What's in a name? As Final Fight demonstrated, quite a bit. In the case of Final Fantasy Adventure, though, what it used to be is quite a bit more interesting than what it became. Marketed in the west as a Final Fantasy game, the Japanese title was Seiken Densetsu: Final Fantasy Gaiden. What makes this interesting is that while it was indeed a Final Fantasy spin-off, it's the other part of the title that would hold greater significance with time, as it marks the first game in what would come to be known in the west as the Mana series. Thus, when players in the west got their hands on Secret of Mana on the Super NES, few (if any) at the time likely knew that what they were playing was actually a sequel to a Final Fantasy game which had already arrived in the years prior. Since then, the total number of Seiken Densetsu/Mana games has risen to 11, with most making it out of Japan, but only the most well-read fans of the series know where it truly began.