In the past few days, the leaked demo of Final Fantasy VII Remake has been making a name for itself. While we are still waiting for the official release, this trial version is causing a lot of further speculation. Is there also a PC version in the works?
<a href = "https://img.gameswelt.de/public/images/201912/dfc23ae67ca0c6a0d8233c292ac10a5a.jpg" data-title = "Final Fantasy VII Remake Image 1
Date: 12/17/2019 "data-lightbox =" dfc23ae67ca0c6a0d8233c292ac10a5a.jpg ">
Final Fantasy VII Remake has so far only been announced for Sony's PlayStation 4 and should start on the home console from March 03, 2020. However, there are growing indications that there may also be a PC version of the role-playing blockbuster in the not too distant future.
Dataminer recently found not only concrete evidence of a demo of Final Fantasy VII remake on the PlayStation Network, in a few cases it was even possible to download and publish moving images via YouTube. The Dataminer didn't stop at this point, but continued digging in the demo files – and found it.
And so it is now said that already in this PS4 demo there is a lot of evidence of a possible PC implementation of Final Fantasy VII Remake. Appropriate NVIDIA and AMD references are also mentioned via Twitter and Discord, as well as additional PC resolutions.
Yeah already discussed this yesterday in Discord with others that there are many "many" signs inside the Demo that we will see a future PC Port sooner or later. There is PC Code still left inside, and it mentions various higher Resolutions together with some NVIDIA and AMD stuff.
– Roxanne (@ roXyPS3) January 2, 2020
The packaging released in December includes a note that the game will only be available on the PS4 on a time-exclusive basis. This exclusivity runs for a year until March 3, 2021. A PC version of Final Fantasy VII Remake may also be on the plan by next year at the latest, even though Square Enix's official confirmation is initially pending. At E3 last year, the studio emphasized that there are currently "no plans" for publication on other platforms. The notes in the demo probably speak a different language.