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Welcome back to The Deepest Dive! In our second discussion, Ben Hanson, Kyle Hilliard, Jeff Marchiafava, Grant, and Ronnie talk about damn near everything in Chapters 5-9 of Final Fantasy VII Remake thanks your amazing comments left here on Patreon. We don't spoil anything after Chapter 9 and don't reveal spoilers from the original 1997 game. In this discussion, we talk about Aerith's personality and writing, killer houses, and hand massages.

If you prefer to watch the video version, check it out here! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3gWPeZl69fY

For the next discussion airing on April 29th, please play through Chapter 14. We'll have the post up looking for your thoughts on April 22nd.

If you enjoy the discussion, any help sharing it with a friend is appreciated!

Comments

Anonymous

Ben “I don’t think this’ll crack three hours” Hanson strikes again XD

Anonymous

not in this episode, I think it was during the great Goty hunt or something

Anonymous

Not sure if you all figured it out, but you get different side quests in Chapter 9 depending on how many side quests you completed in Sector 5 and some of the dialogue choices you make in Wall Market. This is why everyone was confused about guardian angel side quest and why you missed out in Johnny’s quests.

Anonymous

Also depending on the type of massage you chose will give you different side quests. Expensive massage for Madam M and poor massage for Sams quests.

sk8bit

This was such a joy to listen to. I kinda wanna hear more of JeffM and Grant's specific thoughts though! Don't get me wrong, Ronnie is absolutely hilarious and insightful but it was like mostly him and I wanna hear all the different perspectives before this beautiful dive has been dove! Sorry if this sounded grumpy, having a ball playing along! PS: Loved Kyle's MGS references ;)

AEKR

Cloud was doing the old man a favor by refusing to walk down the street to return the graveyard key to Mogie. He was toughly encouraging the old man to keep moving. When old people stop moving, it seems their health often declines rapidly. Someone even points out that the walk would do the old man good.