@Ryushikaze @Gym Leader Devil
Out of boredom I was reading/skimming through old threads to do with the LTD and...oh my lord...
How did any of you ever put up with Blankbeat and others like them? Some of the stuff they're constructing arguments off of makes me want to
scream at my monitor for not being able to reply to them! Surely not all of them were
this bad, right? Kudos to ye, FairheartStrife, Isabella, Vendel, Quexinos, hitoshura, Tres etc. because my god I would have lost it.
In this post, I'm talking about this quote, and how it supposedly implies Cloud and Tifa might not have worked out and could possibly have broken up post AC, because it, in particular, makes no sense to me:
“‘Episode Tifa’ … first off, there’s the premise that things won’t go well between Tifa and Cloud, and that even without Geostigma or Sephiroth this might be the same. I don’t really intend to go on about my views on love or marriage or family (laughs). After ACC, I guess Denzel and Marlene could help them work it out. Maybe things would have gone well with Aerith, but I think there is a great burden from Aerith.”
Why would Nojima build up Cloud and Tifa so much, going as far as to claim that "in his heart", he knew they would be "at home" together where they "belonged", write a short section of a book that elaborates on Cloud and Tifa's relationship and write it through his views of "love, marriage, and family", having Tifa referred to as "taisetsu na josei" to Cloud, have Cloud, his personality, and character arc revolve around Tifa, only to go "Oh, Cloud and Tifa? yeah, those two didn't work out off screen and broke up lolz." Seriously, what purpose would that have in the story or for the characters involved? That even after everything they've been through, they just didn't work out because they didn't have a perfect, flawless relationship? What message are we supposed to learn from there?
I also feel like people massively exaggerate issues between Cloud and Tifa. From Case of Tifa, there literally isn't a single thing that indicates Cloud and Tifa wouldn't work out, in fact, it shows quite the opposite, that when Cloud isn't struggling with guilt and depression(Which is resolved, btw), that he was happy,
very happy, living "like a family" with Tifa and the kids. Having "silly conversations" with her, encouraging Tifa that he would be there for her to remind her of how strong she is, that they would certainly find their "normal life" together, how Cloud "slightly resembled a young father and his children."
Problems only started occuring when Cloud starts his business, which if I remember correctly, is only because it forced him to "face his past", which again, relates back to his depression and is not reflective of any actual deal-breakers between Cloud and Tifa.
Seriously, what on God's green earth indicates Cloud and Tifa would ever break up offscreen? I can't tell if I just have tunnel vision and am forgetting stuff or something from being wound up, but what is an interpretation of this compilation where Cloud and Tifa are incompatible and weren't happy together to the point they separate that isn't completely detached from any and all reasoning and evidence provided by said compilation?
Only wishful thinking from Cleriths can spin this quote in such a way for it to even possibly allude to a failed relationship between Cloud and Tifa.
Really sorry for the rant, Like I said I'm wound up, mainly from not being able to give that person my two cents.
Honestly having so many Tifa quests locked behind others’ was bad. It pissed me off at times. Why do you do this to your heroine? Aerith’s quests had none locked behind others’. No quest should be locked (new areas aside I can understand that).
While it annoyed me too, I think the simplest explanation is that this is supposed to be Aerith's game, her time to shine since she (hopefully) won't have nearly as much screen time in part 3, so they want you to experience Aerith's sidequests.
The same way the affection system in the original was biased towards Aerith...because they wanted to get you attached to her before she inevitably kicked the bucket.