DrakeClawfang
The Wanderer of Time
Anyone know where this thing that The Planet is called "Gaia" comes from?
Mythology?
Plus. Gaea's cliffs, no?
You answered my question. I was just curious if the Japanese word for when they refer to "the planet" in English could possibly translate to anything else.I'm unsure what you mean by other interpretations, but the word the Japanese script uses is "hoshi," meaning "heavenly body." It's usually translated as "star" but can refer to other things.
I hate the name Gaia. It's overused in games/anime/the world.
I liked the world of FFVII better back when we all thought it was simply called, "Planet." XD
I hate the name Gaia. It's overused in games/anime/the world.
I liked the world of FFVII better back when we all thought it was simply called, "Planet." XD
Yeah I liked it more as simply "The Planet"... but I'm that way with a lot of things. I grew up playing the Square RPGs in the 90s, and now all these retranslations/remakes are causing new names/renames to things. Most of the time I just think of it in its original form that I grew up with, only because I'm used to it, and that's what I remember.
And Gaia or not, I still think it's fun to think of FFVII as almost an alternate reality. It's only slightly futuristic, but yet other aspects put it in the past compared to present-day Earth.
I couldn't agree more. It is over used quite a bit in the FF worlds. Planet seems to fit the bill quite nicely. Just for curiosities sake, FF10 had Spira what was it called before Tidus was sent 1000 years into the future. I don't recall it ever being mentioned.
And the weirdest thing was in the Supernova attack, "the planet" was also unnamed, even though it was kind of implied it was Earth due to the other planets in their solar system being the same as ours.lol Ryu, beat me to the punch. XD
Either way I always found the idea of the world in FFVII having no name to be hilarious. It was just, "The Planet." You never see this in a story. Worlds always have names. So the idea that this world had none other than a quite true statement of what it is was really, really hilarious.
But alas, that humor is lost forever.