Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade Is Now Available On Xbox Series X|S

Welcome back Xbox fans, Japanese role-playing game (JRPG) enthusiasts, Final Fantasy fans and fellow geeks!

Over a week ago, Square Enix officially released Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade for Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S plus Windows PC and Xbox Cloud Gaming. For Xbox gamers who love JRPGs and the Final Fantasy games franchise, this development marked the end of a years-long wait for the big budget remake of Final Fantasy VII to be released on their consoles.

This is Aerith Gainsborough in the big-budget remake?

This early, Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade on Xbox is already making a positive impact as it launched strongly on the Top Paid Xbox sales charts ranking 9th place overall. The PureXbox.com news article states as follows:

Meanwhile, Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade co-director Naoki Hamaguchi expressed his happiness that Xbox gamers are enjoying the game and he already confirmed that the remaining chapters of the Final Fantasy VII Remake trilogy will be released on Xbox. Read his Twitter post below.

Final Fantasy VII Legacy and Cultural Significance

Historically, the original Final Fantasy VII was released on PlayStation in 1997 and it became a massive commercial juggernaut which arguably made the JRPG more popular among Western gamers. Characters like Cloud Strife, Barret Wallace, Tifa Lockhart, Aerith Gainsborough, and Yuffie Kisaragi became wildly popular not only among Final Fantasy fans but with JRPG enthusiasts. Sephiroth meanwhile became one of the most defining villains of video gaming.

Battles in the game are often fast, intense and filled with visual spectacle.

The road to the big budget remake was a long one and it eventually Final Fantasy VII Remake was released as an exclusive game on PlayStation 4 in 2020. A year later, the upgraded version called Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade was released on PlayStation 5.

Xbox gamers who purchase Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade can expect the following: Quests, mini-games, and missions set in expanded areas of Midgar. There are also some new characters and content that adds even more depth to the story.

The main cast in Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade.

If you are an Xbox gamer who has decided to purchase a copy of Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade, click https://www.xbox.com/en-US/games/store/final-fantasy-vii-remake-intergrade/9NRQVQ7ZRM7Z/0010

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I’m Having Fun Playing Dig Dug On My Xbox Series X

Welcome back Xbox fans, retro gaming enthusiasts and fellow geeks!

I’ve been playing Atari 50 on my Xbox Series X for more than a year now and I can say it is a blast of retro gaming fun. In addition, the DLCs added even more fun, more variety and gave me insight about the production history of the games.

In recent times, I purchased the Namco Legendary Pack for Atari 50 and it came with 3 Atari Pac-Man games (for Atari 2600, Atari 5200 and Atari 8-bit), the American arcade versions of Dig Dug and Xevious, and the home console versions of Galaga, Xevious, Galaxian and Dig Dug.

Among those games, I chose to play the arcade version of Dig Dug which I never previously played. Indeed, I visited the video arcades a lot when I was younger and I do remember passing by a few machines of Dig Dug. I simply never took the opportunity to play Namco’s arcade classic back then. By the late 1990s, Dig Dug was simply no longer offered by local arcade operators.

The Dig Dug arcade cabinet.
The North American arcade flyer of Dig Dug by Atari.

After installing the Namco Legendary Pack, I started playing the arcade version of Dig Dug on my Xbox Series X using the Xbox controller. Even though I rushed in viewing the Xbox control scheme, Dig Dug still turned out to be simple and very playable at the same time.

In the game, you play the character Dig Dug (Taizo Hori) who has to dig tunnels in an underground maze. You have to eliminate the enemies/monsters deep within which are the Pookas (red and spherical beings that wear large goggles) and the Fygars (fire-breathing dragons). To eliminate an enemy, you have to use an air pump to physically connect with it and then inflate it until it explodes. Another way of eliminating an enemy is by crushing them with falling rocks which requires a bit of strategy as you are always chased.

Even without new tunnels made, there are times when enemies are able to penetrate through the soil to emerge near you. If you are in a tunnel with an enemy present, you will often get chased. Be mindful that for every level you progress into, enemies move faster and their numbers gradually increase.

The first level of Dig Dug.
Inflating a Pooka.
The Fygars are dragons and they are dangerous as they have fire as breath weapons.
Inflating a Fygar above ground.
Here, I managed to have a huge rock fall down and hit the Fyger and Pooka that chased me earlier. Pulling off this move requires strategy.
As you inflate an enemy and there are still more enemies near you, you have to be mindful that a Pooka can penetrate through the soil and emerge in a tunnel near you.

Having played Dig Dug a number of times already with my Xbox copy of Atari 50, I can say that I am really enjoying the classic arcade game from Namco. Historically, Dig Dug as planned and designed by Masahisa Ikegami who was assisted by Shigeru Yokoyama (Galaga). The game’s programmers were Shouichi Fukatani and Toshio Sakai, while the art was done by Hiroshi Ono, and the music was composed by Yuriko Keino.

At the 11th round, the game has turned much more challenging as the monsters moved faster and they can be overwhelming.

You might be wondering why was Dig Dug (in arcade and console ports) and those other Namco classic games released in a DLC package for the Atari 50 collection recently? This is because Atari and Namco formed a business partnership in Japan when the American company established its presence there with Atari Japan. In fact, Namco started shifting into video gaming because of Atari. As for Dig Dug, it debuted in Japanese arcades in March 1982 and was brought to American arcades with Atari as the distributor (note: a licensing deal with Namco was signed).

As already recorded in history, Dig Dug became a huge critical and commercial success in both Japan and the United States. While the game emerged as the 2nd highest grossing arcade game in Japan for 1982, Atari sold more than 22,000 Dig Dug arcade cabinets and generated over $46 million in sales that same year. With big success achieved, it was not surprising to see Atari release ports of Dig Dug on the Atari 2600, Atari 5200 and Atari 8-bit computers.

A Dig Dug print ad for America by Atari.

If you are an Xbox gamer who is into retro gaming and you are interested in Atari 50, click https://www.xbox.com/en-US/games/store/atari-50-the-anniversary-celebration/9N3TFDSQ531T

Those who are already playing Atari 50 on Xbox consoles who have yet to try the Namco Legendary Pack, click https://www.xbox.com/en-PH/games/store/atari-50-the-namco-legendary-pack/9n46gncv28zh

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Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at  @HavenorFantasy as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco

Remember Trump With Xbox and PlayStation?

Long before the birth of the Make America Great Again (MAGA) movement and his incredible 2016 US Presidential Election victory, Donald Trump made his presence felt in video games.

I am talking about Trump’s participation in a short video that was presented during the Xbox conference of the 2004 Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3). The video was a parody of Trump’s popular show The Apprentice in which he appeared in a business meeting with the executives of Team Xbox (the real-life Robbie Bach, J Allard and Peter Moore) and Team PlayStation (with actors playing the PlayStation executives).

Back in 2004, as I was anticipating online media coverage of that year’s E3, I visited one particular Xbox website which streamed the said Trump-Xbox-PlayStation video and even offered a downloadable version for Windows media. I downloaded the video, watched it and was delighted ultimately. For your viewing pleasure, posted is a direct-feed video of from the This Week In Gaming YouTube channel.

Next, I posted below for you all another video that is slightly longer, was recorded off-screen at the Xbox conference, and has the live audience reactions that you should listen to. Watch the video below.

Is the 2004 video (titled “The Novice”) entertaining? For me it still is fun to watch again and it is one of the more memorable moves Xbox executed at the E3 (which today no longer exists). It is intriguing and entertaining to see Trump at the center of the video about the console war between Microsoft and Sony at the time.

As an entertainment piece of history, The Novice video is a reminder about how exciting console gaming was back in 2004 (note: intense competition between console makers was the standard of the time) when compared to what happened in recent times. Xbox gaming this year has been disappointing considering the following developments that happened: 50% price hike on the Xbox Game Pass Ultimate subscription service, Xbox Series consoles price hikes, thousands of game developers laid off, the sudden cancellation of unreleased Xbox games, and Team Xbox directed by Microsoft to go full multiplatform with their own games (examples: Gears of War: Reloaded and Forza Horizon 5 got released on PlayStation 5).

Over at the side of PlayStation, Sony itself was embarrassed with its over-budgeted and poorly made game Concord. Concord is easily one of the most expensive flops in the history of video games.

Indeed, a lot has changed since 2004. Trump is now on his 2nd term as President of the United States solving the nation’s many problems while tackling several matters happening overseas. Sony and Microsoft are still active in the video games industry in different ways and they are still having their respective consoles manufactured outside of America. Console gaming nowadays is getting too expensive.

Let me end this piece by asking you readers: Do you find Donald Trump’s participation in the 2004 video with Xbox and PlayStation entertaining to watch? Were you a constant viewer of The Apprentice? Do you own a PlayStation 5 or an Xbox Series X or Xbox Series S console?

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Thank you for reading. If you find this article engaging, please click the like button below, share this article to others and also please consider making a donation to support my publishing. If you are looking for a copywriter to create content for your special project or business, check out my services and my portfolio. Feel free to contact me with a private message. Also please feel free to visit my Facebook page Author Carlo Carrasco and follow me on Twitter at  @HavenorFantasy as well as on Tumblr at https://carlocarrasco.tumblr.com/ and on Instagram athttps://www.instagram.com/authorcarlocarrasco