It runs better than the PS4 remaster. It sounds better (Japanese VO). It looks better on an OLED Vita (via Adrenaline) or upscaled on a PC than the blurry console port. And the -Extra additions mean you don't have to grind 100 hours just to see the secret ending.
| Feature | PSP English V2 | Official HD Remaster | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Original Japanese (Superior emotional range) | English Dub (Mixed quality) / Japanese (DLC) | | Violence/Censorship | Uncensored (Blood, execution scenes) | Censored (Black blood, removed cutscenes) | | RTS Mechanics | Full pixel-precise touch/mouse emulation | Janky console port | | Multiplayer | Ad-hoc Party (Can still emulated via PPSSPP) | Removed entirely | | Performance | Perfect on PSP/PPSSPP | 30 FPS lock on PS4 (Stutters) | Final Fantasy Type-0 -english Patched V2- Psp Iso -Extra
Then came the savior: .
If you have a PSP, a Vita, or even a decent Android phone, seek out this specific patch. Class Zero is waiting. And remember the moto of the Vermilion Bird: "When we die, we shall not die alone. We leave our marks in the history of the Rubicus." It runs better than the PS4 remaster
In the sprawling universe of Fabula Nova Crystallis —the mythos that gave us Final Fantasy XIII and Final Fantasy XV —there lies a hidden gem that many Western fans completely missed during the PSP’s golden era. That game is Final Fantasy Type-0 . And the -Extra additions mean you don't have
Keywords used naturally: Final Fantasy Type-0, English Patched V2, PSP ISO, Extra, SkyBladeCloud, PPSSPP, New Game+, Fabula Nova Crystallis.
Originally released exclusively in Japan in 2011, Type-0 was a technical marvel for the PlayStation Portable, offering a dark, mature war story, a cast of 14 unique playable characters, and action-RPG combat that pushed the handheld to its limits. For years, English-speaking fans were left in the dark, relying on messy, incomplete fan translations.