Product Details
Chrono Trigger

Chrono Trigger
From Square Enix

Price:

This item is not available for purchase from this store.
Click here to go to Amazon to see other purchasing options.


26 new or used available from $34.00

Average customer review:

Product Description

Box for the very popular and semi-rare Chrono Trigger for the SNES!


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #1328 in Video Games
  • Brand: SQUARE
  • ESRB Rating: Everyone
  • Platform: Nintendo Super NES

Editorial Reviews

From the Manufacturer
SQUARESOFT classic created by the renowned "dream team" of Yuji Horii, Akira Toriyama, and Hironobu Sakaguchi.

Experience a non-linear game system, which allows players to change chronological game events to produce multiple ending scenarios for endless hours of gameplay.

Revolutionary battle system that seamlessly integrates battles into gameplay and allows players to avoid most enemy encounters.

Unique character abilities give players the option to perform visually impressive combination techniques, adding depth to battle strategies.

Prequel to Squaresoft's award-winning title Chrono-Cross.

A timeless masterpiece that is one of the most sought after games of all time.


Customer Reviews

The Greatest Console RPG ever made5
Chrono Trigger remains the greatest console RPG ever made. The version on this new CD compilation is identical in play to the original, but includes several animated cutscenes (done by Bird Studios, producers of Dragonball/DBZ and owned/operated by Akira Toriyama, who did the character designs for Chrono Trigger as well) which are themselves worth the price. (In point of fact, the price itself is interesting; the compilation of Chrono Trigger and Final Fantasy 4 costs less than either of them did separately when first released.)

Chrono Trigger centers around the adventures of Crono (yes, that's the correct spelling), a young man whose only apparent unusual feature is skill with a sword; otherwise, he lives a rather ordinary life, getting his allowance from his mom, taking care of his pet cat, and, as the story begins, looking forward to the Millennial Fair. At the Fair, he meets with a pretty blonde girl, Marle, who wears an interesting pendant, and who as a stranger to his town asks him if he'd be nice enough to show her around a bit.

Things get strange when they visit the exhibit area of one of Crono's friends, Lucca, who's an eccentric inventor. Her invention mysteriously reacts to the presence of Marle's pendant, and Marle vanishes, leaving the glowing pendant behind. When Crono decides to follow her wherever she's gone and bring her back, he's catapulted into a time-spanning adventure which will take him from the present to 65 million years in the past, and thousands of years in the future, and eventually to confront a world-destroying monster which may, at the same time, have been responsible for the creation of Crono's own civilization. Along the way he will learn secrets of his world's history, gain new powers, and gather allies, ranging from the super-strong cavegirl Ayla to the technologically advanced machine-man Robo.

Chrono Trigger's greatest claim to fame was, and is, that it boasts many possible endings, all quite different, based on what decisions you make during the game. They're not all easily predictable, either, and at least one or two are rather creepy. It's also interesting in that, after a certain point, you no longer have to keep Crono in your party (most games have a set viewpoint character that you have to keep around). It's quite possible to finish the game with *ANY* combination of available characters.

Gameplay is, in my opinion, superior to that of any of the Final Fantasy games. For one thing, it avoids the "eternally wandering monster" phenomenon which makes overland travel in the FF series so damnably frustrating, while still allowing you to wander freely across the land and visit places, looking for clues, new things to buy, and new friends and allies. For another, the combat sequences are much more active than those of other RPGs of its same era, and include special techniques -- both for individuals AND ones combining the techniques of two or three characters at once. Once you beat the game, you have the option of using "new game+", which allows you to start with the same power, and most of the items, that you'd gained along the way the first time. This is useful for those trying to play through again, since it allows you to zip through combats which, the first time, took many minutes to complete. (it does, however, introduce a bit of cognitive dissonance, especially in the early parts of the game: "How the heck are they throwing ME in jail?! I have enough power to level this entire CASTLE by myself!")

The soundtrack of Chrono Trigger is unbelieveably good. Somehow, through the miracle of MIDI, the original game had 3 full CDs worth of music crammed on it, and the skill with which the MIDI was composed and produced made it sound, at the time, very nearly orchestral. Even today the sound isn't bad, and the re-done, fully orchestral version is amazing. Each major character has its own theme, and they're all excellent. Chrono Trigger's soundtrack still rates as one of my absolute favorites.

If you like console RPGs at all, this is one that you absolutely MUST buy, and keep enshrined somewhere. Now available as part of "Final Fantasy Chronicles", there's even more reason to own it, since it's cheaper now than it was when first released!

The greatest RPG ever made in existence5
Okay, before FFC (Final Fantasy Chronicles) I played this game as the original SNES version. But I never really bought it. This is the third RPG I've ever played. (Super Mario RPG and Secret of Mana were the first two) The story was how should I say this? THE BEST RPG STORY I'VE EVER HAD THE PLEASURE OF PLAYING THROUGH! Okay, most of you are used to FFVII now that the playstation has come around. But before Final Fantasy VII, there was Chrono Trigger, the greatest RPG ever made to grace the gaming world today. Even its sequal Chrono Cross doesn't have as good a story. Even Lunar Silver Star Story Comeplete (which is said to have the greatest story ever!) doesn't have as good a story.

The characters are much more unique than in Final Fantasy. (They actually care for the planets future, even if it won't effect them.) Sorry to say that I'm getting tired of the Final Fantasy leaders not giving a care in the world for anything until the end of the game. From Crono to Magus, the characters shine with an Aura so powerful, they leave you even crying at times! The good news is that no character dies like in FFVII just to make you feel emotional, and there is no love story like in FFVIII to make you feel emotional.

The music is just as good (if not better) as FFVI(III in the US.) The best the SNES has ever had. Any RPGer will be delighted by this game.

The characters even have to work together in battle. With Dual Techs and Triple Techs, this is way better than Chrono Cross. When I first played this, I begged for a sequal, or at least make this another Final Fantasy Series. The game was awesome!

Any RPGer who thinks this has a bad story or plot, doesn't know the meaning of adventure and story! In fact if someone hated this story, I'd be insulted!

You go thorugh time travel, and witness the Day of Lavos. Even though that day is in 1999, and they live in 1000 AD, in 2300 they stumble upon this. Even if it doesn't effect their time, they realized that they couldn't turn thier backs on the planet.

A MUST HAVE RPG!

I agree.5
This game is already one of my favorites of all time and I only played it for the first time about two months ago. I did, however, rent it toward the end of my third grade year but when my dad and I went to buy it, they'd stopped selling most SNES games and replaced them with Playstation and N64 all over. But I downloaded this game on an Emulator and finally got to play it again as well as Final Fantasy III (VI), a game I unfortunately never got to play. But all the Final Fantasies are gonna be on the Gameboy Advance pretty soon and I expect this game to be as well, someday. Here's my review.

The graphics of this game are awesome. Even SNES games can have incredible graphics. In fact, the graphics here almost surpass many games even today. The storyline is awesome. I won't spoil it, even though some other reviewers already did. But the gameplay is the best of any RPG. Three of the Final Fantasy games should have had this style of gameplay instead of what they did have, which made them very frustrating. All the others are fine, though. I found this game somewhat easy, but I don't mean so much so that it's a breeze, but you'll still find yourself getting stuck on a couple of battles for a while, stop playing for a week, come back and and say 'ahh, I did it...'

Overall, I'd play this game over anything today. Ever since video games started looking more like movies, companies just seem to focus on making a game look great instead of having incredible storylines like the games of the SNES era almost all did. I've played Doom 3, Quake 4, Halo, and a ton of other movie games that I only enjoyed for a short amount of time before I just sort of decided to move on to something else. I've had Final Fantasy IV, VII, VIII, IX, and X for years and years and years and I play those more than anything else. Among my favorite video games ever, include The Legend of Zelda: A Link to The Past, Super Mario RPG, all the Mario Bro's games, Zelda: Ocarina of Time, and Super Mario 64. These are all games I grew up with, and I only wish Chrono Trigger and Final Fantasy III (VI) could have been a part of my life back then as well.