Naoki 'Yoshi-P' Yoshida, director of Final Fantasy 14, stated that extended release intervals for new Final Fantasy titles make it harder for younger players to connect with the series. He shared these comments in an interview promoting the mobile launch of Dissidia Duellum Final Fantasy. Yoshida, who is 53 and has played since the first Final Fantasy, contrasted this with the faster release cadence enjoyed by older fans.
Naoki 'Yoshi-P' Yoshida, director of Final Fantasy 14, addressed challenges in attracting younger audiences to the Final Fantasy series during an interview tied to the launch of Dissidia Duellum Final Fantasy on iOS and Android on March 23, 2026. At 53 years old, Yoshida noted his own history with the series, having played Final Fantasy 1 in real time. He observed that younger generations, accustomed to action-based combat and online competitive play, find recent entries harder to engage with compared to older fans who benefited from more frequent releases in the 1990s and 2000s. 'I'm sorry to say... the release intervals for new titles have gotten longer, so some players haven't really had the chance to connect with the series the way older fans did,' Yoshida said. Square Enix has attempted to bridge these gaps through remasters, remakes, and spinoffs, though Yoshida's comments highlight ongoing concerns about development cycles in triple-A games. Recent mainline titles like Final Fantasy 15 and 16 have sparked division among fans, potentially complicating entry points for newcomers.