Final Fantasy XIV director Naoki Yoshida recently spoke about the future of the massively multiplayer online role-playing game with The Washington Post, saying that at its current growth rate, users can expect the online world to continue expanding with new content for at least five more years, if not indefinitely.
âEven now, [Square Enix CEO Yosuke Matsuda] is encouraging us to strive for more players and for 30 million adventurers, and he still has future plans for us,â Yoshida told The Washington Post via translator. âLuckily, we donât see any stopping in our momentum. At one point we thought maybe we might plateau, but fortunately our player base just continues to expand and grow.â
While game development is never easy, Final Fantasy XIV expansions and patches have continued to arrive at a decent clip under Yoshidaâs guidance thanks to the way his team has streamlined the process of creating new content. Yoshida said that while planning expansions, they expect about 70% of the work to already be done due to previous development, leaving just enough room for iterating on those standardized resources.
The writing, Yoshida added, is always done much farther in advance. The story for Final Fantasy XIVâs upcoming Endwalker expansion, which launches this fall, was completed all the way back in October 2019.
Final Fantasy XIV got off to a rocky start when it first launched in 2010, but Square Enixâs decision to place Yoshida (then known chiefly as a talented Dragon Quest X planner) in a leadership role led to the 2013 release of A Realm Reborn, a reboot of the original game thatâs served as a foundation for all subsequent expansions.
Itâs largely assumed that Yoshidaâs work turning the MMO around earned him a role producing the seriesâ next single-player installment, Final Fantasy XVI. But for now, heâs remaining silent on what they have in store so as to avoid inadvertently raising or dashing the hopes of the diverse Final Fantasy fanbase.
âWe donât want to say something thatâs half-baked and cause speculation on [Final Fantasy XVI],â Yoshida said. âWith any Final Fantasy fan, depending on which Final Fantasy title is your jam, the point that you get excited will tend to differ.â