It’s impossible to play a 10-year-old game and be online without spoilers, so I thought I knew what to expect about Final Fantasy XIV: Heavensward‘s big death long before I experienced it. It would be sad, I thought, but surely not as meaningful as folks made it out to be. After all, character deaths aren’t a big deal for me in most stories. I often find them annoying — shallow emotional ploys that work too hard to make you feel A Thing without providing much reason for why you should feel it. A single death couldn’t elevate Final Fantasy XIV’s story that much, right? How wrong I was.
[Ed note: This piece contains spoilers for the finale of FFXIV: Heavensward.]
In an emotional scene, Haurchefant Greystone dies in a heroic moment of sacrifice that still sticks with me. His final words are “a smile better suits a hero,” a line that made our list of the 100 greatest video game quotes. That parting sequence is as big of a deal as everyone said it was and not just for Heavensward. It’s the moment where FFXIV finally comes into its own.
It’s hard to say FFXIV has much of a vision before this point. A Realm Reborn, the game’s rebirth following a disastrous 1.0 launch, meanders for hours and falls into the typical fantasy trap of easy morality and clear heroes. There’s a bad empire and an even worse magical person influencing that empire, and being a good guy just means knocking the baddies around. Other Final Fantasies make the same mistakes. They throw in moments of complex character development, like Cloud learning that he has to take responsibility for himself and help others instead of floating through life or Cecil realizing that no good deed will ever erase the stains of his past sins. But they’re ultimately still about one person defeating another.
I’m reminded of Ursula K. LeGuin’s stance on fantasy and heroism. In the afterword of LeGuin’s A Wizard of Earthsea, she wrote: “All too often the heroes of fantasies behave exactly as the villains do, acting with mindless violence, but the hero is on the ‘right’ side and therefore will win.”




