Highlights

  • Squaresoft and Enix merged in 2003, and now they dominate the Japanese RPG scene.
  • Square Enix has produced some strange games, like Kingdom Hearts and World of Final Fantasy.
  • Some of their oddities include E.V.O.: Search for Eden, Fortune Street, and The Quiet Man.

It was a wild day when Squaresoft and Enix combined into one company in 2003. That merger was odd, but it has proven to be a fruitful one for both companies. Now, they alone rule the Japanese RPG scene with an iron fist.

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Even stranger still are the games that Square Enix has produced. Some of the oddities begin with their name choices like with Kingdom Hearts HD 2.8 Final Chapter Prologue. It’s a bit nonsensical, but so are the cores of the following games. To note, some of these titles were made before the merger to help give the list a bit more variety and should provide a blast of RPG nostalgia.

Games developed or published by Square Enix, Square, or Enix will be considered.

8 E.V.O.: Search For Eden

Fighting enemies in EVO-Search For Eden
E.V.O.: Search for Eden

Platform(s)
PC , SNES
Released
December 21, 1992
Developer
Almanic

E.V.O.: Search for Eden was an Enix game released for the SNES. It was an action RPG that was about the evolutionary chain. Players began as small amoeba-like creature, but they could eventually turn into a fish, and from there, the branching paths became even bolder. Should players stay in the water, or should they sprout legs and go on land?

There was virtually no story to speak of, so it was a game for the RPG player who adored mechanics above all else. That, and a game made for Darwin.

7 World Of Final Fantasy

A scene featuring characters in World Of Final Fantasy
World Of Final Fantasy

Platform(s)
PS4 , PS Vita , Xbox One , Switch , PC
Developer(s)
Tose
Publisher(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
JRPG

There are a lot of weird spinoffs in the Final Fantasy series, but World of Final Fantasy has to be at the top. It was originally released as a PS4 and PS Vita game, but it eventually got ported to new consoles, too.

It starred two siblings, Lann and Reynn, who wound up in a magical land filled with classic Final Fantasy characters like Cloud, Lightning, and Squall. The multiverse aspect was not the weirdest part; it was the turn-based gameplay that had players stack monsters on top of their heads. It’s certainly the strangest Pokemon clone to come out in a while.

6 Fortune Street

Promo art featuring characters in Fortune Street
Fortune Street

Platform(s)
Wii
Released
December 5, 2011
Developer(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
Party Game

Itadaki Street is a huge franchise that started in Japan on the NES. Some of the entries are based around other properties like Fortune Street, which is the only game in the series to be released outside of Japan. It combined characters from the Dragon Quest series and various Mario games together to compete in a board game on the Nintendo Wii.

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Itadaki Street, as a whole, can best be described as an RPG version of Monopoly. Mario is no stranger to board game parties, but it was strange adding Dragon Quest characters to the mix.

5 Kingdom Hearts

A cutscene featuring characters in Kingdom Hearts
Kingdom Hearts

Platform(s)
PS2
Released
September 17, 2002
Developer(s)
Square Enix
Genre(s)
Action RPG

Kingdom Hearts is still one of the most surprising collaborations in video game history. Disney characters like Donald Duck running around with Yuffie from Final Fantasy 7 was not something fans thought was possible when that game launched in 1997.

The crossover idea worked when the first game launched on PS2 in 2002 and the series is going strong two decades later. Fans are just waiting to see where the series will go next with Kingdom Hearts 4. Will Sora meet up with Marvel and Star Wars characters in another epic action RPG?

4 Nanashi No Game

Hiding from a zombie in Nanashi No Game
Nanashi no Game

Platform(s)
Nintendo DS
Released
July 3, 2008
Developer
Epics
Genre(s)
Horror , Survival

Nanashi no Game, roughly translated to Nameless Game, was a horror game for the DS. The game played a lot like its console contemporaries at the time in first-person with a focus more on puzzles than fighting odd creatures. That's only half of the game, though, because the other gameplay hook occasionally sent players to a colorful 8-bit world.

How do these two worlds fit together? That won’t be spoiled here, but the game does feature an unexpected twist. It was only released in Japan, but there is a fan patch for it in English for those interested.

3 The 3rd Birthday

Promo art featuring Aya in The 3rd Birthday
The 3rd Birthday

Platform(s)
PlayStation Portable
Released
December 22, 2010
Developer(s)
Square Enix , HexaDrive
Genre(s)
Survival Horror , Action , Third-Person Shooter , Tactical

The 3rd Birthday is technically the third game in the Parasite Eve franchise. Why did Square Enix change the name? It’s due to a complication with the rights holder of the novel, which forced their hand to change a lot of the gameplay and core ideas. While Aya Brea was still the lead, her powers differed.

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A chaotic attack happened in New York City once again and Aya had to use a machine to travel back in time to figure out what went wrong. She had to possess bodies to keep active in the field. This body swap concept was later reused in another Square Enix game, MindJack, which is probably even more obscure than this PSP action RPG.

2 The Quiet Man

Dane from The Quiet Man
The Quiet Man

Platform(s)
PC , PS4
Released
November 1, 2018
Developer
Square Enix, Human Head Studios
Genre(s)
Beat 'Em Up , Action , Adventure

The Quiet Man is one of the worst-reviewed games on Metacritic from Square Enix. The game starred a deaf man named Dane, and players, like Dane, couldn’t exactly hear what the characters around him were saying. The cutscenes were live-action, but the gameplay was rendered in-engine, and it did not look great.

It was a brawler by nature, but it didn’t have the oomph of a Streets of Rage or Final Fight. For so many reasons, it is absolutely one of the most baffling decisions the company has ever made. In this way, The Quiet Man is kind of "so bad, it’s good," and it needs to be played to be believed.

1 Square's Tom Sawyer

Fighting a battle in Square's Tom Sawyer
Square's Tom Sawyer

Released
March 19, 1989
Developer
Square B Team
Genre(s)
JRPG

In the early days of Square Enix, back when they were just Squaresoft, the company made a lot of licensed-based games. Of the many, Square no Tom Sawyer, or Square's Tom Sawyer, for the NES has to take the cake, which turned the classic Tom Sawyer novel into a turn-based RPG.

It was another Japan-only game, which might be a good thing since the depictions of some of the characters were racist. It’s one of those games that needs to be played to be believed, but unfortunately, there is no full English fan patch for it yet; there is just a partial one that goes through the very early stages.

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