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  2. Wikipedia : Featured article review/Chrono Trigger/archive2

    en.wikipedia.org/.../Chrono_Trigger/archive2

    Notified: Zeality, Mazewaxie, WikiProject Video Games, WikiProject Square Enix Given that it has been two weeks since I posted my concerns about this article and have received no response, it's time to start a formal FAR.

  3. Chrono (series) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrono_(series)

    Chrono Trigger is a role-playing video game which was released on the Super Nintendo Entertainment System on March 11, 1995 in Japan and on August 22 in North America. The game's story follows a group of young adventurers led by Crono, who are accidentally transported through time and learn that the world will be destroyed in the distant future.

  4. The Messenger (2018 video game) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Messenger_(2018_video...

    He hoped to create a game with a ninja as a protagonist, and pitched the concept to the Sabotage Studio co-founder Martin Brouard. Boulanger took inspiration from games such as Ninja Gaiden and Chrono Trigger, and fundamentally altered the game many times. The soundtrack was created by Eric "Raindbowdragoneyes" Brown, who created each song ...

  5. Remembering Chrono Trigger - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-09-10-remembering-chrono...

    If you're a fan of the Final Fantasy franchise, it goes without saying that you're probably a Chrono Trigger fan. Released in 1995 for the NES, the Japanese role-playing game was developed by what ...

  6. Radical Dreamers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radical_Dreamers

    Radical Dreamers was developed by Square, the company which had previously developed Chrono Trigger. [28] Masato Kato wrote Radical Dreamers after Chrono Trigger ' s release, feeling that Trigger concluded with "unfinished business". [29] He composed the main story and drafted the concepts for the sub-scenarios, leaving them to be completed by ...

  7. Chrono Resurrection - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chrono_Resurrection

    Chrono Resurrection, also known as Chrono Trigger: Resurrection, is an unreleased fangame developed by North American team Resurrection Games under Nathan Lazur's direction. It is based on the critically acclaimed role-playing game Chrono Trigger for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System by the Japanese company Square .

  8. Lucca Ashtear - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucca_Ashtear

    In the PlayStation release of Chrono Trigger, one of the endings show Lucca finding an abandoned child who she takes in. [9] This child turns out to be the character Kid from the sequel Chrono Cross. Lucca serves in a supporting role in this game as the owner of an orphanage, which she converted her house into.

  9. Lavos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lavos

    Lavos (ラヴォス, Ravosu) is a fictional extraterrestrial monster and the main antagonist of the 1995 role-playing video game Chrono Trigger, also appearing as an antagonist in its sequel, Chrono Cross. A parasitic alien that falls from the skies in 65,000,000 B.C., its impact results in an ice age.