What is the city on top of Sin?
Best Answer
From my understanding it was a shadow of the inter dimensional space Sin creates along with the Faiths since look how far you half to walk from where the Fahrenheit lands in the Sea of Sorrow all the way to Dream's End.
We see The Nucleus in the aftermath of Operation Mi'ihen and in it we see Luzzu along with a bunch of Crusaders and Al Bhed running around, after Luzzu walks away we see Bahamut Faith appear (that child who became the Faith).
the city on Sin kinda looks like City of Dying Dreams and i think also beneath Macalania the party is sitting on that area of Sin which explains the ruins, the ruins we see in the images you provided being a shadow of inter dimensional space would explain why the ruins the party was in Macalania wasn't as big, that's just my understanding however.
Pictures about "What is the city on top of Sin?"



Why is there a city on sins head?
Yoshinori Kitase created [Sin] to represent the kinds of calamitous disasters that exist in the real world, such as earthquakes and typhoons. [...] Having ruins become a part of Sin's physical form helped to visually cement the idea it is an "unimaginably ancient monster on an unprecedented scale".What city is on the back of sin?
It carries part of a city presumed to be a part of Zanarkand on its body close to the back of the head. Sin's final form has feathery wing-like protrusions that are purple at the tips. Full view of Overdrive Sin.Is jecht a sin?
FFX: Braska's Final Aeon & The True Identity Of Sin Throughout the entirety of the game, Sin's true identity is Jecht, Tidus' father. It's revealed that each Final Aeon is created from someone deeply connected to the summoner, giving up their life in order to defeat Sin.How was sin defeated FFX?
It is possible to end the battle quickly by having Rikku mix a Trio of 9999, wait until Sin is in range, and use multi-hit attacks, such as Tidus's, Lulu's or Wakka's Overdrives, or Rikku's elemental gems. A strong Anima Overdrive can KO Sin in one hit.INXS - Original Sin
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: picjumbo.com, Julia Volk, William Fortunato, Hannah Bickmore
