We’re keeping a close eye on a fresh leak that could reshape how we think about Final Fantasy 7 Revelation as the “final” chapter. According to Eurogamer, database entries on the Epic Games Store — surfaced via EpicDB — list a raft of add-ons and special editions for the game, including a headline item described as a Story Expansion Pass. If true, those listings suggest the game’s narrative might not finish with its main campaign.
What Was Reported

Per Eurogamer, the leaked Epic Games Store database entries allegedly include:
- a Story Expansion Pass (which implies the story could extend beyond the main campaign and that there would be multiple expansions);
- nine DLC packs listed in total (though those could be small items, cosmetics, or minor bonuses rather than full narrative add-ons);
- a Digital Contents Pack (suggesting cosmetic items or similar digital bonuses);
- a pre-order bonus and two non-standard editions labelled Premium and Premium Plus.
Square Enix has not officially announced any of these items, and Eurogamer notes the listings are descriptive enough to generate speculation rather than provide confirmed plans. The same coverage also reminds readers that Final Fantasy 7 Revelation was unveiled earlier in June as part of Summer Game Fest.
The Source & Credibility
The details originate from an Epic Games Store database leak reported by Eurogamer, which cites EpicDB as the intermediary for the listings. Take this with a pinch of salt: Square Enix hasn’t announced any of the packs or editions, and database listings can be incomplete, provisional, or misleading.
Eurogamer points out the ambiguity in the leak itself — for example, a “DLC” in the listing could be anything from a full story expansion to a simple cosmetic skin. The report emphasises that the presence of a Story Expansion Pass implies multiple story-focused releases, but it doesn’t specify how many expansions that would be or when they would arrive.
For context within the franchise, Eurogamer recalls that Final Fantasy 7 Remake was the only game in the trilogy so far to receive substantial story DLC post-launch — namely the Intergrade expansion that focused on Yuffie. That precedent is part of why these leaked listings are getting attention.
What It Could Mean

If the Story Expansion Pass and the other listings are legitimate, the implications are notable. A pass explicitly labelled for story content suggests Square Enix may be planning post-launch narrative releases rather than tying up every plot thread inside the base game. That would mean Final Fantasy 7 Revelation might not conclude the saga in the definitive sense many expect.
Eurogamer even floats possibilities such as Intergrade-style DLC that explores unresolved plotlines or a more celebratory, send-off style expansion for the cast (a “Mass Effect 3 Citadel-style” idea is mentioned as an example). Again, that’s speculative and framed as such in the report — the leaked database lists nine DLC packs, but those could instead be smaller cosmetic or bonus packs, especially given the explicit listing of a Digital Contents Pack.
There’s also the commercial angle: the leak shows non-standard premium editions and a pre-order incentive, which would fit a launch plan that includes multiple post-release offerings. But it’s important to stress these items are present in a database leak and not in any official Square Enix announcement.
Why This Matters
We’re excited by the idea that Final Fantasy 7 Revelation might continue to grow after launch, but we remain sceptical until Square Enix confirms anything. The game is already notable for a few confirmed facts: Eurogamer reports it does not yet have a release date but is set to arrive in the spring of 2027, and that it will launch simultaneously across PC, PS5, Xbox Series X/S, and Switch 2. The game director, Naoki Hamaguchi, allegedly promised the project will not “compromise on graphics whatsoever” to accommodate less powerful platforms.
Whether these leaked listings turn out to be true could change how players approach Final Fantasy 7 Revelation: as a single concluding experience, or as the start of an extended post-launch rollout. We’ll be monitoring for official word from Square Enix, but for now, take this with a pinch of salt — the listings are intriguing, the precedent exists, and the possibility of extra story content is very much on the table if the leak is accurate.





