The Critically Acclaimed Mmorpg

2021Copypasta / advertising parodysemi-active

Also known as: FF14 Copypasta · Have You Heard Of The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG · FFXIV Free Trial Copypasta

The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG is a 2021 Final Fantasy XIV copypasta featuring robotic, enthusiastic pitches of the game's free trial that became so pervasive it earned acknowledgment in official Square Enix advertising.

"The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG" is a copypasta and inside joke born from *Final Fantasy XIV*'s free trial marketing. Emerging in early 2021, the meme mimics the overly enthusiastic pitch that FFXIV players are notorious for giving their friends, promoting the game's generous free trial with an almost robotic level of detail. It quickly became one of the most recognizable gaming copypastas of the 2020s, eventually getting acknowledged by Square Enix themselves in official advertising.

TL;DR

"The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG" is a copypasta and inside joke born from *Final Fantasy XIV*'s free trial marketing.

Overview

The meme centers on a block of promotional text that reads something like: *"Have you heard of the critically acclaimed MMORPG Final Fantasy XIV? With an expanded free trial which you can play through the entirety of A Realm Reborn and the award-winning Heavensward expansion up to level 60 for free with no restrictions on playtime."* The joke is that FFXIV players are so evangelical about the game that they'll recite this marketing pitch word-for-word to anyone within earshot, whether asked or not2. The copypasta captures a real dynamic in the FFXIV community: the game's fans are famously persistent recruiters, and the free trial is genuinely generous enough that their pitch sounds like a sales script3.

The copypasta traces back to around March 4, 2021, when Square Enix launched an updated free trial website for *Final Fantasy XIV*4. Around the same time, the game's official YouTube channel published three live-action advertising videos featuring a woman who aggressively pitches the free trial to friends and strangers in everyday situations1. One ad features a woman checking out a mundane free trial for a streaming service before being interrupted by the FFXIV pitch. Another has her pestering someone about a gym membership. In each, a *Final Fantasy XIV* character appears at the end for backup1.

Even before the official ads dropped, FFXIV players had already been copy-pasting the free trial pitch across social media as a running joke. On February 12, 2021, Twitter user AnonyMooseXIV posted an "I Wish All X a Very Y" meme that referenced the copypasta, picking up nearly 1,400 likes and 900 retweets4.

The FFXIV English Twitter account leaned into the joke on April 17, 2021, tweeting a version of the copypasta themselves4.

Origin & Background

Platform
FFXIV community (copypasta), YouTube (Square Enix ads)
Key People
Unknown, HatashHyrunashi, AnonyMooseXIV
Date
2021
Year
2021

The copypasta traces back to around March 4, 2021, when Square Enix launched an updated free trial website for *Final Fantasy XIV*. Around the same time, the game's official YouTube channel published three live-action advertising videos featuring a woman who aggressively pitches the free trial to friends and strangers in everyday situations. One ad features a woman checking out a mundane free trial for a streaming service before being interrupted by the FFXIV pitch. Another has her pestering someone about a gym membership. In each, a *Final Fantasy XIV* character appears at the end for backup.

Even before the official ads dropped, FFXIV players had already been copy-pasting the free trial pitch across social media as a running joke. On February 12, 2021, Twitter user AnonyMooseXIV posted an "I Wish All X a Very Y" meme that referenced the copypasta, picking up nearly 1,400 likes and 900 retweets.

The FFXIV English Twitter account leaned into the joke on April 17, 2021, tweeting a version of the copypasta themselves.

How It Spread

The copypasta spread rapidly across platforms throughout 2021. It became a fixture on 4chan's /v/ board, Twitter, Reddit, and even popped up in real-world settings like gaming conventions and Discord servers. The joke worked because it was rooted in truth: every FFXIV player seemed to know the free trial pitch by heart.

On May 20, 2021, Twitter user HatashHyrunashi posted a word art version of the copypasta that turned the text itself into visual art. That post pulled in over 6,900 likes and 3,100 retweets. Word art edits became a popular sub-format.

When the *Endwalker* expansion launched in December 2021 and overwhelmed FFXIV's servers, Reddit user Xane posted an edited word art version to r/ffxiv on December 16 that riffed on the server congestion. It earned over 1,800 upvotes.

Square Enix's own advertising leaned hard into the meme energy. PCGamesN described the official ads as "channelling the same energy" as the annoying friend who won't stop talking about FFXIV. TheGamer called the live-action trailers "an accurate representation of every friend you've ever had that can't seem to shut up about the game".

The meme got a second wind on July 28, 2023, when Square Enix announced that the *Stormblood* expansion would be added to the free trial in patch 6.5, raising the level cap to 70. The next day, HatashHyrunashi posted an updated word art copypasta reflecting the new trial limits. That post exploded with over 10,000 likes and 5,000 retweets in under 24 hours.

How to Use This Meme

The standard approach is to drop the copypasta text into any conversation, comment section, or message thread, ideally when it's completely unprompted. Common variations include:

1

The straight paste: Copy the full free trial pitch verbatim into a random discussion, as if you're an NPC who can only say one thing.

2

The pivot: Start responding to someone's question or statement normally, then pivot mid-sentence into the copypasta. ("What's the best MMO? Well, have you heard of the critically acclaimed...")

3

The word art: Arrange the copypasta text into decorative typography or fit it into another meme template.

4

The interruption: Insert the pitch into unrelated meme formats, treating the FFXIV sales pitch like an intrusive thought.

Cultural Impact

What makes this copypasta unusual is that the company behind the game actively embraced it. Square Enix produced official live-action advertisements that deliberately mirrored the "annoying FFXIV friend" dynamic, with actors literally ambushing people to pitch the free trial. The ads repeated "Final Fantasy XIV Online" so many times that PCGamesN noted "it sounds weirder every time".

The meme also reflects a genuine marketing success. FFXIV's free trial is unusually generous for an MMO, offering hundreds of hours of content across the base game and multiple expansions at no cost. The copypasta, while a joke, doubled as effective word-of-mouth advertising. The game's official free trial page now promotes play "up to level 70" with "no restriction on playtime," covering three full games' worth of content.

*Final Fantasy XIV* itself had a notable comeback story. The original 2010 launch was so poorly received that it appeared on lists of games known for negative reception. Square Enix shut the game down and rebuilt it from scratch as *A Realm Reborn* in 2013, turning it into one of the most popular MMOs in the world. The copypasta meme captures the zeal of a fanbase that watched their game rise from the ashes.

Fun Facts

Square Enix's game composer created music videos reenacting beloved in-game memes around the same time the copypasta was taking off, showing the company was fully on board with meme culture.

The free trial pitch has been updated at least twice: first covering A Realm Reborn plus Heavensward (level 60), then adding Stormblood (level 70) in patch 6.5.

Korea got an entirely different marketing campaign for FFXIV that included an anime-style promotional video, making the live-action copypasta ads a distinctly Western phenomenon.

The original 2010 version of *Final Fantasy XIV* was so bad it made Wikipedia's list of games notable for negative reception, making the fanbase's evangelical enthusiasm for the rebuilt version all the more ironic.

Derivatives & Variations

Word Art Copypasta:

HatashHyrunashi's typographic arrangements of the full copypasta text, updated each time the free trial expanded[4].

Endwalker Server Queue Edit:

A modified version posted during the December 2021 server congestion crisis that joked about the free trial being unavailable due to overcrowding[4].

"I Wish All X a Very Y" Crossover:

AnonyMooseXIV's February 2021 mashup that placed the copypasta into the "I Wish All" template format[4].

Live-Action Ad Parodies:

Fan-made videos mimicking Square Enix's official ads, featuring people ambushing friends and strangers with the free trial pitch[1].

Frequently Asked Questions

The Critically Acclaimed Mmorpg

2021Copypasta / advertising parodysemi-active

Also known as: FF14 Copypasta · Have You Heard Of The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG · FFXIV Free Trial Copypasta

The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG is a 2021 Final Fantasy XIV copypasta featuring robotic, enthusiastic pitches of the game's free trial that became so pervasive it earned acknowledgment in official Square Enix advertising.

"The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG" is a copypasta and inside joke born from *Final Fantasy XIV*'s free trial marketing. Emerging in early 2021, the meme mimics the overly enthusiastic pitch that FFXIV players are notorious for giving their friends, promoting the game's generous free trial with an almost robotic level of detail. It quickly became one of the most recognizable gaming copypastas of the 2020s, eventually getting acknowledged by Square Enix themselves in official advertising.

TL;DR

"The Critically Acclaimed MMORPG" is a copypasta and inside joke born from *Final Fantasy XIV*'s free trial marketing.

Overview

The meme centers on a block of promotional text that reads something like: *"Have you heard of the critically acclaimed MMORPG Final Fantasy XIV? With an expanded free trial which you can play through the entirety of A Realm Reborn and the award-winning Heavensward expansion up to level 60 for free with no restrictions on playtime."* The joke is that FFXIV players are so evangelical about the game that they'll recite this marketing pitch word-for-word to anyone within earshot, whether asked or not. The copypasta captures a real dynamic in the FFXIV community: the game's fans are famously persistent recruiters, and the free trial is genuinely generous enough that their pitch sounds like a sales script.

The copypasta traces back to around March 4, 2021, when Square Enix launched an updated free trial website for *Final Fantasy XIV*. Around the same time, the game's official YouTube channel published three live-action advertising videos featuring a woman who aggressively pitches the free trial to friends and strangers in everyday situations. One ad features a woman checking out a mundane free trial for a streaming service before being interrupted by the FFXIV pitch. Another has her pestering someone about a gym membership. In each, a *Final Fantasy XIV* character appears at the end for backup.

Even before the official ads dropped, FFXIV players had already been copy-pasting the free trial pitch across social media as a running joke. On February 12, 2021, Twitter user AnonyMooseXIV posted an "I Wish All X a Very Y" meme that referenced the copypasta, picking up nearly 1,400 likes and 900 retweets.

The FFXIV English Twitter account leaned into the joke on April 17, 2021, tweeting a version of the copypasta themselves.

Origin & Background

Platform
FFXIV community (copypasta), YouTube (Square Enix ads)
Key People
Unknown, HatashHyrunashi, AnonyMooseXIV
Date
2021
Year
2021

The copypasta traces back to around March 4, 2021, when Square Enix launched an updated free trial website for *Final Fantasy XIV*. Around the same time, the game's official YouTube channel published three live-action advertising videos featuring a woman who aggressively pitches the free trial to friends and strangers in everyday situations. One ad features a woman checking out a mundane free trial for a streaming service before being interrupted by the FFXIV pitch. Another has her pestering someone about a gym membership. In each, a *Final Fantasy XIV* character appears at the end for backup.

Even before the official ads dropped, FFXIV players had already been copy-pasting the free trial pitch across social media as a running joke. On February 12, 2021, Twitter user AnonyMooseXIV posted an "I Wish All X a Very Y" meme that referenced the copypasta, picking up nearly 1,400 likes and 900 retweets.

The FFXIV English Twitter account leaned into the joke on April 17, 2021, tweeting a version of the copypasta themselves.

How It Spread

The copypasta spread rapidly across platforms throughout 2021. It became a fixture on 4chan's /v/ board, Twitter, Reddit, and even popped up in real-world settings like gaming conventions and Discord servers. The joke worked because it was rooted in truth: every FFXIV player seemed to know the free trial pitch by heart.

On May 20, 2021, Twitter user HatashHyrunashi posted a word art version of the copypasta that turned the text itself into visual art. That post pulled in over 6,900 likes and 3,100 retweets. Word art edits became a popular sub-format.

When the *Endwalker* expansion launched in December 2021 and overwhelmed FFXIV's servers, Reddit user Xane posted an edited word art version to r/ffxiv on December 16 that riffed on the server congestion. It earned over 1,800 upvotes.

Square Enix's own advertising leaned hard into the meme energy. PCGamesN described the official ads as "channelling the same energy" as the annoying friend who won't stop talking about FFXIV. TheGamer called the live-action trailers "an accurate representation of every friend you've ever had that can't seem to shut up about the game".

The meme got a second wind on July 28, 2023, when Square Enix announced that the *Stormblood* expansion would be added to the free trial in patch 6.5, raising the level cap to 70. The next day, HatashHyrunashi posted an updated word art copypasta reflecting the new trial limits. That post exploded with over 10,000 likes and 5,000 retweets in under 24 hours.

How to Use This Meme

The standard approach is to drop the copypasta text into any conversation, comment section, or message thread, ideally when it's completely unprompted. Common variations include:

1

The straight paste: Copy the full free trial pitch verbatim into a random discussion, as if you're an NPC who can only say one thing.

2

The pivot: Start responding to someone's question or statement normally, then pivot mid-sentence into the copypasta. ("What's the best MMO? Well, have you heard of the critically acclaimed...")

3

The word art: Arrange the copypasta text into decorative typography or fit it into another meme template.

4

The interruption: Insert the pitch into unrelated meme formats, treating the FFXIV sales pitch like an intrusive thought.

Cultural Impact

What makes this copypasta unusual is that the company behind the game actively embraced it. Square Enix produced official live-action advertisements that deliberately mirrored the "annoying FFXIV friend" dynamic, with actors literally ambushing people to pitch the free trial. The ads repeated "Final Fantasy XIV Online" so many times that PCGamesN noted "it sounds weirder every time".

The meme also reflects a genuine marketing success. FFXIV's free trial is unusually generous for an MMO, offering hundreds of hours of content across the base game and multiple expansions at no cost. The copypasta, while a joke, doubled as effective word-of-mouth advertising. The game's official free trial page now promotes play "up to level 70" with "no restriction on playtime," covering three full games' worth of content.

*Final Fantasy XIV* itself had a notable comeback story. The original 2010 launch was so poorly received that it appeared on lists of games known for negative reception. Square Enix shut the game down and rebuilt it from scratch as *A Realm Reborn* in 2013, turning it into one of the most popular MMOs in the world. The copypasta meme captures the zeal of a fanbase that watched their game rise from the ashes.

Fun Facts

Square Enix's game composer created music videos reenacting beloved in-game memes around the same time the copypasta was taking off, showing the company was fully on board with meme culture.

The free trial pitch has been updated at least twice: first covering A Realm Reborn plus Heavensward (level 60), then adding Stormblood (level 70) in patch 6.5.

Korea got an entirely different marketing campaign for FFXIV that included an anime-style promotional video, making the live-action copypasta ads a distinctly Western phenomenon.

The original 2010 version of *Final Fantasy XIV* was so bad it made Wikipedia's list of games notable for negative reception, making the fanbase's evangelical enthusiasm for the rebuilt version all the more ironic.

Derivatives & Variations

Word Art Copypasta:

HatashHyrunashi's typographic arrangements of the full copypasta text, updated each time the free trial expanded[4].

Endwalker Server Queue Edit:

A modified version posted during the December 2021 server congestion crisis that joked about the free trial being unavailable due to overcrowding[4].

"I Wish All X a Very Y" Crossover:

AnonyMooseXIV's February 2021 mashup that placed the copypasta into the "I Wish All" template format[4].

Live-Action Ad Parodies:

Fan-made videos mimicking Square Enix's official ads, featuring people ambushing friends and strangers with the free trial pitch[1].

Frequently Asked Questions