Do the Japanese Care About Final Fantasy III DS?

Well duh. Check the pre-orders...

Posted by Staff
According to reports from our friends in the Japanese press, retailers in the RPG-obsessed land of Japan have begun taking pre-orders for Final Fantasy III, the somewhat anticipated series filler for the Nintendo DS. And amazingly, with a month before the game hits store-shelves, a massive 450,000 customers have paid upfront for their chance to kill things in a turn-based fashion.

It would seem that interest in a Famicom remake (albeit the only game in the series never to see a proper global release) outstrips demand across the board in Japanese game retail right now, a telling indicator of the power of the Lite-revived DS and hard-wired addiction consumers have to all things Square.

It was not explained how many pre-orders were linked to sales of these little beauties. Though given that in real-terms, a Lite costs as much as a slice of pizza in Japan, we can only assume it's a lot.

Expect news on the decade-long wait for FFIII in the west being sated on SPOnG as we get it.

Companies:
Games:

Comments

TsuMuchChuJung 3 Aug 2006 12:42
1/13
"According to reports from *our* friends in the Japanese press, retailers in the RPG-obsessed land of Japan have begun taking pre-orders for Final Fantasy III, the somewhat anticipated series filler for the Nintendo DS."

"It would *seem* that interest in a Famicom remake (albeit the only game in the series never to see a proper global release) outstrips demand across the board in Japanese game retail right now, a telling indicator of the power of the Lite-revived DS and hard-wired addiction consumers have to all things Square."

;)
micta 3 Aug 2006 16:09
2/13
TsuMuchChuJung wrote:
"According to reports from *our* friends in the Japanese press, retailers in the RPG-obsessed land of Japan have begun taking pre-orders for Final Fantasy III, the somewhat anticipated series filler for the Nintendo DS."

"It would *seem* that interest in a Famicom remake (albeit the only game in the series never to see a proper global release) outstrips demand across the board in Japanese game retail right now, a telling indicator of the power of the Lite-revived DS and hard-wired addiction consumers have to all things Square."

;)


Too Much Too Young, is there something i should know, what's the matter here?

(Answer with song titles, there's a new SingStar game out this week after all...)
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majin dboy 3 Aug 2006 17:48
3/13
does it have wifi compatiable co-op?any wifi options?
Joji 3 Aug 2006 21:33
4/13
I reckon they do care, since they love to collect stuff. Just a shame we'll never see these over here. I can do with a second DS.
soanso 3 Aug 2006 22:16
5/13
this is the DS game I want. This looks beautiful.
TsuMuchChuJung 4 Aug 2006 12:25
6/13
micta wrote:
Too Much Too Young, is there something i should know, what's the matter here?

(Answer with song titles, there's a new SingStar game out this week after all...)


Haha! Err.... I'm sort of trying to blag myself a job with you, hoping that I might prove my use by repeatedly pointing out misspellings. The errors in this article have been corrected since I first drew attention to them. You can also see my work here.

PS I did my best to answer in song titles but it didn't really make much sense.

Tsu Much Chu Jung: "What became of the likely lads?"
SPOnG: "I'm a slave 4 u"
Tsu Much Chu Jung: "I bet you look good on the dancefloor."
SPOnG: "The answer is Blowing in the Wind."
Tsu Much Chu Jung: "Help!"

Yeah...
--
Feat. The Libertines, Britney Spears, Arctic Monkeys, Bob Dylan & The Beatles
tyrion 4 Aug 2006 17:29
7/13
TsuMuchChuJung wrote:
Haha! Err.... I'm sort of trying to blag myself a job with you, hoping that I might prove my use by repeatedly pointing out misspellings.

Have you sent a CV to us?

Oh and by the way, ellipsis are usually represented by three dots, not four, and they are usually used to show a missing word, not a pause. You should have used a semi-colon or a hyphen. :-)
PreciousRoi 6 Aug 2006 02:55
8/13
...hmmm... could the ellipsis as representative of a pause in speech have evolved as a sort of visual onomatopoeia , perhaps coming out of the American cartoon tradition?

ellipsis is certainly more visually attractive and appropriate than either of the alternatives in some situations.
RiseFromYourGrave 6 Aug 2006 03:23
9/13
tyrion wrote:

Oh and by the way, ellipsis are usually represented by three dots, not four, and they are usually used to show a missing word, not a pause


shouldnt you have said ellipses? ;)
tyrion 7 Aug 2006 07:48
10/13
RiseFromYourGrave wrote:
shouldnt you have said ellipses? ;)

It seems (from a quick Google "define:" search) that either spelling is used, but that ellipsis is the more commonly used version, having more hits.

I know this is like citing Wikipedia, but the ellipsis spelling has some cambridge.ac.uk hits and the ellipses spelling doesn't, so I'm happiest with what I wrote.
RiseFromYourGrave 7 Aug 2006 16:28
11/13
so ellipsis is a singular and plural word? weird
Ditto 7 Aug 2006 16:37
12/13
RiseFromYourGrave wrote:
so ellipsis is a singular and plural word? weird


So's fish.

"I have a fish."

"I have many fish."
RiseFromYourGrave 7 Aug 2006 17:20
13/13
yeah its not very common, unlike in japanese.

plus ive always thought that the plural ending for words that finish with 'sis' is always 'ses'

thats all.
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