5 Final Fantasy Fan Theories That CHANGE EVERYTHING

Final Fantasy is one of the game franchises that are awash in fan theories thinking this means that and that means this. Reality is, we are all just probably overthinking and over-evaluating these games. Regardless, it makes for some interesting fan theories.

Here are some of the most interesting Final Fantasy fan theories, via Gameranx.


Diner Gets Five Yolks In Two Eggs [Pic]

fiveyolks

When is a one-in-25 billion shot not a one-in-25 billion shot? Let us eggsplain.

Alan Millar got a particularly bountiful treat when he ordered ham, egg and chips (aka fries) in a British pub: staff who cracked the two eggs to fry for the meal found one with a double yolk and one with a triple yolk.

Unfortunately his meal at the Gloucester Old Spot pub has led to some dodgy statistical reporting with several newspapers claiming such a combination has only a one-in-25 billion chance of happening.

That would be true if multiple-yolk eggs appeared entirely randomly rather than in clusters. In practice such eggs are often intentionally packaged together by staff on production lines with the intention of “liberating” the carton to take home for an extra-yolky treat, an intention that doesn’t always pan out.

Economist Tim Harford explains more about this probability flaw — and its parallels with the 2008 financial crisis — in his book The Undercover Economist.

Violence/Gaming Meta-study Comes Under Fire

apalogo

200 university academics have criticized a report linking video games to violent behavior. They say the study from the American Psychological Association failed to properly assess the credibility of its source material.

The APA recently released an initial report of a task force made up of seven scientists. They did not carry out a study themselves. Instead they used two sources. Firstly they looked at four meta-analyses (studies of multiple studies) published between 2007 and 2010. Secondly they examined 31 studies published since 2009, selected from a pool of 131 studies that were whittled down using a checklist for relevance and statistical reliability.

The APA’s report concluded that there was a “consistent relation” by which violent video game use led to increased aggression and decreased empathy. However, it said that violent games were only one risk factor and that it was a combination of factors that led to aggressive and violent behavior.

Now an open letter from academics says the report could have several flaws:

  • While the report ultimately derives from multiple studies, it may be missing the findings of studies that failed to show a link and thus weren’t published, or of studies which tried and failed to replicate previous findings.
  • Combining multiple studies may exaggerate small supposed correlations that don’t necessarily stand up. For example, a “gamers = violent” conclusion might be too simple and ignore a more complex explanation such as “gamers are more likely to be male; men are more likely to be violent.”
  • The way people express violence in laboratory settings might not accurately reflect behavior in the real world.
  • While meta-studies have their uses, it isn’t necessarily correct to assume that lots of studies showing weak evidence of a violence-gaming link can combine to produce a strong evidence base.

The academics also note that overall violence among youths has fallen during the period in which video gaming has become more popular.

Gamer Throws Epic Sulk On TV [Video]

Back in the 1990s, a man named Dave Perry was touted as one of the best video gamers in the United Kingdom. Unfortunately when he had an embarrassing performance on TV shows Gamesmaster, he chose to deal with his defeat in a memorably immature manner…

To be fair to Perry, he later claimed that the game to be played was changed at late notice and producers were well aware that he had never played Mario 64 beforehand. He talks about the incident in this Eurogamer article.