Jump to content

Metal Max 4: Gekkō no Diva

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Metal Max 4)

Metal Max 4: Gekkō no Diva
Developer(s)Cattle Call
24Frame
Publisher(s)Kadokawa Games
Director(s)Tomoki Tauchi
Yūsuke Tomono
Designer(s)Hiroshi Miyaoka
Artist(s)Atsuji Yamamoto
Shun Kise
Composer(s)Satoshi Kadokura
SeriesMetal Max
Platform(s)Nintendo 3DS
Release
  • JP: 7 November 2013
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player

Metal Max 4: Gekkō no Diva (メタルマックス4 月光のディーヴァ, Metaru Makkusu Fō Gekkō no Dīva, lit. "Metal Max 4: Diva of the Moonlight") is an entry in the Metal Max series (besides the Metal Saga series). It is a Japanese open world, nonlinear, vehicle combat role-playing video game published by Kadokawa Games for Nintendo 3DS on 7 November 2013. The game was developed by Cattle Call and 24Frame. Animation produced by Studio 4°C. Famitsu awarded game a 35/40.[1]

Synopsis

[edit]

The story takes place 50 years after the destruction of human civilizations by mad supercomputer Noah. The protagonist (default name "Hinata") is a young boy who is living peacefully with his foster sister Sasha and foster father Gib in desert islands. One day, a group of mysterious army attack their island. The protagonist and Sasha escape but Gib captures them.

Sasha tells the protagonist that Gib and him were "Hot Seeds", the project of sealing human survivors in hibernation chambers since 50 years ago, in order to preserve mankind and restore the human civilization after the "Great Destruction". Sasha reveals herself to be an android tasked to protect both Gib and the protagonist.

The motivation of the villains to catch Gib is to unseal the ultimate weapon "Black Mole" (クロモグラ), an "indestructible" mobile fortress that was created to fight against Noah, and Gib was one of the creators of it. Therefore, the protagonist have to save Gib to prevent the villains to lay hands on the "Black Mole".

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Famitsu reviews: Rocksmith 2014 receives highest score this week". videogaming247 Ltd. October 29, 2013. Retrieved 10 November 2013.
[edit]