Yuffie was the strongest character in the game if used properly. Aside from having some of the best multi-hit limits and a final weapon that does 10k damage without fail, she could morph enemies without losing attack power.
Of course, she’s nowhere NEAR as underestimated as Cait Sith. Late in the game he’ll pump out damage by the tens of thousands with HP Shout.
The only really WEAK character was Tifa. Her final weapon had a fondness for double-digit damage and her limits were hit-or-miss, literally.
Same here too. Once you build them up there’s really no spectacular difference between everywhere. If you use Yuffie and say she’s uber strong well, so is Cid and Cait once you get them built up the same way. I find that everyone starts out with their own weaknesses and then eventually those just fade away with the levelling up.
And anyway, you don’t always have to use the most powerful characters, you people are wusses when it comes to a good challenege. Why don’t you all go overlevel or something.
Not as hard having four thieves. THAT was hard. The beginning it was tough, in the middle it was moderately hard, and towards the end it was near impossible.
Never tried four white mages. Who gets the Thor’s Hammer? :moogle:
Black mages are alot more fun when you use a game genie code for infinite magic points. I only do that when just playing around, though. It gets extremely easy when you get the level three attack spells and Nuke.
Shinobi is the noun form of Shinobu, “to endure.” It quite literally means endurance. “Shinobi-no-mono” means “person of endurance.” It’s another phrase for ninja, the modern definition of which is “a spy or secret agent.” Maybe that’s where your misconception came from.
Shinbou can also mean endurance, but it’s a different kind of endurance. It also means “patience.”
You’re japanese, right? You, of all people, should realize how many different words the japanese have for ONE thing and how many things a single japanese word can mean.
Edit: On that note, Shinobi can also mean death’s warrior in the “shi-no-bi” sense, or it can mean “stealth warrior” as “shino-bi.” It can also mean “heart of the blade” as some other contraction of “shinzou.” As I said, the japanese have a habit of giving a thousand meanings to one word and thousands of words to one meaning.