Revelation – Gaming Master https://gaming.vmondeika.com Get daily gaming updates with us Fri, 12 Jun 2026 02:30:51 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=7.0 Jabra Evolve3 75 review: I wore this work headset for weeks, and it was a revelation https://gaming.vmondeika.com/jabra-evolve3-75-review-i-wore-this-work-headset-for-weeks-and-it-was-a-revelation/ https://gaming.vmondeika.com/jabra-evolve3-75-review-i-wore-this-work-headset-for-weeks-and-it-was-a-revelation/#respond Fri, 12 Jun 2026 02:30:51 +0000 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/jabra-evolve3-75-review-i-wore-this-work-headset-for-weeks-and-it-was-a-revelation/

Jabra Evolve3 75

MSRP $463.00

“Jabra Evolve3 75 walks the extra mile in style.”

Pros

  • Pretty light and portable
  • Great mic quality
  • Long-lasting battery
  • Replaceable battery
  • Doesn’t sound half-bad

Cons

  • Quite a big hit on the wallet
  • ANC isn’t the best
  • No 3.5mm wired audio
  • Hurts the ear after long sessions
  • Small-ish physical buttons

Quick Review

The Jabra Evolve3 75 is the rare business headset that earns a place in your personal life, too. This one ditches the fragile boom mic for a 6-microphone array and AI-powered ClearVoice processing. Jabra delivers call quality that borders on uncanny, which is the core reason why you plonk cash for this audio gear. It consistently isolates your voice through blaring shop music, wind, and machinery, with only the faintest background leak.

Tipping the scales at 180 grams, it’s lighter than its predecessor, folds nearly flat into a travel case, and swaps heat-trapping leatherette for breathable fabric that survives ten-hour call days. The drivers punch well above expectations, serving clean mids, crisp treble, and controlled bass that make it a legitimate everyday headset. Battery life is fantastic, running well over an average week’s worth of playback, and at least two whole days with noise-cancellation enabled. The headset also supports USB-C fast charging and Qi2 wireless charging.

It isn’t flawless, though. The on-ear design lets office chatter slip past the ANC, and I wish the ear pads were slightly bigger. The cramped physical controls are far too easy to misfire. Moreover, the bundled wireless charging stand is a fussy balancing act. But at $450, with user-replaceable parts and a five-year warranty, the Evolve3 75 is the new gold standard for anyone who wants a single headset for work, music, and everything in between.

Jabra Evolve3 75 specs: What’s hiding underneath the shell?

Product Model Jabra Evolve3 75 UC Stereo with Wireless Charging Pad
SKU / UPC 37599-989-989 / 706487028413
Form Factor / Wearing Style On-ear headband (Binaural stereo), boomless mic, arm-free design
Speaker Size 32 mm
Speaker Max Input Power 20 mW
Speaker Sensitivity 108.5 dB
Speaker Impedance 35 Ohm
Speaker Frequency Range (Music Mode) 20 Hz – 20,000 Hz
Speaker Frequency Range (Speak Mode) 100 Hz – 14,500 Hz
Audio Codecs Supported LC3, AAC, SBC
Active Noise Cancellation (ANC) Jabra Advanced ANC™ (Adaptive, real-time adjustments)
Microphone Type 6 Digital MEMS microphones
Microphone Frequency Range 10 Hz – 20,000 Hz
Microphone Sensitivity -36 dBFS/Pa
Voice Isolation Technology Jabra ClearVoice™ (AI-powered deep learning)
Hearing Protection Technology PeakStop™, IntelliTone™, G616 compliant
Bluetooth Version Bluetooth 5.3 Low Energy (LE Audio)
Bluetooth Profiles A2DP v1.4, AVRCP v1.6, HSP v1.2, HFP v1.9, SPP v1.2, PBP v1.0, TMAP, Auracast™
Wireless Operating Range Up to 30 m / 100 ft
Bluetooth Multipoint Yes (Connects up to 2 devices simultaneously; remembers up to 8 devices)
Fast Pairing Support Microsoft Swift Pair, Google Fast Pair (Android only)
Included Bluetooth Adapter Jabra Link 390a (USB-A variant)
Talk Time (ANC & Busylight Off) Up to 22 hours
Talk Time (ANC & Busylight On) Up to 18 hours
Music Playback Time (ANC Off) Up to 110 hours
Music Playback Time (ANC On) Up to 45 hours
Battery Type Rechargeable Lithium-ion (User-replaceable)
Total Charging Time Up to 180 minutes
Corded Charging Interface USB-C™ (Supports simultaneous charge and use)
Wireless Charging Yes (Qi2 compatible; Wireless Charging Pad included in box)
Rapid Charge Performance 5 minutes charge = 5 hours power / 10 minutes charge = up to 10 hours music
Battery Status Retention Up to 50% after 30 mins charging; up to 80% after 60 mins charging
Smart Sensors On-head detection (Auto-pause music, auto-mute/answer calls)
Integrated Indicators 360° Busylight (In-call LED visual status alert)
Controls & Buttons ANC/HearThrough toggle, power/connection, voice assistant trigger, volume, track skip, play/pause, mute, call hook
Intelligent Voice Assistants Siri, Google Assistant (AI-ready with 96%+ voice prompt accuracy)
Compatible Software & Apps Jabra Plus Mobile/Desktop, Jabra Direct, Jabra Xpress
Platform Certifications UC Certified, Zoom Certified, Google Meet/Voice Certified, Intel® vPro® Certified
Main Unit Dimensions (W x H x D) 187 mm x 70 mm x 151 mm (7.36 in x 2.76 in x 5.94 in)
Main Unit Weight 180 g (6.35 oz)
Materials Used Dual-foam fabric ear cushions, color-matched fabric headband over ultra-soft foam, SUS metal headband, renewable PC+ABS, metal mono fork
Sustainability & Lifecycle User-replaceable battery & ear cushions; constructed with recycled/biocircular materials
Operating Temperature -10°C to 45°C (14°F to 113°F)
Storage Temperature -10°C to 50°C (14°F to 122°F)
Box Contents Jabra Evolve3 75 Headset, Jabra Link 390a Bluetooth Adapter, Wireless Charging Pad, Slim Travel Carry Case, USB-C to USB-C Cable (1.2 m), Warranty/Warning Leaflets
Manufacturer Warranty 2-year limited warranty

Jabra Evolve3 75 design and build quality: Stylish, with a side serving of hurt 

The Jabra Evolve3 75 looks and feels like a premium product the moment it leaves the box, leaning hard into a modern aesthetic with an extremely refined finish. Built from high-quality matte plastics and metals, it lands closer to sophisticated than strictly corporate. You can easily pass them off as music-centric headphones instead of something that belongs in a corporate cubicle. It comes in standard Black as well as a striking Beige. Overall, this Jabra headset are designed to disappear into the background whether you’re in a boardroom, a retail shop, or on a subway train.

One of the most welcome shifts from the previous Evolve2 75 is the change in materials. Jabra has wisely walked away from heat-trapping PU leatherette cushions in favor of a breathable, textured fabric. If you spend six to ten hours a day on calls, this is a genuine lifesaver. The fabric keeps your ears noticeably cooler through marathon sessions, even if it runs a touch warmer than some high-end consumer synthetic meshes.

The earcups themselves are soft and settle into a secure, comfortable fit without ever feeling restrictive. They are not too big, either. However, even for a person with smaller-than-average ears like me, I wish the earcups were slightly bigger to properly cover the ears. Depending on the person, there’s almost always a small bit of ear skin peeking from the sides. It doesn’t quite ruin the noise cancellation seal, but I would have liked slightly bigger cushion pads to get a reassuring passive isolation.

At just 180 grams (6.35 ounces), the Evolve3 75 is discernibly lighter than its predecessor, and the weight sits perfectly balanced across the thick, heavily padded headband. It feels almost weightless on your head. Since this is an on-ear design rather than over-ear, the earcups press directly against the cartilage of your ears. That keeps the profile low, but it can leave the backs of your helixes a little sore after five or six straight hours. It’s a familiar trade-off of any on-ear model, and there’s no escaping the hurt on the Jabra Evolve3 75, either.

Portability, though, is the standout aspect. The headset folds flat into an included hard travel case that’s pretty slim itself. You have to hold the thing to grasp how slim it is, as it slipped into my already overstuffed laptop bag without a fight. Jabra has leaned into sustainability and longevity, as well. To that end, the fabric ear cups and the internal battery are user-replaceable, which means this headset is built to survive years of daily abuse.

The physical controls, on the other hand, leave a lot to be desired. The right earcup crams in volume, playback, call controls, and a mute button, and these buttons are tiny, clustered too tightly, and far too easy to trigger by accident. Yes, a solid learning curve and plenty of muscle memory are needed, but that’s nothing insurmountable. I preferred to use the mobile app for most of the controls, either way. You’ll find yourself blasting music while simply repositioning the headset, or fumbling for the volume rocker while desperately trying not to hang up on an important call. The left earcup, home to power, ANC, and the charging port, is at least a little less crowded.

Score: 8/10

Jabra Evolve3 75 audio quality: Serves the purpose, and that’s all 

When you buy a headset built mainly for Microsoft Teams or Zoom, your hopes for music playback usually sit somewhere near the floor. Naturally, it came as a genuine surprise to me when the Jabra Evolve3 75 served up a well-rounded sound profile. It’s good enough to moonlight as your everyday pair of headphones, which is no mean feat for a decidedly business-first headset. Equipped with 32mm drivers with a 20Hz–20KHz frequency response, the audio profile comes through clean and textured.

When I fired up ICE by Morgenshtern, I expected a butchering. I was wrong. The screeching that kicks off the song somehow didn’t make my ears bleed, and the bass drop that immediately followed nudged me into a head-bopping session. The instruments are not crushed against the heavily auto-tuned vocals, and the soundstage is also adequately wide. Even EDM-leaning tracks such as Twin’s Uzi are a pleasing audio experience.

Unsurprisingly, if you prefer classical music where the vocals are the real star, this headset will do them justice. Barring a few tracks, my queue consisting of Jah Khalib, Nayyara Noor, and Siavash Ghomayshi was mostly a soothing experience. The headset handles the mid-range with sufficient clarity, letting vocals and busy instrumentals shine with brilliant separation.

Treble is bright, while the bass is controlled and present without getting too harsh or suppressed. Whether I fed it heavy rock or delicate acoustic tracks, the audio output was enjoyable, only thinning out a little on tracks built around aggressive sub-bass. Simply put, don’t expect delicate basslines to feed your soul. It won’t match the expansive soundstage of audiophile cans, but it’s fairly capable of handling your daily Spotify playlists or gaming sessions.

Active Noise Cancellation is good, though it’s ultimately held back by the headset’s design. As an on-ear type, it simply can’t seal your ear canal the way earbuds do, nor wrap your outer ear like an over-ear model. The Adaptive ANC does an admirable job of muting low-frequency hums, but sharper, high-frequency sounds like office chatter, ringing phones, and mechanical keyboard clatter will still leak through.

If you work in a loud, open-plan office and need total isolation, the passive sealing of an on-ear may not be enough. Connectivity is handled by Bluetooth 5.3, with support for AAC, LC3, and SBC codecs onboard. LC3 unlocks higher-quality playback on compatible Android devices, though the absence of high-res codecs like LDAC or aptX is a bit of a letdown at this price. Moroever, playback is strictly wireless, as there’s no 3.5mm wired option to fall back on.

Score: 8/10

Jabra Evolve3 75 call and mic quality: Terrific at the job

The crown jewel of the Jabra Evolve3 75 is its call and microphone performance. Ditching the boom mic was a massive gamble for a business headset, but I’m glad to report that Jabra’s six-mic digital MEMS array and AI-powered “ClearVoice” tech make the bet pay off brilliantly.

The ClearVoice AI engine was supposedly trained on more than 60 million real-world sentences to understand natural tone, inflection, and the way people actually speak. The payoff is a mic system that isolates your voice with startling accuracy while muzzling the sonic chaos around you. In demanding real-world settings, the result felt almost magical.

I could handle a conference call from a noisy cafe with music blaring, walking through city streets, or sitting near heavy machinery. For the most part, the mic isolates your voice flawlessly. The person on the other end was mostly treated to near-total silence when you’re not speaking, and only the faintest whisper of background noise when you are.

A few of my test subjects were surprised when I told them I was standing by the side of a busy road, while they didn’t hear any of the jarring horn-honking and engine rumbles of auto-rickshaws. Jabra claims 96% voice-capturing accuracy in any environment, and in testing, that figure feels about right.

There is one small caveat. Since the mics live on the earcups rather than an inch from your mouth, your voice can occasionally read a fraction quieter, distant, and a tad bit tinnier than it would through a traditional boom. It’s not jarring, but sharp ears can still notice the slight difference.

The headset also nails its sidetone function. Even with noise cancellation enabled, the mics naturally pipe your own voice back through the speakers so you can hear yourself, sparing your colleagues from being accidentally shouted at. It does a bit of amplification to the natural tone and timbre, but it won’t make you hate your vocal cords anytime soon.

Score: 9/10

Jabra Evolve3 75 app and features: Sufficient firepower on the desk

The Evolve3 75 is a productivity powerhouse with the companion app, loaded with features built for modern workflows. It plays nicely across Windows, macOS, Android, and iOS, and carries dedicated certifications for Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams.

A key functional highlight is Bluetooth multipoint support. The headset natively pairs with two Bluetooth devices at once, and since it also ships with a pre-paired USB-C (or USB-A) dongle, you can technically juggle three active connections. It switched intelligently between my phone and laptop, letting me stream from my PC and seamlessly pick up an incoming call on the connected Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra without having to fiddle with the settings menu.

For office workers, the built-in “busy light” is a brilliant touch. Two red LEDs on the earcups light up automatically the moment you’re on a call, flashing a clear signal to colleagues or family that you’re not to be disturbed. There’s also a dedicated Microsoft Teams version with a specific earcup button that launches Teams and drops you into meetings with a single press.

The mobile app is intuitive and robust, offering full control over the hardware. You can toggle ANC modes, dial in HearThrough transparency levels, set the exact volume of your sidetone, and tune a customizable five-band equalizer to taste.

Score: 9/10

Jabra Evolve3 75 battery life: Up to the task

Battery anxiety is essentially an afterthought on the Evolve3 75, even for a person who spends a healthy few hours each day on long calls. Jabra’s claims are staggering, and in practice the headset delivers fittingly high per-charge endurance.

For continuous music playback with ANC off, it’s rated for 110 hours, noise cancellation brings those numbers down to 45 hours, while the mileage for non-stop voice calls stands close to 22 hours of talk time. On a standard hybrid schedule divided across Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, and Zoom calls with background music and ANC enabled, the headset barely registers a dent over a two-day stretch.

When you finally do need to recharge, the fast-charging over USB-C is phenomenal. Five minutes on the wall buys you five hours of playback, and a ten-minute top-up nets ten hours of power. Better still, you can keep wearing and using the headset’s battery tank while it charges over the USB-C cable. In my most recent test session, they lasted three full days of busy work, which is not too shabby, considering I spent over four hours on online training sessions.

The Evolve3 75 is also Qi2 compatible, so you can drop it onto any standard wireless charging pad. Jabra bundles a wireless charging stand that latches onto the left earcup, but the design is finicky. The whole exercise of wireless charging demands a precise balancing act to line up the charging coil contacts, and the headset is prone to tipping if you so much as nudge it.

Score: 9/10

Should You Buy

The Jabra Evolve3 75 is an impressively competent, premium all-rounder that smudges the line between corporate hardware and consumer lifestyle audio. It’s not quite as rewarding as its more premium Evolve3 85 sibling, but that predominantly boils down to the latter’s more comfortable over-ear design.

Rocking a sticker price of $450, this one is undeniably expensive, priced above many elite gaming headsets and landing squarely in the audiophile territory. But the steep ask is justified by the sheer breadth of what it does. You’re paying for a highly portable, ultra-lightweight design, a phenomenal AI-powered boomless mic that suppresses background noise, terrific battery life, and solid all-around sound output. The peace of mind from user-replaceable parts and a five-year warranty stacks real long-term value on top.

The key drawbacks are the fiddly physical controls, a finicky wireless charging stand, and an ANC system that wobbles slightly against loud office chatter thanks to the on-ear design. If you’re a hybrid worker, a frequent traveler, or someone who lives on business calls, the Jabra Evolve3 75 is a fulfilling investment that can handle work, music, and gaming while looking pretty chic. Plus, they are regularly discounted online, and at the time of writing this, they were listed at $319, which is pretty tempting.

Why not try 

Jabra Evolve3 85 — In case you’re already sold on the Evolve3 75, but work in a loud, disruptive environment, step up to the Evolve3 85. Its over-ear design fully wraps around your ears for significantly better passive isolation and vastly superior ANC. It keeps the same boomless AI microphone tech and incredible battery life, trading away a bit of portability and breathability for a more pleasing audio experience.

Epos Impact 500 — If you want the lightest, coolest headset possible and don’t mind a more traditional look with a protruding mic, the Epos Impact 500 is a cool pick. Its physical boom mic rests inches from your mouth, so your voice comes through slightly warmer and more “present” than any boomless rival. It also throws hybrid ANC into the mix.

Logitech Zone Wireless 2 ES — On a much smaller budget, if you’re chasing a reliable office headset, the Logitech Zone Wireless 2 ES strikes the middle ground handsomely. It’s an affordable alternative that still nails call quality, happens to be fairly comfortable for your skull, and offers a solid wireless performance.

How we tested

I tested the Jabra Evolve3 75 as my primary work headset for a spell of two weeks. During that time, they were extensively used for calls and music playback across my usual workday. Calling as handled across cellular 5G networks and online calls over Microsoft Teams, Google Meet, Zoom, and WhatsApp.

For testing the mic quality, I toggled between noise suppression and ANC midway through calls — cellular and internet — to assess the quality of the voice signal reaching the person on the other end. I recruited at least eight participants for voice and video calls to seek their blind input on the quality of voice and noise level they were fed on their end.

For testing the audio quality, I used the Sony WH-1000XM6 as a control device for testing the soundstage and overall music listening experience. The Jabra headset was used in Bluetooth mode, connected to a smartphone and MacBook Pro, while 5G and Wi-Fi (200Mbps) handled the calling route.



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Final Fantasy Revelation Will Contain Even More Minigames Than Rebirth https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-revelation-will-contain-even-more-minigames-than-rebirth/ https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-revelation-will-contain-even-more-minigames-than-rebirth/#respond Thu, 11 Jun 2026 23:53:22 +0000 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-revelation-will-contain-even-more-minigames-than-rebirth/
Image: Square Enix

As good as Final Fantasy VII Rebirth is, a lot of folks are in agreement that it suffered from poor pacing and an overstuffed world full of needless minigames.

Well, if you hoped that the upcoming sequel, Final Fantasy VII Revelation, would be a bit more streamlined, then you’d best just set your expectations accordingly. In a new interview with VGC, director Naoki Hamaguchi confirms that Revelations will actually have more minigames than its predecessor.

This comes from a desire to stick to the original vision and not bend over backwards to address fan feedback. If the team tried to fix absolutely everything that fans weren’t completely satisfied with, then you’d wind up with a game that “doesn’t really have any character”.

Here’s what he had to say:

“What I can say for Revelation is that it will feature as many mini-games as it did in Rebirth, if not more. I did not want to make a cut on that aspect. I didn’t want to reduce the number of mini-games. We’ll see how it turns out in terms of the fan feedback, but I will take that responsibility, depending on what happens. That was my decision.”

Despite this, Hamaguchi-san does confirm that some minigames can be skipped altogether; so even though there are more, it sounds like you’ll have more agency as to which ones you actually engage with.

The interview also naturally turns to how Revelation might conclude, and although Hamaguchi-san refrains from providing any specific details (thank goodness), it sounds like the team is satisfied with the overall conclusion, saying “I think we’re pretty confident and happy with how it’s turned out”.

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Square Enix reveal Final Fantasy 7: Revelation, the final part of the remake trilogy, coming to PC in 2027 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/square-enix-reveal-final-fantasy-7-revelation-the-final-part-of-the-remake-trilogy-coming-to-pc-in-2027/ https://gaming.vmondeika.com/square-enix-reveal-final-fantasy-7-revelation-the-final-part-of-the-remake-trilogy-coming-to-pc-in-2027/#respond Sat, 06 Jun 2026 00:36:47 +0000 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/square-enix-reveal-final-fantasy-7-revelation-the-final-part-of-the-remake-trilogy-coming-to-pc-in-2027/


Square Enix have announced the third part of their Final Fantasy 7 action RPG remake trilogy. It’s called Final Fantasy 7 Revelation, and it’s out on all platforms including PC in spring 2027. Yep, there’s no wait for a port this time. We get to live out the closing act of Cloud Strife’s journey and participate in the associated Discourse at the same time as those console gremlins.


The publishers dropped a trailer for Revelation at this year’s Summer Game Fest, revealing two additional/returning playable characters – Vincent Valentine and Cid Highwind. They’ll join Cloud, Tifa, Barret, Red XIII, Yuffie and Cait Sith on a mission to avert an apocalyptic Meteor spell and defeat swishy bad boy Sephiroth, who is on the brink of godhood. They’ll also jump out of airships a lot, in curious echo of the battle royale genre.

Watch on YouTube


“The entire planet is freely explorable via the iconic Highwind airship,” explains the press release. “Players can drop in via parachute anywhere, seamlessly transitioning from air to land. With Meteor descending and enormous Weapons unleashing terror, the planet’s conflicts are many, and the party will need to divide and conquer.


“Choose where to go, who to help and in what order as the planet itself fights for survival,” it continues. “Make one last stand alongside a beloved cast of legendary heroes, making decisions along the journey that can impact aspects of their stories. Customize combat by switching between real-time action and Tactical Mode in the series’ acclaimed hybrid battle system, now expanded and perfected with new playable characters and powerful new abilities.”


New areas in Revelation include the Mideel archipelago, the nation of Wutai, and the ice-locked Northern Continent. As for those new characters, Vincent is still the nimble gunslinger of yore, while Cid is a brute with a polearm, “quickly closing the distance for powerful single-target lance strikes or sweeping area-of-effect damage.”


There are some warm words from individual developers. “All the stories and emotions accumulated over the years will culminate in the most satisfying way with this experience, brought to you as the series’ final chapter,” enthuses director Naoki Hamaguchi. It’s certainly been fascinating and, at times, alarming, watching Square Enix explore the knotty extended universe and legacy of the 1997 RPG in the Remake trilogy.


I confess, I fell off the remake train after finishing the original FF7 Remake, released in 2020. I’ve yet to touch the second instalment, Rebirth; everything I know about it comes from Nic’s (RPS in peace) absolutely stonking review of the PC version, which doubles as a dissection of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock. To boil his fine words down to the bones, he characterises it as project made with love yet cruelly stretched between eras in game design. Now I face the grim ordeal of deciding whether I have the time and energy to play Rebirth, with all its flaws, in order to play Revelation next year.

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Final Fantasy VII Revelation Officially Unveiled For Switch 2, Out Spring 2027 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-vii-revelation-officially-unveiled-for-switch-2-out-spring-2027/ https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-vii-revelation-officially-unveiled-for-switch-2-out-spring-2027/#respond Fri, 05 Jun 2026 23:29:27 +0000 https://gaming.vmondeika.com/final-fantasy-vii-revelation-officially-unveiled-for-switch-2-out-spring-2027/
Image: Square Enix

At the Summer Game Fest 2026, Square Enix has officially unveiled the third and final part in the Final Fantasy remake trilogy. It’s officially titled Final Fantasy VII Revelation.

This next chapter, following Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade and Final Fantasy VII Rebirth, will be a simultaneous release across all platforms including the Switch 2.

Square Enix has also shared a first look at this new chapter and some additional details via some PR:

As the world teeters on the brink of annihilation, the final battle against Sephiroth begins.

A meteor mars the sky, monstrous planetary guardians wreak havoc across the globe, and the fires of war rage. Now, Cloud and his companions must stand against this chaos to not only decide the planet’s fate, but bring a legendary conflict to its conclusion.

In the final chapter of the FINAL FANTASY VII remake project, the scale has never been larger and the stakes have never been higher. Take to the skies and explore a boundless world, fight alongside a fully assembled party, master strategic and dynamic combat, and prepare yourself for the climactic finale.

A vast planet awaits. Everything leads here.

This official reveal follows the release of Final Fantasy VII Rebirth on the Switch 2 earlier this week. Check out our review for more information. There’s also a demo available on the Nintendo eShop.

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