Highlights

  • Final Fantasy games offer a diverse range of unique jobs for characters, including black mage, dragoon, and summoner.
  • In Final Fantasy 10-2, the dressphere system allows players to switch between a massive 17 jobs, with two bonus jobs in the International version.
  • Final Fantasy 11 introduces 22 available jobs, divided between basic and advanced categories, with the ability to mix and match job roles.

In Final Fantasy, a job is not a way to justify one's continued existence in society and to satiate basic needs but how a character contributes to victory during a battle, whether through support, offense, or healing. The series is well-known for having invented many jobs over the years, such as black mage, dragoon, and summoner, many of which carried into subsequent games.

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With such a colorful spread of possibilities, fans might struggle to pick a favorite. Fortunately, the directors of many Final Fantasy games have recognized that variety is the spice of life. As such, many Final Fantasy titles have provided a diverse offering of characters with unique jobs, or the option to pick from a buffet of different job types at a whim, keeping gameplay fresh from start to finish.

6 Final Fantasy 10-2

Total Playable Jobs: 17-19

Yuna, Rikku, and Paine in Final Fantasy 10-2
Final Fantasy 10-2

Platform(s)
PS2 , PS3 , PS4 , PS Vita , Switch , Xbox One
Released
November 18, 2003
Developer(s)
Square Product Development Division 1
Genre(s)
JRPG
  • Jobs can be switched between (even in battle) via the "dressphere" system
  • The International and FF10/10-2 HD editions add two bonus dresspheres for players to use

In a departure from the previous game, Yuna and her Gullwings companions do not have set roles in Final Fantasy 10-2 but can switch between them, even amid battle, thanks to the "dressphere system." This mechanic gives the player access to 17 jobs, providing they have been unlocked, such as songstress, dark knight, berserker, gunner, and the (for some reason) ultra-powerful "mascot."

Different versions of Final Fantasy 10-2 provide a slightly different number of dress spheres. Players with the International Version will gain access to an additional two: the festivalist and the psychic. Fortunately, for the curious, these two extra jobs were packaged into the Final Fantasy 10/10-2 HD Remaster edition, so anyone who may have missed them on the original on the PS2 might want to check them out.

5 Final Fantasy 11

Playable Jobs: 22

final fantasy 11 screenshot
Final Fantasy 11

Platform(s)
PC , PS2 , Xbox 360
Released
October 28, 2003
Developer(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
MMORPG
  • A mix of six basic and 16 advanced jobs gives Final Fantasy 11 a total of 22 available jobs
  • Players can mix and match jobs by taking "support jobs," which grants them access to other jobs at half their level

Jobs in Final Fantasy's first MMO, Final Fantasy 11, are divided into two. When players hit 30 in any of the six basic jobs, they are free to choose between one of the advanced jobs (including some unusual types such as the puppetmaster, the rune fencer, and the dancer), providing they can complete the requisite quest associated with it, first.

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Final Fantasy 11 initially shipped with 12 jobs total, and each expansion introduced a new set of two or three. Swapping jobs is possible, but it means taking the level of the newly equipped job, which can be a setback. However, players can take advantage of the abilities of two classes at once by taking a support (or sub) job. This grants them access to another job but at half of their current job's level.

4 Final Fantasy 3

Playable Jobs: Original & Pixel Remaster: 22, Remake: 23

Final Fantasy III 3D version protagonists looking at crystal
Final Fantasy 3 (3D Remake)

Platform(s)
Android , iOS , Nintendo DS , PSP , PC
Released
November 14, 2006
Developer
Matrix Software
Genre(s)
JRPG
  • The addition of the "callback" job in the FF3 remake takes its total job count to 23
  • Many of the obtainable jobs are stronger rehashes of earlier roles

While Final Fantasy 5 might have been the game that nailed down job swapping, Final Fantasy 3 was the game that did it first. The 3D remake first appeared on the Nintendo 3DS and added an extra job on top of the 22 existing jobs (the oddly-named onion knight), which in the original game took the place of the default job, the freelancer.

Like in the original, jobs are staggered out in sets according to which crystal the party had last encountered. One point to consider about some of the jobs found later in the game is that they are only upgrades of existing jobs that permit the use of more powerful abilities or spells (for example, the black mage is made obsolete by the magus, and the magus is made obsolete by the sage).

3 Final Fantasy 14

Playable Jobs: Following The Dawntrail Expansion, 23

Final Fantasy 14 Jobs Hard Place
Final Fantasy 14

Platform(s)
PC , PS3 , PS4 , PS5 , Xbox Series X , Xbox Series S
Released
August 27, 2013
Developer(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
MMORPG
  • Without counting classes, the weaker versions of FF14's jobs, or crafting classes, there are 23 jobs as of the arrival of "Dawntrail"
  • Players can switch in and out of different job roles as they please, allowing them to try out each role without restriction

Given that Final Fantasy 14 is still steamrolling along in popularity and content, including the sporadic implementations of new playable jobs, it should come as no surprise that it should make it to a high point on the list. With the advent of the "Dawntrail" expansion, FF14's total job count is 23. This number excludes all the eight base classes (that act as basic versions of regular jobs). Had these classes been called "basic jobs" (as Final Fantasy 14's predecessor, FF11, calls them), they would not have been discounted, and the number could have been raised to 31.

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Jobs can be swapped between and mastered at any time, making for an incredibly flexible system. Although the "classes" must be discounted on a technicality, there is also a case to be made to include the eight crafting classes as jobs. Crafting classes have their own active skills; for example, serving up a feast as a culinarian requires the player to use crafting-specific skills just like they would in combat, and there are even questlines associated with each of the Disciplines of the Hand.

2 Final Fantasy 5

Playable Jobs: Original & Pixel Remaster: 22, Game Boy Advance: 26

Final Fantasy V 5 Gilgamesh
Final Fantasy 5

Released
December 6, 1992
Developer(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
JRPG
  • Final Fantasy 5 presents players with 22 distinct jobs in the original
  • The Game Boy Advance version adds four unique jobs, bringing that to 26

Ask any fan of the Final Fantasy series, and they will tell you that the biggest selling point of Final Fantasy 5 is its stellar job system, which saw huge improvements over its predecessors. There are 22 in total in the original and Pixel Remaster, with the Game Boy Advance version including an extra four atypical (for Final Fantasy) jobs: the necromancer, cannoneer, gladiator, and oracle.

Adding to the huge number of distinct jobs available to collect and master is the fact that FF5 gives players much more control over their characters' jobs, including customization and skill mix-and-matching. As with Final Fantasy 3, jobs are unlocked as the party encounters a new elemental crystal or its shards.

1 Final Fantasy Tactics

Generic Jobs: 20-22, Total Playable Jobs: 31-33

FInal Fantasy Tactics
Final Fantasy Tactics: The War of the Lions

Platform(s)
Android , iOS , PSP
Released
May 10, 2007
Developer(s)
Square Enix , Tose
Genre(s)
Tactical
  • Regular units can learn up to 20 jobs with an additional 2 with The War of the Lions
  • Special unlockable characters add an additional 11 jobs, although these cannot be taught to units

In Final Fantasy Tactics, rather than controlling a set party, the player directs units drawn from a large cast of characters. It makes sense, then, that Tactics would include plenty of roles for variety. The original PlayStation version of Final Fantasy Tactics provides 20 "generic" jobs (based on those of the mainline series) that any character can learn with enough investment.

An additional 11 special jobs come loaded exclusively on unlockable characters, and although these jobs cannot be taught, once obtained, these unlockable characters and their jobs become fully controllable. The War of the Lions versions introduced two extra generic jobs (as if the original number wasn't already high enough).

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