After years of speculation, Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles has finally been confirmed. The game is a remaster of the original 1997 PlayStation release, one of the most influential strategy RPGs of its time. For longtime fans of the genre, this should be cause for celebration, though that feeling of joy has been somewhat damaged by some recent comments from the remaster's developers.
In a Square Enix interview, the development team explained that the remaster will not include any content from Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions, the 2007 enhanced PSP version. This means the updated script, animated cutscenes, additional jobs, multiplayer content, and characters like Balthier will be absent, with Square Enix citing the complete loss of original source code as the reason for this decision.
Final Fantasy Tactics Remake Wish List
The possibility of a Final Fantasy Tactics remake creates some exciting prospects concerning what should change or remain the same.
Why Final Fantasy Tactics Is Missing Features
The source code for the original Final Fantasy Tactics no longer exists. As explained in the interview, this loss was not the result of negligence but of the development practices of the 1990s. Localization was handled by overwriting data instead of branching it. Tools for backup and version control were not widely used. With no way to access the underlying code, the team had to rebuild Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles from scratch using existing versions.
This process required developers to play through the original game to identify systems by feel. In some cases, programming was recreated line by line by analyzing surviving builds. While that dedication deserves respect, the reality is that The War of the Lions content is built on top of data the team no longer has access to. The result is a remaster that offers a modern way to experience Final Fantasy Tactics, but not necessarily the most complete version.
The War of the Lions added fully voiced, hand-drawn anime cutscenes for several major story events. These may not be fully present in the new remaster.
Why Game Preservation Still Lags Behind
This situation highlights a larger concern in the gaming industry. The loss of master data and source code continues to affect remasters, ports, and even sequels. Accidental damage, outdated storage systems, and business closures have erased irreplaceable assets. Sometimes the original creators are no longer around or ownership of the code is in legal limbo. Thankfully, there are initiatives like the GOG’s Game Preservation Program attempting to combat this.
Without source code, re-releasing old games becomes guesswork. Projects can take years longer and require extra resources just to recreate what already existed. Even companies as large as Square Enix and Konami have admitted to these struggles of game preservation.
When Kingdom Hearts was remastered for HD platforms, Square Enix had to rebuild the first game using retail discs because it had lost the development files.
The gaming community has seen other casualties. Panzer Dragoon Saga, and early Capcom arcade games all suffer from limited access because of poor archival practices. This makes every successful remaster without source code a rare and precarious effort.
Final Fantasy Tactics Is Still Worth Preserving
Despite the missing content, Final Fantasy Tactics: The Ivalice Chronicles still matters. It marks the first time the original version of the game will be playable on modern platforms without the use of emulation or handhelds. The tactical depth, character class system, and political storytelling remain untouched. These strengths have inspired other games such as Tactics Ogre: Reborn and Triangle Strategy.
For returning fans, this version may feel incomplete, but it still presents the opportunity to experience the foundation of Ivalice’s mythos. For new players drawn in by Final Fantasy 16 or Final Fantasy 7 Rebirth, it provides a window into one of the franchise’s most ambitious spin-offs.
More importantly, the transparency from Square Enix suggests a growing awareness of the importance of retro game preservation. While it is disappointing that The War of the Lions cannot be part of this release, acknowledging the limitations and still committing to the project is better than letting Final Fantasy Tactics vanish from the modern landscape entirely.
- Released
- September 30, 2025
- ESRB
- Teen / Fantasy Violence, Blood, Mild Suggestive Themes, Mild Language, Drug Reference
- Developer(s)
- Square Enix
- Publisher(s)
- Square Enix
- Franchise
- Final Fantasy
- Number of Players
- Single-player
- PC Release Date
- September 30, 2025















- Genre(s)
- Tactical, RPG, Strategy