Square Enix sets “Final Fantasy VII: Revelation” trilogy finale for Spring 2027
The third remake game is coming in Spring 2027 on PS5, Switch 2, Xbox Series X|S, and PC for the 30th anniversary.

Square Enix has revealed “Final Fantasy VII: Revelation” as the third and final title in its “Final Fantasy VII” remake trilogy. The game is slated for Spring 2027 across PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox Series X and S, and PC tied to the 30th anniversary of the original.
Square Enix just pulled the curtain back on the ending: “Final Fantasy VII: Revelation” will be the third and final title in its “Final Fantasy VII” remake trilogy, launching in Spring 2027. The announcement also comes with platform clarity that matters to anyone budgeting releases, staffing studios, or planning publishing calendars.
The specific date window is Spring 2027, and the rollout footprint is wide: PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox Series X and S, and PC. Importantly, Square Enix is tying the release to the 30th anniversary of the original “Final Fantasy VII,” which means the game is not being treated like a normal seasonal release. It is being positioned like an anniversary event, with all the operational and commercial pressure that comes with that label.
So why does “third and final” matter more than “new trailer”? Because trilogy finales change how everyone upstream thinks. For publishers and platform partners, a trilogy finale is usually where long-term momentum is supposed to cash out. It is also where risk concentrates. Announcing “final” publicly pressures the creative and business sides to land the arc cleanly, while the financial side expects the release to do heavyweight lifting for the brand.
This also shifts how decision-makers interpret the broader remake strategy. “Final Fantasy VII” is one of the most recognizable franchises in games, and remaking a cornerstone title tends to set a template for what the company believes modern audiences will pay for: high production value, multi-platform access, and a release schedule that can sustain attention across years. By locking the finale to a named milestone, Square Enix is effectively telling the market that it wants the product and the brand moment to reinforce each other.
Look at the platform mix and you can see the incentives. PlayStation 5 is a natural home for a major Square Enix release, but adding Nintendo Switch 2 and both Xbox Series X and S signals a deliberate push for reach rather than exclusivity. Meanwhile, PC is included as well. For executives, this is a reminder that release decisions are not just creative. They are about distribution economics, audience segmentation, and how quickly you can translate cultural demand into actual sales.
There is also an operational reality behind a Spring 2027 launch across four major ecosystems. Even when a company is committed, multi-platform releases require careful coordination across certification processes, performance targets, and build pipelines. Executives do not need to guess the importance here. When the announced footprint includes PS5, Switch 2, Xbox Series X and S, and PC, it implies the planning has been progressing far enough to commit to multiple platform needs, not just a single hardware lane.
From a regulatory and compliance standpoint, the industry does not always make the headlines, but the work is real. Big cross-platform releases typically trigger a lot of content rating and storefront readiness requirements by region, and each platform ecosystem can add its own technical gates. The source does not detail any compliance specifics, but the simple fact that this title is planned for broad multi-platform distribution in a specific window means management attention has to be allocated to the compliance calendar as early as possible. Anniversary-linked launches tend to leave less room for drifting milestones, since marketing and partnership plans are often scheduled well in advance.
For peers in publishing, studio leadership, and platform partnerships, “Revelation” sets a benchmark. It is a high-profile example of how a publisher uses timing and platform coverage to convert franchise gravity into measurable product momentum. If you are an executive tracking similar big-budget IP work, the takeaway is clear: announcing “the third and final title” is not only creative communication. It is a public commitment that shapes investor expectations, staffing plans, marketing spend cadence, and how you measure whether the franchise finale lands when the anniversary spotlight hits.
In short, Square Enix has confirmed that “Final Fantasy VII: Revelation” is the trilogy finale, with a Spring 2027 launch across PlayStation 5, Nintendo Switch 2, Xbox Series X and S, and PC, timed to the 30th anniversary of the original. That combination of “final,” “multi-platform,” and “anniversary” is the strategic load-bearing wall. Get it right, and the finale does not just close a story. It closes a chapter in the franchise remake era with brand-wide timing designed to matter.
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