Is Final Fantasy II for the SNES different then the Final Fantasy II for the PSP?



I just recently learned that they made a PSP version of Final Fantasy II, however the story line seems to be different then what I remember from the SNES… Are they infact two different games, and if so, who’s stupid idea was this?

3 Responses to “Is Final Fantasy II for the SNES different then the Final Fantasy II for the PSP?”

  1. Same storyline, they just updated flaws, threw some better graphics in the movies etc. Just an update of the old game.

  2. wow you dont know much history of final fantasy do u okay here we ill try and keep it short….ff 1 was release on nes along with parts 2 and 3 whcih never came to america…the relase ff 4 on the snes as part 2 and ff 6 as part 3 on the snes 5 also never made it to america then 7-12 al came… durinn the playstation era the relased all collections of all the game except part 3…which later came out on the ds…anywayz the psp version are the real versions of part 1 nad part 2 the real part 2 all they did was upgrade the graphics form the nes and put soem nice cgi movies in it..so the ff 2 you know is really part 4 you can find a ps1 version of the game on final fantasy chronicals which has ff4 and chrono trigger in it. als othe relased a graphics better verison of part 4 on the ds. hope this helps.

  3. The two are completely different games. Final Fantasy II for the Super Nintendo in the United States is actually Final Fantasy IV. Square Enix (called Squaresoft at the time) never released the original versions of Final Fantasy II and III in North America. When they developed Final Fantasy IV, they did not want North American gamers to know that some games in the series had been held back, so they renamed it Final Fantasy II. Final Fantasy V also was not released in North America, so Final Fantasy VI was renamed Final Fantasy III when it was released here.

    By the time that Final Fantasy VII was developed for the PlayStation, it had become well known that some games in the series had not been released on this side of the Pacific, so Square Enix kept the original name. The popularity of that game meant that every main Final Fantasy game since then saw a North American release, and the company has retained the original numbering. The real Final Fantasy II has been remade for the PlayStation, Game Boy Advance, PlayStation Portable, and iPhone, and Final Fantasy IV maintained its real name when it was remade for the PlayStation, Game Boy Advance, and Nintendo DS.


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