Final Fantasy VII Trilogy: Coming to Every Major Console, Well…Eventually

Square Enix confirms the full Final Fantasy VII Remake trilogy will reach all major consoles, with Part 3 in development and a staggered but inevitable global release.

News by Asura Kagawa on  Sep 13, 2025

People who play video games are very excited about the big news that Square Enix shared about the Final Fantasy VII Remake series. Many people thought the announcement would be mostly about Final Fantasy VII Rebirth coming to the new Nintendo Switch, but the real news was that the whole trilogy will be coming to more than one device in the future.

Square Enix said in a statement that Final Fantasy VII Remake Intergrade will soon be available on all devices. After that, Rebirth is set to come out sometime in 2026 on Xbox and Switch 2. The most interesting part of the news release, though, was a look at how Part Three was being made.

Final Fantasy VII Trilogy, Major Consoles, News, NoobFeed

Square Enix stated that work is still going on the last part of the trilogy and reassured fans that the whole thing will be available on all major consoles at some point. People are talking about how to handle Part Three since the announcement came out. Parts one and two, Remake and Rebirth, came out first on PlayStation and then on PC, Xbox, and finally Switch.

It's still unclear whether Part Three will follow the same release order or try to hit all systems at the same time. Square Enix has only ever been in charge of one platform at a time in the past. At first, they worked on PlayStation. Then, they moved on to PC and finally Xbox and Switch. This step-by-step development process not only ensures efficiency, but it also makes exclusivity windows last longer.

The way the company talks about Part Three makes it sound like the game will not be exclusive to PlayStation for long, even if it does launch on PlayStation first. The word "eventually" is the most important in the statement. It leaves room for interpretation but confirms a wider release.

Fans and people who study the video game business are also paying attention to Square Enix's new plan. Getting rid of PlayStation-only contracts could make it easier to build games for other platforms, so studios could work on more than one version at the same time. Essentially, developers will need to adapt to a more global release plan. Other big publishers do this all the time, but Square Enix has always been cautious about it.

The delayed release may be a little inconvenient for people who want to play on their favorite system, but the long-term benefit is clear: everyone will be able to play the Final Fantasy VII trilogy. Any player, on PC, Xbox, or the Switch 2, will be able to fully enjoy these classic games by the end of this run. Part Three, which doesn't have a set release date yet, will finish the story on all devices, which is what long-time fans have been hoping for.

Ultimately, Square Enix's response indicates that they have revised their approach to distributing games across platforms. They now favor long-term availability and accessibility over short-term exclusivity. Gamers may now look forward to being able to play Final Fantasy VII on the systems they like most.

Asura Kagawa

Staff Writer, NoobFeed

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