I firmly believe Squaresoft purposely included a love triangle in Final Fantasy VII for a reason. Square wanted a game revolved around a protagonist that was torn between a love for two women. Throughout Final Fantasy VII, Square gave us examples that showed Cloud loved both Aerith and Tifa -- hence a love triangle. It has always been up to each gamer to decide who Cloud loves more, which makes this debate a matter of opinion.
In order of sentences, Yes, No, No, and very no.
Yes, they put it in for a reason. No, it was not to have someone torn between two women. It was so Cloud would waver between them, yes, but the dating mechanics and the four people it can influence are all part of an INCREDIBLY clever red herring that sets you up for the whammies that start dropping left and right near the end of disc 1. FF7 is not meant to be fully understood at first, and they use the whole 'two women interested in Cloud' angle to keep you distracted, from piecing stuff together too early.
And no, there's not really evidence that Cloud romantically loved Aerith, nor does a love triangle require him to do so.
FFIV has a love triangle, and two of its points are already in a relationship, with the third simply pining for the women in the relationship.
But for the sake of the compilation, there has to be one answer. But I honestly don't think Square has given us an answer and in many ways, I feel as though the answer is that Cloud loves both Aerith and Tifa in different ways and for different reasons. There is firm evidence to support both sides, but depending on your personal preference, the evidence each side presents may or may not seem convincing.
True enough, but it helps if the evidence one presents actually fits the established narrative. Quite a lot of C/A 'evidence' outright contradicts the basic narrative, and simply casts several characters in an unusually negative light, such as Tifa being 'selfish' and the memory line being seen as an Ultimatum to Cloud about Aerith, when such a thing makes no goddamn sense at all.
While I played the game growing up as a teenager, I always felt Cloud loved Aerith in a romantic way, and that his feelings for Tifa were of a strong love between two friends. I've cited numerous scenes, dialogue and reasons that suggests this to me.
Have you? I don't recall seeing those cited here. Did I miss a post?
But in the last few weeks, after deciding to see what others thought online, I now realize there are numerous people who feel the exact opposite. Funny how people can play the same game and come away with two totally different perspectives. But I think that's the way Square always intended for it to play out between those who played the game.
I disagree. There was a definite story to tell, and the dating game was a red herring in it. If Cloud's romance is vague, it's not due to deliberate coyness, but apathy. Unlike 8, the romance is entirely ancillary to 7.
I don't believe that one single page in the Ultimania proves Square officially believes Cloti is canon. It just doesn't add up to me. If they truly wanted to come out with an official position, I don't think they would have chosen to do it so ambiguously on one single page (a page, I might add, that's in Japanese and could easily be missed by millions of Final Fantasy VII fans). If they were to make such a bold declaration, I believe they would have done it differently and probably through a different platform. The importance of this page seems to be over inflated; but I can understand why considering how long this debate has been raging.
Firstly, why do you think there needs to be a single 'press release' announcement on this subject? There's not one for FFIII, FFIV, FFVI, FFVIII, FFIX, or FFX, who are all on that page as well.
Secondly, S-E is Japanese, and, surprise surprise, are largely nationalistic in their scope, just as a lot of English speaking companies are. That it's in Japanese lessens its importance not one iota. This particular argument feels really cheap, since it IS just special pleading. Many a Clerith has tried to dismiss this page in this way while using other Japan only sources as pro C/A.
Thirdly, the declaration is hardly bold. It's saying 'Yes, these two characters confirmed their love for each other on this night, just as a significant portion of the fandom had already realized.' By your argument, though, we can't say R!=U because the information that lets us determine that was only revealed in a Japanese only Ultimania.
Fourthly, we have a lot more than just this one page. Scale back a moment, please, and realize that 'This one thing doesn't prove' is not going to help you when we have a bigass pile, of which this is just the most recent and one of the most straightforward.
We have EIGHT instances of this phrase or variations of it relating to this scene, including on p232 which you would claim contradicts this page. S-E is very consistent that Cloud and Tifa realized and confirmed their mutual feelings at the end of FFVII.
I truly believe if you asked Square about the page personally, they would be shocked to find out so much hoopla has been made over it. I don't think they ever intended for this page to be used as official evidence to declare that Cloti is canon. But let's examine the page in question for the sake of argument.
To the first sentence, I'd agree. But I'd say that they'd be shocked because people still weren't seeing the obvious.
All of the scenes in the Ultimania portraying the other canon couples are not optional scenes. So although the page in question is showing romantic couples of the Final Fantasy series, the Ultimania made sure to point out that the pairing of Cloud and Tifa is an optional romance depending on which Highwind scene occurs.
They did no such thing, and at this point, I KNOW you are reciting talking points, Child.
Why would Square point out this distinction if it wasn't a valid distinction? I'll tell you why: because it is a valid distinction. It's a valid distinction because Final Fantasy VII is the story revolving around a love triangle. Square wanted to make sure readers understood that although the other Final Fantasy couples are not optional, Tifa and Cloud are, in fact, an optional romantic couple.
Now just because Tifa and Cloud are an optional romantic couple does not mean they shouldn't be included on a page talking about romantic couples…but it does warrant a distinction, a distinction Sqaure provided.
There was absolutely no distinction provided. It was 'Cloud and Tifa do this thing. On six other occasions, it was 'Cloud and Tifa do this thing.' Period, end of. That they note in a few place that this thing is only done under certain conditions does not change them repeatedly stating 'Cloud and Tifa do this.'
But here's my real problem with using this as evidence that Cloti is canon. Most everyone would agree that Cloud loves Tifa. This page is simply stating what we already knew based on the high affection scene.
But how does Cloud's love for Tifa take away from his love for Aerith?
Hasn't the story of FFVII always been about a man who loves two women?
It doesn't, and no, it has never been that. The story of FF7 is about a young boy who leaves town to be a hero, in part to impress the girl he's had a crush on since he was 8 or even earlier, doesn't manage to get into a supersoldier program, feels he's a failure, hides his identity when he goes home, loses his hometown to the merciless slaughter of one he has once considered his hero, defeats his hero, is expirimented on, and then loses and reconstructs his mind. It's the story of him finding out who he actually is.
The bits with Aerith hitting on him are, again, a red herring, but also a mirror of his self identity arc.
How does the Highwind scene prove Cloud loves Tifa more than Aerith?
Did Cloud's love for Aerith simply disappear after this scene takes place?
Here is another problem. You are assuming Cloud loves Aerith romantically, without evidence. Even IF Cloud loves Aerith, it's not up to us to prove Cloud loves Tifa more than Aerith, it's up to you to prove how much he loved Aerith, if at all.
These questions have always been at the very crux of this debate,
Having been in it for a decade, fuck no they haven't. The question was simply 'Which of the two or possibly four romantic interests and Barret did Cloud 'choose?' Case of Tifa makes that clear.
and have yet to officially be answered by Square. All Square officially said was that Cloud loves Tifa in the optional high affection Highwind scene.
Actually, they didn't say 'in the optional high affection highwind scene.' They just said he does it. But note, also, that ALL S-E has ever said is that Cloud loves Tifa. While the absence of evidence is not automatically the evidence of absence, the absence here is still telling.
So in my mind, all Square did was confirm what we already knew: that Cloud loves Tifa. Square did not say, however, that Cloud doesn't have a separate love for Aerith -- a love that is clearly established throughout the game and is at the very core of the love triangle.
Then you had best get to rationally and empirically demonstrating that love, because you are literally asking us to prove a negative if you want us to prove Cloud didn't romantically love Aerith, and that is a no go.
Unless you want to give me that ten million dollars you owe me.
In real life, someone can love two people simultaneously, which is the very point I think Square was trying to make through establishing a love triangle in Final Fantasy VII.
Not the way they did it, no. Well, not in Cloud's oblivious case anyways. Maybe Aerith's, with her part in the triangle subplot, but Cloud was a clueless water buffallo though basically the whole first disc's romance shennanigans.
You'd be better off looking at VI for 'two loves.'
Given the very nature of Cloud, and his quest to find out who he truly is and discover his true feelings, it makes perfect sense that Square would present him with two equally valid love interests.
They gave him four. One of them is a man. Also, you bring up Cloud finding out who he is and his true feelings. There's a character who features QUITE heavily in both of those things, and it's Tifa, not Aerith. Aerith does not so much as blip onto radar during the sequence where we meet the true Cloud and learn his motivations.
Also, if you take the fact that all the canon couples were included on this one page of the Ultimania, and use that as proof Cloti is canon because the page is discussing "romantic love," (omitting the picture of Aerith and Cloud because the caption doesn't specifically mention Aerith's name, even though it's obvious what Square was trying to do by including this picture on the page) -- my response would be this is hardly different than claiming the official artwork as a valid argument. All the official artwork produced for FFVIII, FFIX and FFX show the canon couples together romantically.
You are wrong. The official Amano art for FF8, 9, and 10 does show the couples who happen to be canon, but he also draws Squall and Selphie together, Yuna and Brother, Yuna and Seymour, etc. The man does not draw 'the canon couples. In fact, it was not until 17 years after FFIV that he drew Cecil and Rosa in an artwork together. He still has not, AFAIK, drawn Locke and Celes, though he has drawn Sabin/ Mash and Celes. Amano art is a complete nonstarter.
Further, the subject of the page is romantic declarations of love. It's not that Cloud and Tifa are pictured that's the evidence. It's THE TEXT that says THEY MUTUALLY CONFIRMED THEIR FEELINGS that's the evidence. All the date picture says is that one of four people will show up depending on what Cloud does. It says nothing about Cloud liking the person who shows up.
The artwork for FFVII shows Aerith and Cloud together. Following the logic that all the canon couples were drawn together for the official artwork, Aerith and Cloud would clearly be the canon couple.
See above. Amano art is not an indication of canon couples, because he draws non canon couples together and oftentimes never draws canon couples. He would also tell you, straight out, his art DOES NOT DICTATE STORY, especially since he stopped being lead designer, but even before that.
This leads me to this conclusion: Square has always given mixed messages about who the canon couple is for Final Fantasy VII on purpose because the story of Final Fantasy VII revolves around a love triangle. It is a story about a man who loves two women for different reasons, and the level of love, and the kind of love he has for each woman is purely a matter of opinion and the decisions each player makes during the game. The page in the Ultimania is simply more evidence that Square has always given us mixed messages, especially when they provided a distinction between Cloud, Tifa and the rest of the Final Fantasy couples included on that page.
Your conclusion, based upon false premises and a poor understanding of the facts, is incorrect. Square isn't giving us mixed signals, not are they 'making a distinction' for Cloud on the FTOIL page.
In many ways, I feel as though the low affection Highwind scene is more accurate judging by the relationship shown between Cloud and Tifa in Advent Children. I just can't help but feel that the relationship shown in Advent Children is anything but romantic.
Then you have never been in a long term mature relationship. Shit is not always roses and rainbow farts.
Barret is also apart of Cloud and Tifa's family,
Almost made it the whole post before this PRATT came out. No, he's not. He does not consider himself part of it, nor do Cloud and Tifa, nor does Square.
Also, Apart and A Part ARE NOT THE SAME.
and nowhere does it show any intimate scenes between Tifa and Cloud. If anything, it appears as if Tifa and Cloud have a complicated and sometimes hostile friendship with one another.
Complicated, yes, Cloud's got a goddamn fatal wasting disease and has exiled himself in a form of penance because he feels guilty about how happy his family makes him and how he was useless to help the child they adopted when it really mattered. Hostile, fuck no. Tifa told Cloud exactly what he needed to hear when he needed to hear it.
Also in Advent Children, Cloud's feelings toward Aerith are shown to be of guilt and remorse. But I also think they are feelings of love, and a desire for this love to continue in the Promise Land.
You will now provide concrete evidence for this claim immediately.
In numerous material that Square has released since Final Fantasy VII, it shows Cloud searching for the Promise Land due to his guilt and desire for forgiveness.
No, no it does not. Please, PROVIDE EVIDENCE. Cite these 'numerous material.' I insist. I suggest you do so before I demand.
But Cloud's guilt and remorse seem directly linked, in my opinion, to his never-ending infatuation, love and quest to be with Aerith in the Promise Land.
Opinions are like assholes, kid. Everyone has them, and they're typically shitty.
'In My opinion' means nothing. Why, because you had not established, in the slightest, there is ANY infatuation, love, OR quest, much less a never-ending one.
Final Fantasy VII has always been a story that revolves around a love triangle
No. No. No. No. No. No. No.
It has not been that AT ALL. That is what you have conceived of it as, but that is not what it is.
and Cloud's struggle to comes to terms with it. Establishing Cloud's obvious love for Tifa (in the high affection scene) does not take away from his love for Aerith, nor does it prove he loves Tifa more than Aerith. All it proves is something we basically already knew.
You've said this already. But you know what you haven't done? Established a love for Aerith.
Heck, this entire time, you've been doing exactly what I complain about. You ASSUME the love for Aerith as a given and proceed from there. You are literally assuming your desired conclusion. DON'T DO THAT.
Furthermore, Square made sure to provide a distinction in the Ultimania that points out that the romantic couple of Tifa and Cloud is different from all the other romantic couples shown on the same page. How is the couple of Cloud and Tifa different from the other couples?
Since you phrased that like a question, no, they didn't.
Their romance is based on an optional scene. Why did Square make sure to include this important distinction? Because Final Fantasy VII revolves around a love triangle.
No, it's because they take notice of variable scenes, even when there's a canon outcome. They take notice of Yuffie and Vincent joining or not, even though them joining is what officially happened. They also don't 'include this distinction,' even remotely, 7/8 of the time they mention Cloud and Tifa confirm feelings at the end of FFVII. And the 8th only gets mention off in a sidebar that actually just says 'If the degree of affection is high, emotions will be strong, otherwise not so much' I paraphrase, of course.
Omitting Tifa and Cloud from a page discussing Final Fantasy romance because the couple is based on an optional scene doesn't make sense, but does warrant a distinction. A distinction Square was happy to give us.
A distinction that doesn't mean what you want it to mean, which is not on the page, which doesn't change that Cloud and Tifa's optional scene is still the scene S-E deems as important, nor does it change that we're told time and time again with NO distinction whatsoever, that Cloud and Tifa confirmed their feelings that night.
And that's not even getting into the 'their family' 'their future' 'they belong together' quotes.
This page in the Ultimania is further evidence of the mixed messages Square has always given us because they understand that Cloud loves both women for different reasons and in different ways. It boils down to a matter of opinion and that's why this debate continues to rage on. For anyone to use this single page as the end-all-be-all in declaring which couple is canon doesn't make sense to me. And I don't think Square intended for it to be used that way, especially because of the distinction they provided.
It's not the be all end all. Even my original post didn't treat it as such. But nice strawman, kiddo.
Anyway...sorry I didn't respond to all of your critiques. But there is honestly no way I have the time to respond to each of your posts individually, and I know any response I give will be met with several responses almost immediately. This is why I highly doubt any Clerith supporter will ever have a fighting chance here. I'm in no way saying this is a Cloti forum, it just coincidentally happens to have several pro-Cloti members that are extremely vocal and knowledgeable. That's not anyone's fault, but a simple fact. For anyone who cares, I've recently joined a few Cloud x Aerith forums and will probably post on them from now on.
The reason Clerith does not have a fighting chance here is because we are armed with facts, logic, and an understanding of narrative flow and the narrative in question.
That you've decided to join the echo chamber after parroting their talking points doesn't surprise me.
Keep in mind, Kiddo, that this entire time, you haven't demonstrated any of what is, but only what you want things to be. And that's all you'll get at CxA. What you want to hear, even if it's completely illusory.
I know some of you might view this as an easy way to escape this debate, but I truly don't have a fighting chance considering how outnumbered I am and the lack of time I have to construct adequate responses. I recently graduated from college and I'm in the process of getting my life in order. Debating on online forums should be the last thing on my list of things to do.
Then why trade a forum only tangentially related with this matter for one almost entirely devoted to it?
As the saying goes 'Does not compute.'
I bid you all farewell and I hope I've given you more insight into why some still feel Clerith is the true couple of Final Fantasy VII. I might return some day, and I'll probably come back to see if any Clerith supporters have gotten up the courage to debate you guys.
You've given us insight into the mindset, but not any evidence to demonstrate that any of that mindset has validity.
Have fun and don't rip apart my post too much, OK?
It is only by ripping apart what you say that you can be shown how lacking in substance it truly is. Harsh words, but true.
You argue for Clerith entirely because you WANT Clerith to be true, not because there's substantive evidence for it, or against C/T.