TheFinal Fantasyseries has long been a very family friendly franchise, especially considering that the games have been releasing since the vast majority of players were children. As a result, titles likeFinal Fantasy 7 Remakehave long been cautious to either tone down the violence throughoutSquare Enix’s expertly crafted combatsystems that keep some of the more mature aspects up to the imagination.

However, now that the series is over 30 years old with 15 mainline titles and even more spin-offs, sequels, and cameos under its belt,Final Fantasy 7 Remakemay want to start making a different move towards innovation. When it comes to this new direction for the series,Final Fantasy 16may already be the start of a new trend, but this doesn’t mean it should be retroactively implemented in more titles.

final fantasy 16 joshua

RELATED:Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 2 Should Lean into the FF10 Connection

Final Fantasy 16 is Finally Going for an M Rating

Current speculation, along with a few leaks, suggests thatFinal Fantasy 16will be M-Rated, thanks in part to more mature themes as well as a willingness to show blood. Fans of this news have responded positively to the idea of a more brutal and bloody addition to theFinal Fantasyseries that is finally aging with its fanbase after three decades of success. This hasn’t been the case for every player, but the vast majority of those responding to this speculation seem to be on board for more realistic violence in the next installment of the Square Enix’s flagship franchise.

TheinitialFinal Fantasy 16traileris all that most fans needed in order to come to this conclusion that the next game will be going for a more mature experience. However, if Square Enix is already dipping its toes into M-Rated titles with this latest release, then the developer may want to consider implementing that same mentality into an ongoing title. Specifically, leaning away from the family friendly attitude could allowFinal Fantasy 7 Remaketo grow as it continues to release the rest of the titles extended parts.

cloud and tifa at 7th heaven

Final Fantasy 7 Remake’s Family Friendly Setting is a Magic Trick

Something that feels strange during certain moments in the new remake, specifically in certain story events that pit the players against Shinra Troopers, is the severe lack of death. One moment that stands out among the others is with one ofFinal Fantasy 7 Remake’s newest characters, Johnny, where Cloud actively suggests killing him to Tifa to keep AVALANCHE safe. Tifa eventually talks Cloud down, but the scene is immediately followed by claiming that the Shinra Troopers that the player just beat in a fight are only knocked out and will wake up soon.

For some players, this whole encounter is somewhat cheapened by claiming that these soldiers that Cloud hit with full strength with a one-ton slab of steel are only knocked out. It feels like a lie that is a lot for players to swallow, after already requiring the player to suspend their disbelief enough to imagine thatCloud’s Buster Swordis a feasible weapon in the first place. With how muchFinal Fantasy 7 Remakeleans on making players understand the consequences for in-game actions like blowing up the Mako Reactor, there really is no reason to shy away from more mature concepts.

Final Fantasy 7 Remake Cloud and Mako Reactor

RELATED:Final Fantasy 7 Remake Part 2 Already Has to Deal With One Big Critique

Final Fantasy 7 Remake’s Prime Demographic is Older Now

As mentioned before, the series is now over three decades old and theoriginalFinal Fantasy 7is now over 23 years old itself. This means that a huge amount of fans that are familiar with the original game, and especially those with memories from playing the game when it released in 1997, are all well above 18. So, if the fear is that by makingFinal Fantasy 7 Remakemature would cause the game to lose a part of its potential market, there is still a massive demographic that an M-Rating wouldn’t alienate or turn away.

This doesn’t have to mean that scenarios like Madam M’s massage needs to go into more detail of the more adult implications of the scene, but instead simply allow the violence to show through the combat. If the new remake is going to spend so much time focusing on the mayhem and death caused by destroying each Mako Reactor, then the same should apply to fighting off wave after wave of Shinra Trooper. Implementing some maturity could go a long way to addressingFinal Fantasy 7 Remake Part 2feeling too similarto the first part, as well as making some later scenes carry considerably more weight.

Article image

Putting an End to a 23 Year Long Debate

What could easily be one of the most anticipated scenes in future episodes is howFinal Fantasy 7 Remakehandles Aerith’s deathat the hands of Sephiroth. This is quite possibly the most iconic scene in the entireFinal Fantasyseries, and is easily one of the most well-recognized moments from the gaming industry as a whole. However, even in the original title’s release, the T-Rating has turned this into one of the most hotly debated sequences among fans of the series, thanks to a detail that kept the maturity in check.

The start of this debate can be tracked down to the way that Sephiroth dispatches Aerith by stabbing her through the back, but his weapon has no blood on it. One schoolyard theory that continues to persist is that the reason for the lack of blood is because whenSephiroth stabs Aerith, he attacks so quickly and with such force that there isn’t time for blood to pool on the blade as it passes through. While there is tons of evidence to prove that the speed isn’t the cause, like the fact that Aerith’s entire body falls forward before he removes the weapon, some fans still believe that the scene proves how powerful Sephiroth is.

Leaning in on the brutality of this moment with a more mature depiction of Aerith’s death to show blood could finally settle this debate that some people claim proveshow powerful Sephirothis. Not even mentioning everything wrong with the theory, like the fact that it isn’t even actually Sephiroth that does the deed, this one simple change can be a definitive answer. Additionally, an M-Rated death for Aerith could be exactly whatFinal Fantasy 7 Remakeneeds to make sure that this major death not only sticks, but also hits harder than any of the ones that proceed it.

Final Fantasy 7 Remakeis available now on PS4.

MORE:Comparing Final Fantasy 16’s Main Character to Final Fantasy 7’s Cloud