A store database listing appears to point to multiple Final Fantasy VII Revelation DLC items, including a Story Expansion Pass, but Square Enix has not announced post-launch plans.

Image: IGDB
A database listing points to post-launch content
Final Fantasy VII Revelation may not end with the credits, at least if a newly surfaced store database listing is accurate. Reports from Nintendo Everything, My Nintendo News, GameSpot, and IGN point to entries connected to the game that include multiple downloadable content items and a Story Expansion Pass.
The listing was spotted through EpicDB, a third-party tool that tracks Epic Games Store database changes, according to Nintendo Everything. My Nintendo News similarly reports that the apparent Final Fantasy VII Revelation DLC entries were added to the Epic Games database. GameSpot notes that an Epic Games Store listing mentions an expansion pass, though the purpose of the items is not yet clear.
That last point matters. Store and database entries can appear ahead of announcements, but they can also include placeholder text, internal labels, test entries, or content plans that change before launch. For now, this is a Final Fantasy 7 Revelation leak, not an official DLC roadmap.
What is confirmed, and what is still leak territory
The confirmed picture is much narrower than the speculation around it. Final Fantasy VII Revelation is described in the source reports as the final chapter of Square Enix’s Remake trilogy and is set to launch on Nintendo Switch 2 in 2027. Square Enix has not officially announced a Story Expansion Pass, individual DLC packs, prices, release timing, or what any post-launch content would contain.
The leak territory is the apparent presence of multiple DLC entries and a specific item labeled as a Story Expansion Pass. If accurate, that would suggest Square Enix is at least preparing for more than cosmetic add-ons, but the label alone does not confirm scope. A story expansion could mean a substantial post-game chapter, a side campaign, character-focused episodes, or even a smaller bridge scenario. It could also be an early database name that does not reflect the final product.
My Nintendo News notes that Square Enix has previously said it is open to DLC, but openness is not the same as an announced plan. Until Square Enix confirms FFVII Revelation DLC plans directly, players should treat the listing as a useful signal rather than a promise.
Why a story expansion would be a complicated fit
A post-ending story expansion for Final Fantasy VII Revelation would be unusually delicate. This is not just another RPG sequel with room for an extra dungeon after the final boss. Revelation is positioned as the endpoint of a trilogy that has spent two games reworking player expectations around fate, memory, identity, and the boundaries between the original Final Fantasy VII and its new continuity.
That makes the words Story Expansion Pass more loaded than they would be for a conventional DLC package. If the expansion takes place after the ending, it risks changing how final the finale feels. If it happens before the ending, it could function more like an optional character route or late-game quest chain. If it focuses on a separate perspective, it could avoid disturbing the main conclusion while still deepening the party, Shinra, Wutai, Zack, or other unresolved threads.
From a progression standpoint, Square Enix would also need to decide whether any expansion is built for completed save files, mid-game access, or a standalone menu. The Remake series has leaned heavily on character growth, materia planning, weapon skills, party roles, and combat mastery. A meaningful story add-on would need to account for endgame builds without trivializing encounters for players who finished the main campaign fully optimized.
What multiple DLC entries could mean for players
The appearance of multiple DLCs does not automatically mean multiple story chapters. Modern RPG store listings often separate expansions, preorder items, digital deluxe bonuses, soundtrack or artbook access, costume packs, and upgrade entitlements into different database entries. Without names or descriptions, it is impossible to say whether the Final Fantasy VII Revelation DLC entries represent gameplay content, editions, bonuses, or internal packaging.
Still, the presence of a Story Expansion Pass label is the part that will draw attention from RPG players. A pass usually implies a bundled content structure rather than a single isolated item, though that is not guaranteed. It could cover one major story release, several smaller episodes, or content that Square Enix has not yet publicly defined.
For completion-minded players, the practical question is whether Revelation’s final save will be designed with post-launch progression in mind. If there is DLC, will mastered materia carry forward? Will party composition remain open after the ending? Will superboss tuning assume players have cleared optional content? Those answers would shape whether a story expansion feels like an epilogue, a challenge pack, or a missing chapter added later.
A post-ending chapter could help or hurt the finale
The strongest case for a story expansion is that the Remake trilogy has more moving parts than a single ending may be able to settle cleanly. Optional post-game content could give Square Enix room to explore consequences without overloading the main finale. It could also let the developers spotlight characters who may not get equal space in the final act.
The risk is that an expansion pass attached to the ending of a long-running trilogy can make the conclusion feel conditional. Players have followed this version of Final Fantasy VII across multiple games, and many will expect Revelation to stand on its own. If a post-ending expansion contains essential narrative resolution, it may be received very differently than an optional side story.
The best fit would likely be content that enriches the ending rather than completes it. A self-contained epilogue, a character-focused scenario, or a high-level quest line that examines the state of the world after the final battle could work without undermining the trilogy’s destination. Anything that answers core ending questions outside the base game would be more contentious.
For now, wait for Square Enix
The leak is credible enough to watch, but not firm enough to plan purchases around. The current evidence suggests that Final Fantasy VII Revelation may have DLC infrastructure in place, including something labeled as a Story Expansion Pass. It does not confirm what that content is, whether it will release, or whether the label reflects final consumer-facing plans.
For players tracking the FF7 Revelation story expansion pass, the next meaningful update has to come from Square Enix. Until then, the store listing is best read as an early sign that Revelation’s post-launch strategy may be broader than expected, while the trilogy’s actual ending remains the part that has to carry the weight first.
