Why Final Fantasy IX Is the Best Game of 2017
...According to One Writer at Paste

It’s been said that this year, the nightmare year of 2017, has been the best year for games in quite a long time. In the midst of violent and bewildering policies and decisions handed down from the executive branch of the United States Federal Government, many of us delved deep into The New Colossus, Destiny 2, Super Mario Odyssey, and a whole host of other expansive and intriguing videogames that seemed to push the medium’s narratives and design assumptions forward in fresh, new ways. Snuck in there, beneath all of the titans and behemoth’s of the industry, was a little game called Final Fantasy IX, a remaster of the original PlayStation game from year 2000, with a whole host of playability features, for the PS4. And it is the best game of 2017.
The reasons for this are varied. I’m not sure that Final Fantasy IX was the best game the year that it came out. The PlayStation 2 was already out in the world and smoking up the streets with its Emotion Engine technology. It was plagued by incredibly long load times, and there were countable seconds between encountering an enemy, the battle screen loading up, and then the fight proper. Transitioning from area to area was an exercise in waiting. Paired with that, it was much more cartoony than Final Fantasy VII or Final Fantasy VIII, and definitely more lighthearted, and for whatever reason it receded into the depths of the minor entries in this long-running franchise.
Those things are, of course, “fixed” in the newest remaster of the game. Load times are reduced, there are quality of life improvements like a High Speed Mode and a Max Damage mode for cheating your way through the bumpier parts of the game, and in general the whole thing looks less like a muddy mess when you stretch it out to the dimensions of a modern television screen. This isn’t why it’s the best game of 2017. These are merely reasons why it’s a good, necessary port for the PS4 console.
It’s the best game of the year because the top-down design of the game does everything that games in 2017 wanted to. Final Fantasy IX is a game far, far ahead of its time when you consider the narrative plot threads, the way that narrative is communicated, and what the ultimate payoff for the world is. A princess runs away from her kingdom and is hunted by her evil mother who wants to sacrifice her in order to obtain weapons of mass destruction. An automaton considers his nature as a constructed being. The last knight of a ruined kingdom wanders the world in search of revenge. These are high concept ideas, and they’re all plot threads for the wide cast of characters that appear in the game.