FFT: Emergence is set up here as a clean starter shell so you can publish the page now and flesh it out later. The core layout is ready — hero, overview, features, gameplay notes, sidebar info, FAQ and related links — so Claude or ChatGPT can expand it section by section when you are ready.
Start with a clean overview, then layer in what actually makes this project worth playing.
This page is ready for the full write-up, but the layout is already doing the heavy lifting. Use this section to explain what FFT: Emergence actually is, what kind of Final Fantasy project it is, and why someone should give it a shot instead of playing vanilla again.
Once you flesh it out properly, this should feel like a proper RomHaven game page rather than a stub: clear overview, specific changes, honest difficulty notes, good player guidance, and links to other relevant Final Fantasy hacks.
Base game, platform, hack author, completion status, major system changes, story changes, QoL work, and whether the challenge comes from smarter design or just bigger numbers.
Don’t pad it with generic JRPG waffle. Don’t invent features. Don’t say it is “the best” unless the page actually explains why in plain language.
Turn this into the quick-hit section that tells players exactly what changed.
Use this section to describe the actual rhythm of the game once researched and tested.
The final version of this section should tell the player what the first hour feels like, how the pacing changes from vanilla, what kind of party-building or tactical decisions matter most, and whether the project is more about challenge, replay value, story, balance, or experimentation.
A short practical section always makes the page feel more complete.
Easy section to bulk-fill later once you’ve confirmed the facts.
This is a starter FAQ answer. Replace it with a clean one-paragraph summary covering the base game, the kind of project it is, and the main reason players choose it.
Replace with an honest answer about whether the challenge comes from smarter design, rebalance changes, randomness, or straight-up hard mode tuning.
Replace with the clearest possible comparison against vanilla — what changes first, what changes most, and what kind of player will notice it fastest.
Swap this out once the emulator link is added and the ROM filename / system are confirmed.
Keep the internal links strong from day one.