Cat Rage Room
Great Old One
- AKA
- Mog
I guess it's a misnomer to say I dislike Sephiroth, but in 1997 he was cool for a while then, and yeah he still has a certain 'cool' factor now, but in general? Eh. It's not for the more popular reasons either; not 'he's too generic' or 'too derivative' or whatever, so why?
Because nothing changes about the guy. He has stayed the same pretty much forever, not only in his personal fictional timeline, but real life as well; an insanely powerful warrior/swordsman that nobody can beat but Cloud. He has always been that. From Crisis Core to Advent Children. From 1997 to 2012.
Think about the evolution that other FF villains go through; the player watched as Kefka went from someone who ran away from being pummeled by Sabin to a living God who ruled over a force of nature. Vayne from FFXII plotted and worked from becoming simply a powerful political figure to being an intermediate of the gods and the harbinger of a new age. It's not even stuff that the player always sees either; it's implied that Ultimecia started her life as a persecuted, afraid individual who got pushed to the brink, FFIV (at least the remakes) tell us that Golbez was once an excited, but impressionable little boy.
But Sephiroth never really got that kind of growth or contrast either. The only mention of his past was "as a kid he knew he was different". Narrative wise he was always the cocky warrior with no equal and little worries. Within the narrative of FFVII he simply goes from being already really powerful to...even more powerful. His upgrade to near god in FFVII doesn't really have as much 'oomph' because for what it's worth he was already utterly unbeatable by everyone as it is. Kefka and Kuja's transformation into their uber selves had more impact because there was a sense of "Shit, we should have gotten him while we had the chance what have we done"
I do give Crisis Core some credit for trying to give Sephiroth some depth by showing him while he was still human; I can appreciate that, but it never quite erases, at least for me, the impression that SE was so comfortable with their creation they were too lazy to give him any malleability.
Because nothing changes about the guy. He has stayed the same pretty much forever, not only in his personal fictional timeline, but real life as well; an insanely powerful warrior/swordsman that nobody can beat but Cloud. He has always been that. From Crisis Core to Advent Children. From 1997 to 2012.
Think about the evolution that other FF villains go through; the player watched as Kefka went from someone who ran away from being pummeled by Sabin to a living God who ruled over a force of nature. Vayne from FFXII plotted and worked from becoming simply a powerful political figure to being an intermediate of the gods and the harbinger of a new age. It's not even stuff that the player always sees either; it's implied that Ultimecia started her life as a persecuted, afraid individual who got pushed to the brink, FFIV (at least the remakes) tell us that Golbez was once an excited, but impressionable little boy.
But Sephiroth never really got that kind of growth or contrast either. The only mention of his past was "as a kid he knew he was different". Narrative wise he was always the cocky warrior with no equal and little worries. Within the narrative of FFVII he simply goes from being already really powerful to...even more powerful. His upgrade to near god in FFVII doesn't really have as much 'oomph' because for what it's worth he was already utterly unbeatable by everyone as it is. Kefka and Kuja's transformation into their uber selves had more impact because there was a sense of "Shit, we should have gotten him while we had the chance what have we done"
I do give Crisis Core some credit for trying to give Sephiroth some depth by showing him while he was still human; I can appreciate that, but it never quite erases, at least for me, the impression that SE was so comfortable with their creation they were too lazy to give him any malleability.