amount of side material, such as sidequests and complex monster designs, is added with each disc, reducing the amount of space left for story programming.
Go back to Shinra Manor during the third disc and go to the achieves room in the basement
Originally, yes, Final Fantasy VII was designed for Nintendo 64. However the project was scrapped and the game was released on Playstation One instead. Final Fantasy VII was so large that there wasn't enough storage space on the Nintendo 64 cartridges to store the whole game. It would have taken 13 cartridges to store the whole game on N64, but just one Playstation disc.