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I also have FFVII game guide and it indeed missed some stuff, like you can steal this from that monster, and it's not mention in the guide, stuff like this, but I found that a lot of things are missing in FFX guide. I am a bit dissapointed. If I read correctly, it doesnt mention the fact that if you return to the chamber of fayth of every temple after finishing Zanarkand, you're gonna get great gifts and not-so-not-important cutscenes. There is absolutly no strategies mentionned for the mini games like the Chocobo racing, the Lightning Dodgings, the Butterflies chasing, etc. It only mentions what you will get as a gift. There is a list of every armor and weapons for each character...but we can only see their names! (lol) Nothing about what ability they have or where to get them!!! That, I found it pretty dissapointing. Like, right now, I want to find a freaking ''No Encouter'' armor or weapon, well I need to go to the Internet to know how to find one! At least, it says that i can customize the ability No Encounter with 30 purifying Salts... But i cant find from which monsters I can get purifying salts! Oh and the Trainer, every time you bring monsters to him, he gives you a gift right? Well, in the guide, it is not mention which gift youll get for what monsters... Maybe it is random and i dont know though. I bought this guide so I could stop going to the Internet every now and then. Ah, also, In the walthrough, there are maps of all the places, with the exact place shown on it for where to find the chests and Al Bhed Primer and all that, but for example, after your beat the Sperimorph and get the Jecht sphere, or after you beat Zanarkand, stuff appear on the road that weren't there at the first time. These items are not shown on the maps, you gotta find them. Ah well, it's not that bad. It's only not a well constructed game guide for lazy asses.Vollständige Rezension lesen
This strategy guide is very useful. I got it in the other day and I love it. The only problem is, I wish it was a little more organized. I can find some mistakes in the print that I wish were fixed. I also wish it would list the weapons and armor with their stats and possibly where you could find them. Other than that the guide is great. I've found things and secrets that I never knew about when I first played this game a long time ago. I wouldn't want any other guide to go by.
The guide comes very in handy and has all the items and information you will need on your journey. Each installment of the Final Fantasy series has featured strong storytelling, characterization, and strategic combat, fun minigames, and hours upon hours of captivating gameplay. The 10th title in the series is no exception. This is the first time a Final Fantasy game has appeared on the PlayStation2, and it takes full advantage of the increased technical capabilities. The story this time concerns Tidus, a blond-haired star of a sport called Blitzball. While he is playing in a match, Tidus's city is attacked by an evil force called Sin, and everything is destroyed save Tidus and his guardian Auran. The adventure begins as the pair are somehow transported to another world. From here on, it's standard Final Fantasy gameplay: fight battles, manage experience points, learn new powers, and recruit a motley crew of nonplayer characters to join your quest. The graphics, however, take things to a new level. They are amazing not only for their realism, but also for their imaginative art design. The world these heroes inhabit is breathtakingly beautiful, flowing, and full of inventive surprises. You haven't lived until you've surfed cables high in the air, or ridden a graceful airship through the clouds. The stunning effects are on display when you use magic in combat, summon gigantic monsters, and use fire columns to devastate your foes. One new element is voice acting. The innovation yields predictably mixed results: it's wonderful to hear spoken dialogue rather than read subtitles, but as with most games translated from Japanese, the acting is mediocre and sometimes unintentionally hilarious.Vollständige Rezension lesen
I've always wanted to play a Final Fantasy game but never knew where to start. One day, out of the blue, I decided finally to start playing Final Fantasy X (you have to start somewhere I guess). Since it was my first Final Fantasy to play and I was new to the whole RPG genre (I was a FPS and RTS guy) I thought I'd seek out a strategy guide. I found this one at my local book store. It has been an incredibly helpful guide. It has all the info you could think of - everything from character overdrives, sphere guide poster, boss strategies, a beastiary, maps, secrets and side quests - just everything. I highly reccommend it; in fact now I have the Brady Games Final Fantasy 8,9, and X-2 strategy guides, all written by Dan Birlew.
This guide is okay, not great. The guides for the other Final Fantasy games are much better in my opinion. It is good though, shows the side-quests, gives a complete walkthrough without exposing the storyline, i.e. no spoilers. I has a good stragety for the game. My only real problem with is is how the area maps are organized, it is difficult to follows the maps, one section of map is connected to many others through lines that are weaving around each other and sometimes you get mixed up and think you're going somewhere you are not. The rest is fine.