![this is your curtain call song this is your curtain call song](https://i1.sndcdn.com/artworks-000148722445-cfwhf1-t500x500.jpg)
Even the medium quests are entirely too long, but long quests are just plain tedious, and it doesn’t help that you’ll often be forced to play the same track more than once or twice during a single quest. There are short, medium, and long quests. These are always background music tracks or battle tracks-which is good, because I really hate event (cinematic) tracks.
#This is your curtain call song series#
The main campaign, however, is “Quest Medley,” which takes you through a random assortment of songs along a series of paths (you choose which ones to take). In Curtain Call, you can actually access the available track list at any time and play through any available song on the fly. In the first game, the main solo “campaign” consisted of playing through the soundtracks in chronological order, which didn’t take very long considering the scope of the soundtrack, and playing through challenging “Dark Notes” to slowly unlock more characters. It now includes more than 200 songs-this includes all of the songs from the first game including its DLC, new songs from those same games, and tracks from spin-off games like Type-O, the XIII sequels, Crystal Chronicles, Dissidia, Final Fantasy Adventure, and even Advent-freakin’-Children! No love for Spirits Within, though. But that’s really all that’s stayed the same.įirst and foremost, the track list has ballooned considerably. To be clear, the core gameplay remains the same: you tap, swipe, and hold the stylus on the touch screen as notes stream from left to right along with the beat of a Final Fantasy song. Well, it’s taken two years, but a solution has emerged: Curtain Call, the sequel that’s better in just about every aspect. But I wanted more, because the track list in the first game isn’t very expansive, but I wasn’t willing to pay for DLC. I didn’t really expect to love it as much as I did, pouring dozens of hours into the game.
![this is your curtain call song this is your curtain call song](https://i0.wp.com/mynintendonews.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/theatrhythm_curtain_call.jpg)
I also like rhythm games, so I decided early on to pick up the bizarre Theatrhythm: Final Fantasy in 2012. Despite having virtually no experience with Square-Enix’s esteemed Final Fantasy series aside from some cursory attempts at FFVII, FFVIII, and that GBA tactics game, I still knew that the franchise was touted for its soundtracks.