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Square Enix released a special interview with Nomura to celebrate the 30th anniversary of Final Fantasy VI

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Could you start by telling us what you were responsible for during FINAL FANTASY VI’s development?

Nomura:
I was mainly involved in designing the game’s monsters and working on the visual aspect of the battles. Back then, we didn’t have that many employees so everybody pitched in when it came to brainstorming ideas for games’ stories and other things we’d like to put in any given title. We’d write those up and have meetings where Sakaguchi (Hironobu Sakaguchi, producer on FFVI), and other key members of staff would decide which things got the greenlight. That’s how some of my own ideas ended up being used for the game’s lore.
That's nothing like how games are made now. Would you be able to tell us a bit more about which of your ideas made the cut?

Nomura:
The idea of machinery and magic coexisting—best represented by the intro scene where the Magitek armors are walking through the snow—was taken from a document I wrote with another employee. The idea of an Esper being frozen in ice came from that too. I also contributed the core ideas for Shadow and Setzer's backgrounds. Back then we had an unusual way of making games' stories: we all contributed our own ideas and then Sakaguchi would choose what went into the game. It didn't matter what your job title was, we all just proposed whatever we wanted to do. The next title in the series, FINAL FANTASY VII, started out that way too but then Nojima (Kauzshige Nojima, scenario writer on FFVII) got involved and from that point on one person tended to handle the story. I got to be involved heavily with working on the setting for FFVII thanks to having so many of my ideas used for FFVI.
Were you involved in the character designs as well?

Nomura:
Yes, I was responsible for making the illustrations of the party-character sprites. I also drew rough storyboards for the cutscenes and did the original drawings of the chibi characters in the instruction manual. At the time, everyone wrote up their planning documents on PCs, but since I been learning about advertising I liked to make them as if I was going to use them in a presentation—I wrote the text by hand, including my fair share of pictures, and I tried to make the letters really stand out. Then one day Sakaguchi saw that and told me to make something similar for FFVI.
You mentioned working on the monsters for FINAL FANTASY V—Gilgamesh was designed by you as well, right?

Nomura:
Indeed he was. The battle lead, Ito (Hiroyuki Ito, director on FFV), told me he had plans for him and he ended up being this larger-than-life gag character. I think Gilgamesh really stands out as an example of how you can have the story play out during battles as well, not just in cutscenes. What the team had unfold mid-battle was revolutionary at the time.
Setzer the wandering gambler is also a really interesting character.

Nomura:
I do gravitate toward characters like him. He's not exactly raring to go all the time, but there's passion bubbling under the surface.

Some of my ideas which didn't make it into FINAL FANTASY V wound up getting used for VI—the original versions of Shadow and Setzer are two such examples. I came up with Shadow's general profile and the idea of him having a dog that follows him, but I didn't come up with every part of his character. Different elements were added by others to my ideas to give birth to the Shadow we know today. I think we were able to do that thanks to having such a small team. After all, back then you were basically either working on the game design, battles, or art.
In short, you happened to come up with characters for future entries while you were all working on your own ideas.

Nomura:
Exactly. There were quite a few cases where ideas which didn't fit a particular project got revamped later and reused. Edea, from FINAL FANTASY VIII, for example was a design I originally drew for FFVI or FFVII. The final bosses of our games tended to be men, so I came up with her thinking it could be novel to face a witch in the final fight.
Do you have any memorable stories from your time working on FFVI?

Nomura:
This may be hard to believe, but I invited a coworker over to my place and we made planning documents together. I also remember working late into the night at the office with the others and cranking the volume on our CD player like we were on a school trip or something. Even before any planning documents had been made for a project, I’d design monsters and characters, and come up with my own ideas. I’d then go and show those to Kitase when the time felt right. Looking back on it now, I was always trying to come up with new, interesting concepts. I like to think it was that approach which convinced my coworkers to give me even bigger tasks in the future.
Lastly, is there anything you want to say to mark FINAL FANTASY VI’s 30th anniversary?

Nomura:
FFVI was the last mainline pixel-art FF, and I think we’d gone as far as we could with that style. I’m incredibly glad I was able to work on it as a pixel artist, and I definitely feel the love for FFVI even today.

That said, while I tried to do everything I could during the project, there are still parts I feel I could’ve done a better job on. I don’t really feel that way about many other games; it’s just something about FFVI specifically.

Full interview available here - https://na.finalfantasy.com/topics/528
 
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Pejo

Member
I'd like to see better questions that don't just fluff him up or talk about other games. Also maybe interviews with Kitase, Ito, and the Gooch, if he will still answer their phone calls,

It's still crazy to me that it took a team of like 10 devs only 1 year to make one of the best JRPGs of all time.
 

MagiusNecros

Gilgamesh Fan Annoyance
I'd like to see better questions that don't just fluff him up or talk about other games. Also maybe interviews with Kitase, Ito, and the Gooch, if he will still answer their phone calls,

It's still crazy to me that it took a team of like 10 devs only 1 year to make one of the best JRPGs of all time.
Sometimes less is more if you have the talent and vision. And now they struggle to make anything due to being creatively bankrupt.
 

DonkeyPunchJr

World’s Biggest Weeb
It’s mind blowing that one of the masterminds behind some of the all-time classics is also capable of some retarded cringe garbage like Kingdom Hearts, Advent Children, and FF7 Remake.

He’s like the Japanese George Lucas
 

Myths

Member
It’s mind blowing that one of the masterminds behind some of the all-time classics is also capable of some retarded cringe garbage like Kingdom Hearts, Advent Children, and FF7 Remake.

He’s like the Japanese George Lucas
As great as people are at contributing one-off, secondary concepts in ancillary roles, they aren’t any better in primary roles. Too many ideas without someone to make grounded decisions leads to a lack of a coherent and recognizable vision.!
 
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