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Final Fantasy Adventure allusions
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This is a list of allusions from Final Fantasy Adventure.
Seiken Densetsu: the Emergence of Excalibur[edit]

Final Fantasy Adventure was built on the cancelled 1987 game and therefore recycles multiple concepts from it.
- The plot of the cancelled game and Final Fantasy Adventure are relatively similar: both games have a young male protagonist setting out on a journey to find the holy sword Excalibur to defeat an evil overlord.
- The legendary sword Excalibur is reused as an important plot item from both games.
- The use of candies as an item.
- The Hinomaru Man seems somewhat similar to Shadow Zero.
- Sumo’s appearance may have been influenced by the hero from this game.
- Likewise, Fuji’s design greatly resembles Elise’s, from the dress to the hair color.
- Mr. Lee from Kett Manor is an obvious nod to the Vampire from the cancelled game.
- The Hydra boss is also recycled from this game, albeit with a different recolor.
- The Mummy enemy may have been a reused idea from the Mummy Man.
Trials of Mana[edit]
- In Adventures of Mana, Sumo's easter egg skin obtainable through password is a reference to Duran's Paladin class.
Final Fantasy series[edit]
Given that Final Fantasy Adventure was originally thought as a spinoff of the Final Fantasy series, a plethora of references and ideas from the first three Final Fantasy games made at the time are present.
Final Fantasy I[edit]

- Sumo’s overall design resembles the warrior class from the first Final Fantasy.
- The Mysterious Man’s appearance has been confirmed to be inspired by the red mage class from Final Fantasy I.
- Watts appears a cave-dwelling dwarf in both “Final Fantasy I” and “Final Fantasy Adventure”.
- Three of the Four Fiends of Chaos (Lich, Marilith, & Kraken) from the first installment appear as bosses in “Final Fantasy Adventure”.
- The Mindflayer enemy appear as Davias’s boss form.
- NPCs bearing a striking resemblance to White Mages appear in Kett Manor and Wendel.
- The Magician enemies are visually identical to the Black Mage class in “Final Fantasy I”.
- The Excalibur sword appearing in both installments are both end-game weapons obtained towards the end of the story.
- Many gears whose name and/or effects are shared in both game, namely the Bronze, Iron, Mythril, Fire, Ice, Diamond, & Dragon equipment, the Werebuster, etc.
- Many magic abilities such as Flare are used in both games.
- Numerous items from Final Fantasy I make an appearance in Final Fantasy Adventure, such as potions (Cure), hi-potions (X-Cure), antidotes, gold needles, eye drops, etc.
- Many enemies are reused from “Final Fantasy”.
- Both Goblins appearing in each games are one of the weakest enemies encountered during the first areas.
- Both installment use gold pieces or GP as currency (the original Japanese script uses Lucre).
- The Training regimen seen in Adventures of Mana uses icons & names of the Warrior, Monk, & Black Mage.
Final Fantasy II[edit]
- Maria’s story bears similar plot elements with Amanda. Both are close friends of the protagonist who wield ranged weapons and are in search of their brother at some point.
- The Dark Lord bears a strong resemblance to Leon as a Dark Knight.
- A Chocobo appears in a forest and can be ridden across the map while avoiding enemies, just like in Final Fantasy II & III. Its signature tune plays while riding.
- The Moogle status transforms the hero into the creature first appearing in Final Fantasy II.
- The Blood Sword appears in both games and functions in a similar fashion.
- The Samurai Helmet and Samurai Armor are the strongest ranked armor in their respected categories, and they are found in the later areas.
- Airships belonging to the evil empire appear as dungeons in both games (Glaive’s Airship in FFA and Dreadnought in FFII).
- Introduced in Final Fantasy II, Bacchus's Wine, unicorn horns, ethers & elixirs are brought in Final Fantasy Adventure and have roughly the same effects.
- Mythril, localized as Silver in Final Fantasy Adventure, is an elusive ore used to make weapons.
- Magic spells are learned by tomes in both installments.
Final Fantasy III[edit]

- Ifrit appears as a boss in “Final Fantasy Adventure”. Just like its Final Fantasy counterpart, both a fire-elemental demons.
- Garuda serves similar roles in both games, as they appear as winged, bird-like servants of a manipulated ruler that are ultimately fought as a boss.
- The Training regimen seen in Adventures of Mana uses icons & names of the Sage job class.
- Both games have a dungeon named Sealed Cave hosting undead enemies.
Real World[edit]
Anime & Manga[edit]
- The pillow item, originally named ラムジィ (Lambsy), may be a reference to ラムヂーちゃん (ramujīchan, "Lambsy-chan") a Japanese localized version of Hana Barbera’s It’s the Wolf cartoons.
Film[edit]
- Mr. Lee's name may have been taken from real-world actor Christopher Lee who played Dracula in many movies.
- The Japanese name for Kett’s House, Vinquette, may be a mistranslation of the American actor Vincent Price, who played in numerious horror movies.
Literature[edit]
- Mythril comes form J.R.R. Tolkien’s writings and was already widely in use in the Final Fantasy series at the time.
- Many monsters appearing in Final Fantasy Adventure taken from the Final Fantasy repertoire originate from the “Dungeons & Dragons” tabletop game series.
- The Adventures of Mana Silence magic spell icon and the japanese name for its corresponding attack item may reference the Monkey who speaks no evil or the Sarubobo.
Other[edit]
- The Japanese name of the “Rust-B-Gone” item (サビトレール (sabi torēru)) may have been inspired from various cleaning products name also using the torēru part.
References[edit]
[Edit] AoM miscellaneous
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