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Rate hike! Rate hike! Tra, la, la! And please include our Space Program in the budget!

Palmer

Palmer is the head of Shinra Electric Power Company's failed Space Program in the Final Fantasy VII series. He continues to act as an executive at the Shinra Company, even if his department is mostly defunct. Palmer is a minor antagonist in Final Fantasy VII, sycophantic toward the company president and generally viewed as incompetent at his job.

Profile

Appearance

Palmer-artwork

Concept art by Tetsuya Nomura.

Palmer is a short, overweight man with thinning gray hair and gray-blue eyes. He wears a white shirt and a double-breasted, tan-colored suit with matching bow-tie.

Personality

Palmer is childish and cowardly, being enthusiastic about everything, but preferring to hide rather than take action himself. He loves his tea with liberal amounts of sugar, honey, and butter (lard in the original translation).

Story

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow. (Skip section)

Original continuity

After Sector 7's collapse, Palmer is at the Shinra Building with the other Shinra directors. During the executive meeting Palmer asks that his Space Program benefit from the mako rate hike President Shinra wants to enforce. Following Sephiroth's rampage at the headquarters, Palmer confirms Sephiroth's return from where he is found cowering behind a pillar.

Palmer

Palmer in Rocket Town.

Palmer accompanies the new president, Rufus, to Rocket Town to steal Cid's plane. Avalanche intercepts Palmer, forcing him to abandon the plan to battle them. His efforts are in vain, and he is defeated.

Although he is hit by a truck as he tries to escape Cloud and company, he, Palmer with Reeve and Rufus, is one of the few Shinra executives to survive the events of Final Fantasy VII. After Meteor is summoned, Palmer sets the rocket in Rocket Town to auto-pilot to collide with the Meteor, with Cid, Cloud, and the other party members trapped inside. The party uses an escape pod to return to the planet, and Palmer is never seen again.

Remake continuity

Palmer scared of Sephiroth from FFVII Remake

Palmer intimidated by Sephiroth.

Palmer visits the Honeybee Inn in Wall Market, and is reluctant to leave when his assistant insists that he has work the next day. After the plate falls, Palmer joins the other directors at the Shinra Building for a meeting. He is getting tea when he sees Sephiroth pass him in the hallway, and is so surprised and frightened he drops his cup. During the directors' meeting, Palmer tries to convince the others than Sephiroth has returned, but is dismissed. He has no objections to using torture to get more "results" out of Aerith Gainsborough or to President Shinra's decision to not rebuild Sector 7 in favor of moving onto the Neo Midgar project.

Spoilers end here.

Gameplay

Palmer is fought as a boss in Rocket Town and can use Mako Gun to cast either Fire2, Ice2, or Bolt2 on the target.

Other appearances

Final Fantasy Record Keeper

FFRK Palmer FFVII
Baknamy FFTA2This section about an enemy in Final Fantasy Record Keeper is empty or needs to be expanded. You can help the Final Fantasy Wiki by expanding it.

Behind the scenes

Shortly after Palmer is defeated, he narrowly evades being chopped to bits by the Tiny Bronco. This is similar to a scene in Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost Ark in which a German mechanic is chopped to bits by a Luftwaffe Flying Wing's propeller during a fight with Indiana Jones.

FFVII_-_Unused_'Palmer_scene',_Honey_Bee_Inn

FFVII - Unused 'Palmer scene', Honey Bee Inn

Palmer's scene at the Honey Bee Inn.

Dummied content for the original game, featuring Palmer in an unused version of the Honey Bee Inn lobby exists in the first Japanese release. By hacking the game, a scene that can never be viewed in the actual game can be played out. The scene's data was removed from all International releases, as well as the Japanese International Version release, which is based on the North American version.

The music unique to this scene is not used anywhere else in the game. The theme was previously unearthed from the game's PC version by hackers, but it was unknown for what scene it was intended. In the scene itself much of the dialogue reads as gibberish, as the game displays the wrong kanji. In the scene, Palmer encounters an undercover Shinra Manager who claims to be visiting the Inn for "marketing purposes." This backfires on him as the Honey Bee lady accompanying Palmer implies he is a regular, something that infuriates Palmer and makes him chase the man out of the inn, followed by the lady.

In the remake, Palmer can be seen inside a private lounge, chasing a honeygirl with a net, as well as outside the Honeybee Inn after Cloud's performance.

Gallery

Etymology

Palmer is a name that can be either a surname or given name that means a pilgrim to the Holy Land, named from the palm worn to signify the journey. Whether there is any intended association with Shinra looking for the promised land is unknown.

References

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