The moments that closed out the greatest retro games — and never left us
Midway through Final Fantasy VII, the flower girl Aerith Gainsborough is killed without warning by the game's antagonist Sephiroth — a moment so unexpected and devastating that it redefined what video game storytelling could do. Players who had spent thirty or more hours building her up lost her permanently, with no resurrection possible regardless of how many Phoenix Downs they carried.
The boss fight against Psycho Mantis in Metal Gear Solid remains one of the most audacious fourth-wall breaks in gaming history: the villain reads the player's memory card, comments on their other games, makes the screen go black with a fake VIDEO signal, and can only be defeated by physically unplugging the controller and inserting it into the second port. The game itself becomes the puzzle.
Planescape: Torment ends not with combat but with a conversation — and with an answer to the question the entire game has been asking. The Nameless One, an amnesiac immortal who has lived thousands of lives and taken thousands of identities, finally confronts the entity his actions have created and must answer the central question of the game's philosophy with every choice he has made.
Super Metroid ends with a three-minute timed escape sequence through a collapsing Zebes, culminating in a boss fight that strips Samus of all her upgrades and forces her to rebuild from scratch in real time — then reveals her fully in her Zero Suit as the planet explodes behind her escape ship, her completion time determining how much of herself she shows.
Chrono Trigger was the first mainstream JRPG to feature multiple distinct endings — thirteen in total — determined by when in the game the player chose to fight the final boss. Each ending offered a different conclusion to the time-travel narrative, rewarding curiosity and replay in a way no prior game of the genre had attempted.
The entire world of Link's Awakening — its island, its inhabitants, the girl Marin who befriended Link — is revealed to be a dream of the Wind Fish. Waking the Wind Fish ends the game and erases Koholint Island and everyone on it from existence. The player destroys the world to complete the quest.
Final Fantasy VI's ending is a feature-length sequence: the party battles through Kefka's tower in a three-team gauntlet, defeats him in a final fight set to the operatic "Dancing Mad," and then escapes a collapsing world while the game plays credit sequences for each of its fourteen characters — a conclusion so ambitious that it pushed the SNES hardware to its limits and ran for over thirty minutes.
EarthBound's final battle against Giygas — a shapeless embodiment of evil beyond comprehension — cannot be won through conventional combat. The only way to defeat it is to use the Pray command, which causes a chain of prayer from the friends and family Ness has met throughout the game to reach through the fourth wall and ask the player themselves to pray.
After defeating what appears to be the final boss, Castlevania: Symphony of the Night reveals that the real ending requires defeating Dracula's castle again — but upside down. The inverted castle, an entire copy of the map reflected vertically with new enemies and areas, doubles the game's length in a single unexpected cutscene.
Baldur's Gate ends by revealing that the player character is a direct child of Bhaal, the dead god of murder — and that the main antagonist, Sarevok, is their half-sibling. The revelation reframes the entire game: every plot to destabilise the Sword Coast was a power play within a divine inheritance, and the player has been unknowingly competing for a god's legacy.
Resident Evil's ending is determined by how many S.T.A.R.S. members the player kept alive and which choices were made during the game — culminating in a mansion explosion and a helicopter rescue that varies significantly depending on whether Chris or Jill is chosen, and whether key characters like Barry or Rebecca survived.
Sonic CD was the first Sonic game to introduce a branching ending determined by player thoroughness: completing the game without destroying the robot generators and freeing the Little Planet Flowers results in a bleak "Bad Future" ending and a grim credit sequence; destroying all generators and collecting the Time Stones results in a "Good Future" where the world is restored and Sonic dances through a celebratory animated sequence.