It turns out Queen’s Blood will return, thanks to Naoki Hamaguchi’s firm stance on its inclusion in the last part of the Final Fantasy 7 remake series. Despite initial uncertainty, the decision follows strong feedback – players clearly embraced the card-based challenge introduced in Rebirth. A recent media appearance revealed his awareness of how deeply fans engaged with it. Thoughtful refinements are now under quiet discussion by developers aiming to build upon what worked. That such a small feature drew major attention surprised even the creators themselves. By next time, expectations have shifted – what felt like an experiment may soon become woven into the core journey.
Choosing to continue Queen’s Blood signals a change in Square Enix’s approach to secondary activities across this three-part series. Mini-games such as Triple Triad or Tetra Master once stayed isolated inside single entries, never reappearing with identical rules even when set in the same fictional realm. Yet in Rebirth, strong ties to mythology along with the evolving “Shadowblood” storyline gave the card play weight – more central element than idle distraction. With time, according to Hamaguchi, players may see the tournament trail extend further across Gaia. Uncharted zones like Rocket Town and icy regions of the north could become part of the circuit eventually.
Despite its polished look, the latest version must handle rising strength levels carefully to avoid imbalance. Following Rebirth, where long sessions shaped decks focused on growing power and zone dominance, the next phase may shift how the playing field works – possibly through structural changes or added depth. Though details about individual cards stay hidden, hints suggest further evolution lies ahead. Completion of unfinished stories tied to mysterious card users seems inevitable when the last chapter arrives.
Should victory in Dustbowl matter more than global rescue missions, then timing could not be better. Though Square Enix often rebuilds from nothing each time, Hamaguchi opts instead to preserve rather than replace. With Queen’s Blood now embedded across all titles, an intricate substructure takes shape – its endurance echoing the original’s strongest mechanics. While focus moves into closing phases of Cloud’s path, reassurance comes quietly: moments still remain around digital boards before silence returns. Finality waits just beyond one last hand dealt.