

At $40, you’re getting a couple of hundreds of hours of content, especially if you try to complete 100 percent of the games (such as defeating all the new Dark Aeons). The result is a package that’s much like a Thanksgiving cornucopia, overflowing with content. These are all well done, but they don’t really add that much in terms of understanding FFX and FFX-2. These also throw-in some TV-like content - you get the “Eternal Calm” that bridges FFX and FFX-2 and the later’s “Last Mission.” The package also has 30-minute episodes with each set of end credits. And with FFX-2, you may play with the Psychic and Festivalist Dresspheres - the outfits you change into and out of that grant combat abilities similar to the series’ long-lived Job system - and the Creature Creator and Fiend Arena (tournaments in which you use your team of monsters to fight other premade squads). For FFX, you get the Expert Sphere Grid of character abilities and the Dark Aeons (these are powerful monsters you fight, not additional Aeons that Yuna can summon) in FFX. The International versions, which only appeared in Europe and Japan, enhance the originals.

Finally, we in the Americas get the complete collection of these RPGs.
