| Full motion video, usually abbreviated as FMV, is a popular term for television-quality film or animation in a video game. The first use of FMV began in the
early 1990s when personal
computers and consoles became technically capable of
utilizing more than a few minutes' worth of movies in a game. Within a few years, FMV cutscenes became a nearly mandatory component in computer games, and even as a better-quality replacement for
sprites in FMV games. Popular platforms for FMV include QuickTime, MPEG and Smacker.
FMV differs from real-time cutscenes in that real-time cutscenes must render the game environment just as in the actual game,
whereas FMV is simply a playback of something that was previously recorded, usually rendered by a much more powerful machine.
Thus, FMV was traditionally usually much higher quality than real-time cutscenes, and the two can usually be differentiated by
this.
With games running on more modern hardware, the use of FMV for cut-scenes has reduced drastically as similar quality graphics
can be produced in the game engine with much less disc space required for the source data. Good examples of this are the Half-Life series which also left the player in control during cut scenes, reducing the
feeling of losing control.
Using the game engine also allows the cut scenes to be played at much higher resolution (assuming sufficient processing power
in the computer), so now FMV cut scenes can usually be spotted because they're 'lower' quality than the in game graphics.
The Sony PlayStation was probably
the first console to popularize FMVs. The FMV cutscenes in
Final Fantasy VIII are considered movie quality and are
absolutely beautiful (though the game wasn't as popular as Final
Fantasy VII). FMVs are still being used in this day in age mostly by the Sony PlayStation 2. Squaresoft
(creators of Final Fantasy, Chrono Trigger, and Kingdom Hearts) are known to
make games with great FMVs in them. The intro to Kingdom Hearts and the first FMV in Final Fantasy X are good examples. The FMVs in Final Fantasy XII are said to be the most realistic yet (you could probably count the individual hairs on
a character's head. That's how realistic it is).
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