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"Final Fantasy 6 Review"

5 Comments -

1 – 5 of 5
Blogger Unknown said...

Thanks for featuring me!

January 7, 2018 at 2:22 PM

Blogger David said...

There was a lot about FF6 that was well done, including the music and the fact that each character had a theme song. Much of the story was well-done.

However, one of the appearances of Kefka in the final battle mimics that of the Pieta, and I would think this would be cause for great concern. Is Christianity being represented as part of the world's evil here? I have my doubts, but it is possible. I've seen other commentators that said that this is simply Kefka's twisted view of himself. However, something really bothers me about attaching a distinctively Catholic figure. This, and only this, makes me question if I should really play this game.

August 12, 2020 at 7:42 PM

Blogger Miles Mariae said...

I think you may be right in seeing it as kefkas diabolical attack on the blessed Virgin rather than the idea that she is on his side or part of his team.... if you haven't played ff4 I'd play that first though as the review says ff6 has some good points

August 13, 2020 at 2:26 AM

Blogger David said...

I've actually played I, IV, VI, VII, IX, and X but have only completed I and IV. I don't want to touch X again after having learned more about the plot! I played VI in college until Kefka's castle and then just quit. I have thought about taking it back up to see if I can eventually play through, but I don't want to do anything offensive to God.

So, when I read about the phase in the final battle (that I have never played in the game), I was greatly concerned. Having to attack a figure made to look like Mary (some sources say the woman's name is Maria in the Japanese version) is rather disturbing. Would it be sinful to play a game with an element like this, even if the image is used as a disguise or mockery by the bad guy? If so, I'd think this would negate any positive aspect of the game. Then again, I wonder if we have any accounts of any saints to whom Satan tried to appear under that disguise, and if they knew to attack or at least reject. I'd be interested in hearing your take on this.

My other concern is that, while it probably doesn't assume that the Blessed Mother is on Kefka's team, is it trying to say that he has assumed deity and has absorbed all other "gods," who are then destroyed along with Kefka in the end. I've heard that, in the end, magic ends with the destruction of Kefka, and people learn to live without it. Could the game be implicitly saying that people learn to live lives without God and find meaning apart from him? Of course, we know that in real life that, if someone were to somehow destroy God (which, of course, is impossible), we'd have worse than "lights out." There wouldn't even be any lights to extinguish!

However, it's my understanding that the people mourn the loss of magic even as life goes on in the end. It can kind of make a parallel to how people live today. People live their lives as though God did not exist. They claim to find their "fulfillment," but honestly, just look at personal stories from some corporate intranet, and from a Catholic perspective I can often just feel the superficiality. There may be some nice things people are doing, but, to say the least, it pales in comparison with the lives of the saints.

August 13, 2020 at 7:16 PM

Blogger Miles Mariae said...

I hadnt appreciated that with Kefka would come the end of magic, I suppose that makes sense.

I know Satan appeared as Our Lord to St Theresa of Avila but he did not have the wounds of Christ and so St Theresa knew it was the evil one,

ST. Paul adds in Galatians that satan can appear as an Angel of Light, so I think he can understand satan taking the form of holy individuals to tempt them.

You may be right that the game is saying Kefka is absorbing the 'gods'

You are also most certainly right that without Christ and the Life of Grace through the sacraments all happiness is either transient or superficial.

August 14, 2020 at 1:24 AM

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