Final Fantasy 6 Remake Now Available for iOS in iTunes App Store

Final Fantasy 6 is now available for the iOS, and downloadable in the iTunes App Store for $15.99.

Square Enix made the announcement yesterday, Polygon reported.

The game was initially released on the Super Nintendo in 1994, and has been remodeled to run on an iOS device and includes touchscreen controls suitable for smartphones. With its cloud saving features, the game is able to be played across either an iPhone or iPad.

Final Fantasy 6's re-release for Android devices is causing major problems after a game breaking glitch is leaving the game useless.

According to Kotaku, about halfway through the game during a fight between Kefka and General Leo in Thamasa, Kefka is supposed to kill the general, except instead, the game freezes up.

Square Enix is aware of the glitch, and has promised a fix is on its way.

"The following bugs have been confirmed and fixes are forthcoming:?- The game no longer crashes during the cutscene showing the fight between Kefka and General Leo.?- The icon for Sabin's Blitz ability now displays correctly.?- A misspelling of the term "Esper" has been corrected," an update in the Google Play store said.

"I'm playing on a Nexus 7 2013. I was doing just fine until I got to the major event in Thamasa. Then it crashed on my twice in the same part," said a gamer on Gamefaqs.com, who along with thousands of other people are complaining about the glitch in the game on message boards.

The mobile version of Final Fantasy VI is in 2D, making it different from the versions of FF 3 and FF 4 that also came to the Android platform in recent years. The battles will also be re-balanced making them less tedious.

Gamers in the U.S. received the sixth installment of the RPG series through the SNES console in 1994. However, the game was re-titled Final Fantasy VI in order to keep with the sequence of the series in the U.S. as not every version was ported from Japan. The original 2 and 3 did not make it to the states until they were re-designed for the Nintendo DS in the early to mid-2000s.