Rinoa Heartilly

Rinoa Heartilly
Final Fantasy character
Rinoa as drawn by Tetsuya Nomura
First gameFinal Fantasy VIII (1999)[1]
Created byKazushige Nojima
Designed byTetsuya Nomura
Voiced byEN: Skyler Davenport
JA: Kana Hanazawa
In-universe information
WeaponBlaster Edge[2]
HomeGalbadia

Rinoa Heartilly (Japanese: リノア・ハーティリー, Hepburn: Rinoa Hātirī) is a character and the co-protagonist of Square's (now Square Enix) 1999 role-playing video game Final Fantasy VIII. She is a teenaged member of a resistance faction known as the Forest Owls. After she recruits protagonist Squall Leonhart and his friends, she decides to stay with his group and falls in love with Squall in the process. During their adventure, she is briefly possessed by the evil sorceress Ultimecia and becomes a sorceress herself once the spirit leaves her body. After defeating Ultimecia, Rinoa and Squall become a couple. Rinoa has also made cameo appearances in other Final Fantasy and Square Enix games.

Character artist Tetsuya Nomura designed her to be cute, not beautiful, as he wanted to create a character whose personality would leave an impression on the player. He felt that the more realistic graphical capabilities the original PlayStation could provide, along with advances like full motion video, made female characters too beautiful and was overshadowing their personalities. The design team set out from the beginning to make Rinoa's clothing more realistic than past Final Fantasy games.

Critics and players alike have praised Rinoa for her personality and her beauty. They also praised her romance with Squall, calling both their relationship and Final Fantasy VIII one of the most romantic Final Fantasy titles. Some reviewers, however, called their relationship forced and criticized that they expressed their feelings so late in the story.

  1. ^ "Rinoa Heartilly Profile". IGN UK. June 1, 2014. Archived from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  2. ^ "Final Fantasy VIII Characters Rinoa". Square Enix. Archived from the original on May 16, 2011. Retrieved March 8, 2020.

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