About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia. Pages: 68. Chapters: Present Bosses, Present Characters, Present Locations, Chrono Trigger, Chrono Trigger, Dragon Tank, Heckran, Present, Yakra XIII, Biggs, Carpenter, Cat, Chancellor, Chrono Trigger, Crono, Crono's Mother, Dalton, Elaine, Gato, Guardia Knight, Imp King, King Guardia XXXIII, Lucca, Marco, Marle, Melchior, Ozzie VIII, Piette, Present, Queen Aliza, Black Omen, Choras, Crono's House, Fiona's Forest, Fiona's Shrine, Forest Ruins, Guardia Castle, Guardia Forest, Heckran Cave, Hero's Grave, Leene Square, Lucca's House, Medina Village, Porre, Snail Stop, Sun Temple, Truce, West Cape, West Continent, Zenan Bridge. Excerpt: Chrono Trigger ) is a console role-playing game developed and published by Square for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System (SNES) in 1995. The game's story follows a group of adventurers who travel through time to prevent a global catastrophe. Square re-released a ported version by TOSE in Japan for the Sony PlayStation in 1999, later repackaged with a Final Fantasy IV port as Final Fantasy Chronicles in 2001. A slightly enhanced Chrono Trigger was released for the Nintendo DS on November 25, 2008 in North America and Japan, and went on sale in Europe on February 6, 2009. The SNES version will be released on PAL territories on the second quarter of the year 2011 via the Wii's Virtual Console service. The development team of Chrono Trigger was headed by three designers that Square dubbed the "Dream Team," consisting of Hironobu Sakaguchi, creator of the Final Fantasy series; Y ji Horii and Akira Toriyama, two freelance designers known for their work on Enix's Dragon Quest series; Nobuo Uematsu, a composer for the Final Fantasy series; and Kazuhiko Aoki, who produced the game. Masato Kato wrote most of the plot, while composer Yasunori Mitsuda scored most of the game before falling ill and deferring remaining tracks to Nobuo Uematsu. Chrono Trigger was well-received by reviewers and commerc...