Final Fantasy XV - Royal Edition Pack (DLC)
The Royal Edition Pack bundles FFXV's biggest late-game additions into one hit: a new dungeon crawl through Insomnia, a driveable off-road Regalia, and a combat overhaul that finally lets the Armiger shine.
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About Final Fantasy XV - Royal Edition Pack (DLC)
Final Fantasy XV - Royal Edition Pack is a DLC bundle for the base game that stuffs several meaningful additions into a single purchase. The headliner is the expanded Insomnia City Ruins, which turns the original game's rushed ending chapter into a proper explorable zone. If you played FFXV at launch and felt cheated by how abruptly that final act collapsed into a corridor, this is the direct response to that criticism. It adds enemy encounters, hidden areas, and enough environmental storytelling to make the fall of Insomnia feel like something that actually happened to real people rather than a backdrop the game sprints past. On the mobility side, the Regalia Type-D is the off-road version of Noctis's iconic car, and it changes how you interact with the open world more than you might expect. Being able to drive across the wilderness instead of sticking to roads opens up shortcuts and lets you reach hunt locations and campsites without the constant back-and-forth that made the mid-game feel padded in the original release. Pair that with the Royal Cruiser, which functions as a new mobile base of operations on the water, and the traversal options available to you feel genuinely expanded rather than cosmetic. Armiger Unleashed is the mechanical addition that RPG players will care about most. The base game's Armiger system, where Noctis calls down the royal arms for a brief powered attack phase, was flashy but shallow. Unleashed reworks it into something closer to an actual combat stance, letting you chain attacks and extend the gauge by landing hits. It rewards aggression and makes the late-game combat loop feel less like waiting for a cooldown and more like actively building toward a payoff. It does not fix the broader issues with FFXV's action combat, which still lacks the depth of build variety you would find in something like the Nioh series, but it makes the fantasy of the Chosen King hitting things very hard considerably more satisfying. First-Person View is the wildcard feature here. It is genuinely interesting for touring the world and appreciating the art direction, but do not expect it to make combat feel better. It is more of a screenshot and sightseeing mode than a serious gameplay option. The bundle also adds trophies and achievements for completionists, which matters if you are the kind of person who will lose an afternoon chasing down every entry on a checklist. Who is this for? Players who bounced off FFXV because the ending felt incomplete and are curious whether the expanded content fixes that problem, at least partially. Also for people who finished the game and want a mechanical reason to revisit late-game content. It is not a full narrative redemption arc for FFXV's famously fractured story structure, and the character episode DLCs sold separately do more heavy lifting on that front. But as a pure content and systems upgrade, the Royal Edition Pack addresses several of the most commonly cited weak spots in a targeted way. If the base game's ambition outpaced its execution for you, this is a reasonable patch. Monika, Scout Team
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Game Info
- Developer
- Square Enix
- Publisher
- Square Enix
- Release Date
- Mar 6, 2018



