Compare Final Fantasy XV (Windows Edition) Steam key prices across 50+ stores and find the best deal. Developed by Square Enix. Published by Square Enix. Released on 3/6/2018. Available on PC. Genres: RPG.

Noctis and his three best friends drive a fantasy muscle car across a gorgeous open world, fight gods, and somehow make you cry about camping. It's a lot.

Final Fantasy XV is an open-world action RPG that spent about a decade in development hell before landing as something genuinely strange and occasionally brilliant. You play as Noctis, crown prince of Lucis, on what starts as a road trip to his own wedding and becomes something much darker. The core loop is simple: drive or walk across Eos, take hunts, raid dungeons, level up, and watch Noctis and his three companions - Gladiolus, Ignis, and Prompto - bicker and bond around a campfire. That brotherhood is the game's strongest asset. The writing around those four is warm, specific, and earns its emotional payoff in a way that bigger-budget RPGs often fumble. The Windows Edition ships with all released DLC included, so the episodic character chapters that flesh out each companion are right there from the start. Play them. They reframe events from the main story in ways that matter. Combat is real-time, built around weapon switching, the Armiger (a phantom weapon system that lets Noctis warp-strike with a rotating arsenal), Link Strikes with companions, and a warp-point mechanic that rewards aggressive positioning. It feels good in motion even when the camera fights you, which it will. Magic is crafted from elemental deposits scattered around the world and behaves more like grenades than spells - satisfying to land, annoying to stock up on. Build variety exists but is shallow compared to what the genre usually offers; most players end up gravitating toward a handful of weapon types by the midgame. The Ascension grid handles passive progression and is wide but not especially deep. You will hit a wall around level 30 if you skip side content, which is the game quietly asking you to do some of those hunts you ignored. The open world of Lucis is gorgeous and largely empty in the ways open worlds often are. The hunts are repetitive, many sidequests amount to fetch work with thin context, and the pacing in the second half collapses badly as the game pivots from wide-open roads to linear corridor chapters. Chapter 13, in particular, has a reputation, and that reputation is earned. The story also has a structural problem where major lore happens in ancillary media - a movie, an anime series - that you may never see. Some context is just missing if you walk in cold. The Windows Edition does include the Royal Pack additions, which add a boat, new areas, and a first-person mode that is mostly a curiosity. Who is this for? If you want a densely written, choice-heavy RPG where your decisions reshape the world, this is not your game. FFXV trades political depth for emotional sincerity. It is a road trip story about male friendship and loss, wrapped in monster hunts and noodle shops. That sincerity lands harder than it has any right to, provided you give it enough time to develop. The first ten hours are slow and deliberately mundane - intentionally so. If you bounce off the pacing early, the back half will not save you. But if the campfire banter clicks, and Ignis starts developing new recipes, and you find yourself weirdly invested in a fishing minigame at 1am, then FFXV has done exactly what it set out to do. Monika, Scout Team

Final Fantasy XV (Windows Edition) Steam key
RPG

Final Fantasy XV (Windows Edition) Steam key

Mar 6, 2018Square Enix
GamerScout Says

Noctis and his three best friends drive a fantasy muscle car across a gorgeous open world, fight gods, and somehow make you cry about camping. It's a lot.

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About Final Fantasy XV (Windows Edition) Steam key

Final Fantasy XV is an open-world action RPG that spent about a decade in development hell before landing as something genuinely strange and occasionally brilliant. You play as Noctis, crown prince of Lucis, on what starts as a road trip to his own wedding and becomes something much darker. The core loop is simple: drive or walk across Eos, take hunts, raid dungeons, level up, and watch Noctis and his three companions - Gladiolus, Ignis, and Prompto - bicker and bond around a campfire. That brotherhood is the game's strongest asset. The writing around those four is warm, specific, and earns its emotional payoff in a way that bigger-budget RPGs often fumble. The Windows Edition ships with all released DLC included, so the episodic character chapters that flesh out each companion are right there from the start. Play them. They reframe events from the main story in ways that matter. Combat is real-time, built around weapon switching, the Armiger (a phantom weapon system that lets Noctis warp-strike with a rotating arsenal), Link Strikes with companions, and a warp-point mechanic that rewards aggressive positioning. It feels good in motion even when the camera fights you, which it will. Magic is crafted from elemental deposits scattered around the world and behaves more like grenades than spells - satisfying to land, annoying to stock up on. Build variety exists but is shallow compared to what the genre usually offers; most players end up gravitating toward a handful of weapon types by the midgame. The Ascension grid handles passive progression and is wide but not especially deep. You will hit a wall around level 30 if you skip side content, which is the game quietly asking you to do some of those hunts you ignored. The open world of Lucis is gorgeous and largely empty in the ways open worlds often are. The hunts are repetitive, many sidequests amount to fetch work with thin context, and the pacing in the second half collapses badly as the game pivots from wide-open roads to linear corridor chapters. Chapter 13, in particular, has a reputation, and that reputation is earned. The story also has a structural problem where major lore happens in ancillary media - a movie, an anime series - that you may never see. Some context is just missing if you walk in cold. The Windows Edition does include the Royal Pack additions, which add a boat, new areas, and a first-person mode that is mostly a curiosity. Who is this for? If you want a densely written, choice-heavy RPG where your decisions reshape the world, this is not your game. FFXV trades political depth for emotional sincerity. It is a road trip story about male friendship and loss, wrapped in monster hunts and noodle shops. That sincerity lands harder than it has any right to, provided you give it enough time to develop. The first ten hours are slow and deliberately mundane - intentionally so. If you bounce off the pacing early, the back half will not save you. But if the campfire banter clicks, and Ignis starts developing new recipes, and you find yourself weirdly invested in a fishing minigame at 1am, then FFXV has done exactly what it set out to do. Monika, Scout Team

Tags

steamOpen-World RPGReal-Time CombatParty-BasedStory-RichCompanion SystemWarp-Strike MechanicsCrafting MagicSingle Player CampaignDLC Included

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Reviews & Ratings

Steam
83%(57,082)

Game Info

Developer
Square Enix
Publisher
Square Enix
Release Date
Mar 6, 2018

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