Serufi Tirumitto is a character from the 1999 role-playing video game Final Fantasy VIII. She is introduced as a recent transfer student from Trabia Garden to its rival school Balamb Garden, a prestigious military academy for elite mercenaries (known as "SeeDs") and home to several of the game's major characters. She is also the pilot in command of the Ragnarok starship, the primary means of air transport for the player's party.
Selphie was the second character drawn by Final Fantasy VIII artist Tetsuya Nomura after the game's lead protagonist Squall Leonhart. The development team originally intended to program Selphie with some of the game's most powerful attacks. A younger version of Selphie appears as a supporting character in the Kingdom Hearts series, which was created by Nomura. Other appearances include the mobile game Final Fantasy Record Keeper as well as the Dissidia Final Fantasy fighting game series. Selphie has received a generally positive reception, being noted for her relatable personality as well as her carefree and energetic demeanour, although some critics did not respond well to her characterization as a childlike female character.
Selphie is depicted in the game as 17 years old and stands at tall. She wields a large pair of nunchaku in battle. In the European version of Final Fantasy VIII, her weapon is renamed as "Shinobou" due to censorship laws in the United Kingdom concerning the portrayal of ninjutsu in visual media which were instituted by James Ferman, the director of the British Board of Film Censors.
A Preadolescence version of Selphie appears in the Kingdom Hearts series, with the inaugural series installment in 2002 being the character's first voiced appearance. She is voiced by Mayuko Aoki in the Japanese version and Molly Marlette in the English version.
Throughout the game, she revisits her childhood closeness with Irvine Kinneas, Irvine: "I really liked this girl, and it made me so happy just talking to her." ( Final Fantasy VIII) who serves as her copilot on the Ragnarok. Selphie: "It just kinda took off! I don't know. It's pretty easy. I think it'll be fine. But there's no guarantee it won't crash!" ( Final Fantasy VIII) A recurring character moment involve Selphie singing a song about trains during the party's train journeys.
Selphie has appeared in several Final Fantasy franchise spin-off games, including playable appearances in titles like Dissidia Final Fantasy Opera Omnia and Final Fantasy Record Keeper.
Critical reception for the character has been generally positive, with some critics calling her one of the most appealing and memorable aspects of Final Fantasy VIII. Meagan Marie from Game Informer considered Selphie to be one of her "personal favorite" Final Fantasy female characters. Dave Smith from IGN praised Selphie as one of the game's few bright lights, highlighting her hairstyle and her cheerfulness as an effective foil for the angst-filled personalities of its cast. Jeremy Parish from USGamer called Selphie his favorite role-playing game character, going as far as calling her the first video game character he could relate to as a realistic human being, setting her apart from other game characters given the sharp contrast between her conduct and the rest of her team. Parish made the claim that she "broke the mold for RPG characters as either grim heroes or blank slates or a combination of the two". Matt Sainsbury from Digitally Downloaded felt that Selphie stood out to him as a physically attractive character, in spite of the graphical limitations of Final Fantasy VIII as a product of its time, because of her "cute, quirky hairstyle" and her attractive mini-dress outfit. David Lozada from GameRevolution considered Selphie's character arc, which sees her dealing with insecurity and childhood trauma in her own way, to be noteworthy because he found that "few other Final Fantasy games feature female character arcs that are as remarkable" as her growth into a confident, strong woman by the game's ending. WomenGamers gave a positive assessment of the character, noting that while others may underestimate Selphie's intellect due to her perky and energetic nature, she demonstrates that she is competent when a problematic situation arises and appears to be as smart as her prodigious comrade Quistis. Selphie received high scores from WomenGamers for the stance and marketing effort behind her, with praise for the lack of sexualization surrounding the character's appearances in promotional material for Final Fantasy VIII and her balanced portrayal as a clumsy yet capable fighter. Selphie Tilmitt Of Final Fantasy VIII, WomenGamers.com, May 9, 2000 (archived).
Several critics note that elements of Selphie's behavior and personality resemble that of other female characters within the Final Fantasy franchise and that she represented a common recurring character archetype used throughout related media. Commentary on this aspect of her character drew both positive and negative responses. Parish argued that Selphie never seemed "overbearing or forced" to him, unlike many other female characters in the series who also occupy the same "genki girl" niche. Sainsbury praised Selphie as the "original somewhat ditzy, super perky, brighten-up-your-day background character" archetype within the Final Fantasy franchise, which is continued by characters who appear in subsequent instalments like Rikku and Vanille. Conversely, Andy Kelly from PC Gamer recognized Selphie as the light-hearted Final Fantasy character archetype "who gets hit extra hard when something tragic inevitably happens", but found her to be "almost sickeningly friendly and good-natured", and her "bouncy and eager to please tendencies" unendearing.
Appearances
Other appearances
Promotion and merchandise
Reception
Analysis
External links
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