A favorite after-work hangout for laborers, Tifa's cocktails and cooking are big hits among the neighborhood people. After hours, though, the place turns into a hideout for the anti-Shinra militant group Avalanche.
Seventh Heaven, alternatively spelled 7th Heaven, is a location in the Final Fantasy VII series. It is a bar and restaurant owned and ran by Tifa Lockhart, located in the Sector 7 slums of Midgar. As well as being a popular location in the slums, it has served as a home base for Barret Wallace's Avalanche cell.
A new 7th Heaven was later built in the city of Edge after the fall of Meteor.
History[]
Before Final Fantasy VII[]
Located in the slums of Sector 7 in Midgar, the original Seventh Heaven bar was built by an unnamed carpenter during the events of chapter 7 of Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII-, and named "Seventh Heaven" by Zack Fair during a conversation. The man spoke of a desire to have an attractive young female bartender, and to build an underground hideout to serve as a base for an anti-Shinra group.[1][note 1]
A man named Monty eventually became the owner of the bar. The bar was successful at first, hiring an attractive bartender who pulled in a large number of customers, and took home 60% of the night's sales. The bartender quit when she began dating a Shinra employee and then moved topside. Since then, business struggled, and the bar was mostly empty of customers.[2] Monty owed a large amount of money back to the builder and was behind on his repayment, but the builder dragged out the repayment much longer than originally planned.[3] Monty had dreamed of also building a secret hideout underneath, leading to the creation of an elevator to a downstairs basement, and had intentions of putting a pinball machine there.[4]
When Tifa Lockhart was introduced to the bar by Marle in May 0005,[note 2] Marle arranged to have Tifa work there, something Monty was very enthusiastic about as the bar was able to reopen evening hours. Tifa suggested improving the unappetizing lunch special, and the bar reintroduced cocktails. Tifa earned 50% of the day's earnings, and her first payday brought her 1,000 gil, with expectations she could take home almost double in night hours.[6]
The business was initially turning around until Monty fell ill and two new regulars, Barret and Marlene Wallace, began to scare away customers.[7] After Tifa scolded Barret for rough sleeping with Marlene, Marle arranged for Monty to allow Barret to sleep in the basement, and had him working for the bar.[8] When Monty passed, the builder required a 200,000 gil payment, of which Monty's estate covered 40,000, followed by normal monthly installments thereafter. Though Barret and Marle were unable to cover the remaining 160,000 gil, Tifa had the money saved up, and promised to pay it.[9]
Having paid off the 200,000 down, Tifa became the owner and proprietor of the bar. When Barret became a leader in Avalanche, he used the secret basement as his group's base of operations, and eventually had the pinball machine installed. Tifa convinced Marle to step away from the bar for her own safety, so as to avoid being tied to Avalanche.[10] The bar became famous for Tifa's food and drinks.[11][12][13] While Barret was out on missions, Tifa would look after Marlene, who would sometimes tell Tifa stories while under Tifa's care.[14] When Barret's team went to destroy Mako Reactor 1, Tifa remained behind in the bar with Marlene.
Original continuity[]
In "At the Hideout in the Slums" in Final Fantasy VII, Cloud Strife and Barret returned from their mission. Cloud spoke with Tifa briefly before joining Barret in their secret headquarters below the bar, where Cloud demanded money from Barret. A disagreement caused Cloud to leave, with no intention of returning, until Tifa diffused the conflict by convincing Cloud to stay with them due to the promise he had made to her, and convincing Barret that they still needed Cloud's help.[11] In "To the No. 5 Reactor", Tifa left with Cloud and Barret for their next mission to attack Mako Reactor 5, leaving the bar in the hands of Marlene.[15]
When the Sector 7 pillar in "Prevent the Fall of the Plate", Seventh Heaven was destroyed along with it. Marlene was not in the bar at the time, having been saved by Aerith Gainsborough.[16]
Remake continuity[]
In "Home Sweet Slum" in Final Fantasy VII Remake, Cloud and Barret returned from the bombing of Mako Reactor 1, and found Tifa there. Tifa showed Cloud to an apartment she had secured for him in Stargazer Heights,[17] and after the two completed tasks around the Sector 7 slums the next day, they returned to the bar where Tifa made Cloud two cocktails, including her house special, the Cosmo Canyon. Cloud was not permitted access to the headquarters downstairs, wherein Barret's cell decided not to rehire Cloud, and not to take Tifa along to their next mission to attack Mako Reactor 5. Once the meeting concluded, the cell celebrated in the bar, and Cloud left.[12]
The next day, in "Mad Dash", the bar was attacked by the Whispers on the eve of Avalanche's second bombing mission. Avalanche try to defend the bar, but the Whispers dispersed after Jessie Rasberry was hurt. As such, Barret changed course, rehired Cloud, and brought Tifa along to the next mission to Mako Reactor 5, with Wedge staying behind at the bar to look after Marlene and the injured Jessie.[18]
In "Fight for Survival", while Cloud and Tifa fought through the Sector 7 pillar, Aerith went to find Marlene, having known Tifa would have asked this of her beforehand.[19] Aerith found Marlene inside and connected with her quickly, before Tseng of the Turks arrived and struck a deal with Aerith. The bar was destroyed when the Turks dropped the Sector 7 pillar; later, in "A Broken World", Cloud, Barret, and Tifa found the ruins of the bar.
The final scene of Final Fantasy VII Remake depicts the bar is amid the locals reconstructing the slums, propping up the broken Seventh Heaven bar sign.
Layout[]
Overview[]
Seventh Heaven is a Texan-style bar and restaurant, and is a large, wooden building located in the western end of the Sector 7 slums. It stands in contrast to the surrounding buildings in Sector 7's slums, which are made primarily of metal plates. The main floor of Seventh Heaven is the bar and restaurant, while a secret elevator near the pinball machine leads down to the basement where Barret's Avalanche cell's headquarters are located.
Bar and restaurant[]
The bar and restaurant area is the main floor where customers are served food and drinks. The bar is designed primarily with wooden tables, benches, and stools. At the back is a bar containing several drinks, and a small kitchen area off to the side. A jukebox and pinball machine occupy one corner, while a dartboard occupies another. while a television screen is located on the wall behind the bar. Neon-lit signs around the walls advertise the menu.[note 3]
Secret basement[]
Avalanche's headquarters are accessed via a secret elevator near the pinball machine. The basement, serving as the headquarters for Barret's Avalanche cell, is only seen in Final Fantasy VII, as in Final Fantasy VII Remake, Cloud is not permitted.
The basement in Final Fantasy VII is a small concrete room, which houses mapping and communication facilities, a computer hub, a television screen, and training equipment. At the center is a large table, where plans are written on paper, as well as on the whiteboard nearby.
Food and beverages[]
Seventh Heaven served food and drink, and opened at 11 AM. Lunchtime ran from 11 to 2PM, with a rotatiing special for each day of the week. 2 to 5PM was teatime, serving coffee and tea, hot or cold, and two varieties of juice. 5 PM to midnight was evening hours, and when the bar served alcohol and finger foods. After the bartender prior to Tifa left, the drinks menu had been pared down.[6]
During Tifa's ownership of Seventh Heaven, the bar served food and drink, cooked and prepared by Tifa, which made the bar famous around the slums for their quality.[11][12][13] The food was taste-tested by Wedge.[11] Neon signs give clues as to the items it served: a neon sign in Final Fantasy VII reads "Draft beer", while in Final Fantasy VII Remake, the signs read "Eggs & Chips" and "Pizza". Furthermore, in Final Fantasy VII, soda bottles and a beer glass can be seen on the tables.
Tifa also served cocktails at the bar, two of which she served to Cloud. One was the popular "Seventh Heaven", a yellow drink that "packs a serious punch and gives you the courage to keep going". Another was the red cocktail "Cosmo Canyon", the house special, inspired by the location of the same name.[12][note 4] Other drinks on the menu included a green cocktail called "Lifestream". When preparing drinks, she performed tricks with the shaker, her showmanship used to garners higher tips from patrons.[21] The cocktails Tifa poured for Cloud came out clear, even if she used a shaker to mix them.
Gameplay[]
Final Fantasy VII[]
7th Heaven appears in the following chapters:
The area is visited briefly for story objectives wherein the player talks to other characters. The player can visit both the main floor of the bar and the underground.
Final Fantasy VII Remake[]
In Final Fantasy VII Remake, Seventh Heaven is visited in three chapters:
In "Home Sweet Slum", the player can use the jukebox to play the music they have collected, and partake in a darts minigame (see below). The jukebox already has Tifa's Theme. In "Mad Dash" and "Fight for Survival", it is only visited briefly. Unlike Final Fantasy VII, the player can only visit the bar's main floor.
Darts[]
The player can play darts during "Home Sweet Slum", after the others take the lift down to the secret basement in the quest "Talking Strategy". Finishing in seven or fewer moves earns a trophy and a Luck Up Materia (Wedge will gift it later). The plater can start with aiming to Triple-20 to score 60 points per throw.
Musical themes[]
Before setting out to destroy the Mako Reactor 5, the background music to Seventh Heaven is "Tifa's Theme" (ティファのテーマ, Tifa no Tēma?). After Cloud decides to take up one more job and destroy the reactor, "Barret's Theme" (バレットのテーマ, Baretto no Tēma?) replaces Tifa's as Seventh Heaven's theme.
Other appearances[]
Seventh Heaven appears in Final Fantasy Airborne Brigade. In Final Fantasy XIV: A Realm Reborn, there is a bar called "The Seventh Heaven" in the Revenant's Toll area of Mor Dhona.
There are also several allusions to the bar's name. In Dissidia 012 Final Fantasy, Tifa's most powerful exclusive weapon, "Seventh Heaven", is named after the bar. In the fighting game Ehrgeiz: God Bless the Ring, Tifa uses an attack named after the bar.
The bar also appears as part of the Midgar DLC for PowerWash Simulator, having been dirtied after a scuffle with some of Don Corneo's men. Tifa hires the player character to clean the location with their power washer, which also involves cleaning Cloud's Buster Sword and Barret's Gatling Gun arm.
Behind the scenes[]
Development[]
It appears the early designs for Seventh Heaven for Final Fantasy VII were later used for a generic pub in Junon. The "Making Of" bonus disc included with Final Fantasy VII International includes a pre-release shot of the Junon pub where Cloud uses lines he says in Seventh Heaven in the final game. Comparing the layout of the Junon pub to the Beginner's Hall in Junon suggests that the underground level of the Beginner's Hall may have been the original Avalanche hideout, situated below the Seventh Heaven bar.
Pre-release shots of the area also reveal what changes were made to the Seventh Heaven bar during development. The pinball machine was part of the background in the early version of the area, but was likely turned into a 3D object for simplicity's sake. Different graphics for the TV screens in Seventh Heaven also have been spotted in pre-release images; while in the final game the TV reader looks like a cartoon character, in the early versions the newsreader appears as a real photo of a person. The TV behind the bar is never used in the final game, but dummied dialogue files suggest that a conversation between Tifa and Cloud while watching the news was once planned for the game.
Seventh Heaven was designed to be Wild West-inspired, to match Tifa's cowgirl outfit she wears in Nibelheim. Final Fantasy VII Remake co-director Motomu Toriyama described it as looking like a "watering hole straight out of a cowboy movie". Though the developers wanted to add swinging saloon doors as expected from Wild West buildings, they were not added to ensure the interior was not visible from the outside in Final Fantasy VII Remake, as required for plot reasons.[22]
In Final Fantasy VII, Cloud would use the pinball machine to descend to Avalanche's secret hideout below. In Final Fantasy VII Remake, this was removed in order to create a greater sense of distance between Cloud and Avalanche at that stage.[23]
Allusions[]
In Final Fantasy VII Remake, the picture above the door is of the Seventh Heaven from the original game.
Text on a sign outside the bar and on the doormat in the original game appears to read "Tyfer Bar." "Tyfer" is likely a transliteration.
In Final Fantasy VII, the sign at the top of the bar in Midgar reads TEXAS COWBOY CLUB. The neon sign on Seventh Heaven reads TYFER BAR. "Tyfer Bar" is likely a transliteration of Tifa's Japanese name into English by a graphic artist unaware or prior to the official transliteration. Inside the bar the welcome mat also reads TYFER BAR and there are neon signs on the walls saying TEXAS and DRAFT BEER. Notably, there is no "Texas" in the world of Final Fantasy VII, but "Lockhart" is the name of a city in the real life state of Texas, United States. Tifa was also dressed as a cowgirl in the flashback to Nibelheim, and cowgirls are often associated with Texas.
Zack's slogan for the bar in Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII- was "Seventh Heaven! A slice of heaven in Sector 7!".[citation needed]
Etymology[]
seven heavens refer to the seven divisions of the Heaven, the abode of immortal beings, or the visible sky, the expanse containing the Sun, Moon and the stars. This concept dates back to ancient Mesopotamian religions and similar concept is also found in some Indian religions such as Hinduism, and in some Abrahamic religions such as Judaism, Islam and Catholicism.
In religious or mythological cosmology, theThe number 7 in Biblical references symbolically represents perfect completion. The number also has a significance in Quranic numerology.
The number seven occurs numerous times in Final Fantasy VII as an allusion; e.g. Avalanche is based on Sector 7, the Shinra Building has 70 floors, there is a status called All Lucky 7s; the bar Seventh Heaven follows with the other allusions to the number.
Notes[]
Annotations[]
- ↑ The name of the man in Crisis Core is not revealed, but is possible that Zack spoke to Monty, who later owned it.
- ↑ Tifa was directed to the Sector 7 slums on her eighteenth birthday, and met Marle there the following Wednesday.[5]
- ↑ In Final Fantasy VII, a non-player character in the Starlet pub in Cosmo Canyon offers their original cocktail named the "Cosmo Candle", inspired by the bonfire located there.[20] It is unclear if it is connected to Tifa's cocktail offered in Final Fantasy VII Remake.
Citations[]
- ↑ Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII- script § "Chapter 7"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 149-151
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 171-173
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 164
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 145-147
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 152-155
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 157
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 161-165
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 171-173
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts, p. 190
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Final Fantasy VII script § "At the Hideout in the Slums"
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 Final Fantasy VII Remake script § "Talking Strategy"
- ↑ 13.0 13.1 Final Fantasy VII Remake loading screen § "Seventh Heaven"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake script § "Head for the Exit"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII script § "To the No. 5 Reactor"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII script § "Prevent the Fall of the Plate"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake script § "Return to Base"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake script § "Sudden Attack"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake script § "Link Up with Avalanche"
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII script § "Cosmo Canyon optional dialogue"
- ↑ Romano August 2020
- ↑ Final Fantasy VII Remake Material Ultimania, p. 122
- ↑ Romano July 2020
References[]
- Video games
- Square Co., Ltd. (1997). Final Fantasy VII [Game]. Square Co., Ltd.. PlayStation.
- Square Enix (2008). Crisis Core -Final Fantasy VII- [Game]. Square Enix. PlayStation Portable.
- Square Enix (2020). Final Fantasy VII Remake [Game]. Square Enix. PlayStation 4.
- Books
- Kazushige Nojima (2023). Final Fantasy VII Remake Trace of Two Pasts [Book]. Square Enix. ISBN 978-4-7575-7348-2.
- Websites
- Romano, Sal (2020, July 21). "Final Fantasy VII Remake Part 2 development already underway". From Gematsu''. Archived from the original on July 21, 2020.
- Romano, Sal (2020, August 4). "Final Fantasy Portal Site: Digging Deep into the World of Final Fantasy VII Remake special interview part one". From Gematsu. Archived from the original on 16:17, August 06, 2020 (UTC).