BlackBerry

The BlackBerry was a line of smartphones and software developed by Canada's Research in Motion, Ltd. (now BlackBerry, Ltd.) dating back to the mid-1990s. Originally a line of pagers for business use, RIM eventually developed BlackBerry into a business-grade platform personal digital assistants and later smartphones that could be managed at the enterprise level. BlacBerry was also noted for its easy-to-use e-mail system and for the use of a QWERTY keyboard that facilitated rapid text entry. The system proved to be extremely popular for business executives and "road warrior" workers during much of the 2000s, but upon the release of the iOS system by Apple and the Android platform by Google late in the decade, BlackBerry struggled to maintain its dominance of the mobile market.

In an effort to appeal to younger and more tech-savvy consumers, BlackBerry released a flurry of devices with names such as the Bold, Pearl, Curve, and Torch. Though many of these models had serious design flaws and were by extension unpopular, they were able to run applications from an extensive library vetted by RIM.

As of 2012, the platform dwindled to insignificance, with RIM besieged by waves of failures and bad business decisions.

Final Fantasy titles on BlackBerry
These titles were ported by Namco Bandai, whose WonderSwan Color received them first:
 * Final Fantasy
 * Final Fantasy II