Monday 26 May 2014

FINAL FANTASY X’S WAR ON ORGANISED RELIGION

Circa 2001 when it originally came out for the PS2, no one was paying attention to that. The games media of the time focused on what would appeal to the everygamer: It was all “Amaaazing graphics” this, and “The first fully-voiced JRPG ever” that (actually untrue – the little-known Septerra Core beat it to that historic punch by almost two years).
What a difference over a decade of retrospect makes.
The infamous laughing scene now seems more meta than absurd. Mentally Photoshop Final Fantasy X director Yoshitori Kitase’s bobbling head on top of Tidus’ body for that part and he’s now howling with atheistic glee. At a blood moon.
FFX is set in a world called Spira, and at base, FFX is a picaresque story from the point of view of someone (Tidus) who is technically from the place he is supposed to be a stranger to.
Kitase’s laughter begins about here.
Day to day life in Spira is characterised by the omnipresent dread that comes from having a million-ton flying sea beast of doom cruising the ocean floor at all times. They called it ‘Sin.’ More Kitase laughter: It looks a lot like the biblical scourge, Leviathan. Maybe it’ll do a barrel roll on your island community this weekend, maybe it won’t.
Sin
Sin, eh? Subtle...
The only thing keeping people together, curiously, is the church of Yevon. ‘Church’ is a misnomer seeing as Yevon is Spira. Spira is a theocracy, and despite how colourful and carefree its archipelagos and cities might seem, it is also a fascist theocracy. That kind of dualism is intentional, and represents FFX’s broader Buddhist subtext. Hey what? We’ll get to that. In the meantime, if you go against Yevon, you’re gonna have a bad time.
You Just Gotta Have Fayth
Unlike the fantastic concept of something like Satan, Yevon’s devil is a real and present danger. They’ve even christened it what they want it to represent: Sin. The presence of Sin equals the promise of potential salvation, even though Sin always reappears, even when a summoner like Yuna manages to destroy it. Always.
Yevon placates the masses and maintains their power structure by insisting that Sin will only truly disappear once everyone has properly atoned through following their teachings to the letter. There is no rationale given for why this would work, and especially not when it will work. Nobody questions it. They are too afraid. The absence of technology and education creates a vacuum where “you just gotta have faith” can flourish. Faith in the powers-that-be.
Yuna-Dance-720
Water is one of the recurring motifs of FFX.
In truth, Sin is no divine punishment. It is the desperate creation of a man, different to machina in form but not function. ‘Machina’ is what FFX calls technology, and it is a massive point of contention. Of little direct mention in the game itself is the Machina War, seemingly the only major event in Spira’s history. It is why scenes of verdancy and ruin coexist so frequently they define the landscape. It’s why Yevon is what it is.
1,000 years BT (Before Tidus… this is not an official quantity), the city-states of Bevelle and Zanarkand warred with each other for reasons unknown. Bevelle had advanced technology – machina – on their side, Zanarkand had the ancient magics of its summoners. Bevelle’s weapons were going to win and win easily, so Zanarkand’s leader sacrificed the city’s remaining populace to create Sin. Sin promptly and undesirably rolled over onto Zanarkand and smushed it, ending the Machina War. Sin’s creator? Zanarkand’s leader – a man called Yu Yevon. It’s later revealed that Sin is just armour, and that he is the driving force inside it.
How he came to be Spira’s own Christ figure is a subtle parallel to the many different arguments surrounding who exactly Jesus was. FFX’s point is: Nobody knows, and it is too late for those questions. The more overt parallel is sharp and deliberate: Jesus’ martyrdom created something misunderstood by many and misused by many more. Yu Yevon’s martyrdom did the same. Spira’s saviour is Yevon, and Yevon is Sin, Spira’s oppressor. This cycle is entirely godless. People made it. People sustain it.
XXX
Yu Yevon - quite the friendly chap.
It’s important to note that FFX does not take issue with the concept of creationism. Spira itself doesn’t even have a creation myth. Instead, it is hugely critical of what people do with what gives rise to creationism, and under what unique and powerful social circumstances organised religion finds the opportunity to rise in the first place.
In this case, the end of war creates a desperate hope that war will not happen again. Fear is Final Fantasy X’s answer, and fear is exploitable. This is hard to argue with, and we have seen religion-as-regime over and over throughout history. It’s easy for that to happen. Some more radical thinkers even claim that Christianity was designedspecifically as a system of control. FFX contends that the entire thing – Yevon – is an accident; a strange turn of events seized by opportunists and culturally ingrained as quickly as possible. In only 1,000 years, the majority of an entire world is indentured to its church. This should, fittingly, be ringing some bells. Clang clang.
XXX
He moonlights as Wang in the Tekken games.
FFX even speaks of organised religion’s virtues – in this case, a strong sense of community – as an indictment of its hypocrisy. All races on Spira are united under Yevon, but only so long as they follow the teachings. Being that those teachings seem suspiciously engineered to favour the Dark Ages, the progressive Al Bhed are outcast as heathens for their interest in the technology that defined the Machina War. Machina is aggressively banned by the church.
That was the wind-up, here’s the pitch: Upon visiting Spira’s holy epicenter Bevelle, machina are to be seen in abundance. The mere suggestion of using them is enough to condemn an entire minority, it seems, but machina “officially sanctioned” by Yevon that fulfill identical and even warlike roles to the ones Rikku and co. go diving for are fine. Yevon’s word is law unlawful to itself: “Machina started our troubles,” is their excuse, “so machina is not allowed. Except for us.”
Machina also gave Bevelle such a decisive advantage during the Machina War with Zanarkand that it forced Yu Yevon to create Sin. They are right and they are wrong, but they are right for the wrong reasons. God vs. science has so far been a losing battle for the former. Take away the people’s means and command their minds. Clang clang.
Anima - a blunt instrument of the game's subtext.

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