Full Metal Max
Getting into the Metal Max series has been one of the most exciting experiences to come my way in this hobby recently. I picked up Metal Max Xeno Reborn on a whim, and the next thing I know, Iām hungrily trying to consume everything from the series I could get my hands on. Thatās unfortunately not a lot. Most of the series has never left Japan. While there are some fan translations landing for some of those titles, there was only one official release for the series in North America before Metal Max Xeno. That was 2005ās Metal Saga on PS2.
Donāt let the name fool you. This isnāt some spin-off. Metal Saga is a whole-fat entry in the series. There were some trademark issues resulting from Data East going bankrupt, so the developers at Crea-tech couldnāt actually call it Metal Max for a time, but thatās the only disruption. It takes place in the same world as the previous games, making reference to those narratives, and the mechanics all follow the formula set out by the previous two titles. Itās the true Metal Max 3 in everything but name.
Unfortunately, the shift to the 3D perspective wasnāt an effortless one.
The stupid end of the world
Metal Saga starts out in much the same way that the original Metal Max does: the protagonist tells his parent that heās setting out in the world to become a hunter. Taking place in a post-apocalyptic future, Hunters travel around and take down the various monsters that roam the devastated planet.
Like the original Metal Max, the actual over-arching narrative isnāt clear from the start, and only takes shape at the very end. Largely, youāre let loose on the world and left to do whatever you feel like, and Metal Saga just trusts that youāll eventually find your way to the conclusion. Itās up to you to just travel around, get stronger, and make money by defeating Wanted Monsters. In tanks.
I canāt stress this enough: Metal Saga, like the series before it, is a game about tanks. There are vehicles in there that arenāt tanks, but everyone talks about tanks like theyāre mankindās greatest achievement. If you want to actually complete the game, youāll need to scour the world for the best tanks, then outfit them with the best equipment. Itās amazing.
You remind me of my grandson
The post-apocalypse of Metal Max is a tale as old as time. Humans were starting to get a little panicked about how they were destroying the planet. Rather than take personal responsibility, they created an AI called NOAH to help them fix it. NOAH decided that the best way to save the planet was to get rid of the source of the problems: humans.
Thatās pretty realistic. Humans would definitely try to take a shortcut for solving their problems, and an AI would almost certainly follow a request right down to the letter.
Not a lot of people in Metal Saga know what caused humans to get pushed to the brink of extinction. Furthermore, the plot of Metal Max involved the protagonist finally shutting NOAH down, but since no one knew the world was even still in peril, few people really know that even happened.
But while the Metal Max series is incredibly on the nose for something that was created in 1991, itās incredibly lighthearted about the whole affair. If The Last of Us is a finger wag and Fallout is a head shake, then Metal Max is a roll of the eyes. Itās not just about manās inhumanity to man; itās about manās baffling, ceaseless stupidity.
While you travel the world, you keep bumping into survivors who just have the strangest priorities. Thereās a cult that worships bodybuilding. You might find a retirement home full of elderly people driven to crime by neglectful grandchildren. Your primary rival in all of this is a rich heiress who is more interested in collecting tanks than taking down the monsters that threaten the remnants of humanity. Itās nowhere near as ridiculous as Metal Max 2 could get, but it certainly doesnāt wear a straight face.
Tasty corpses
This sort of leads to Metal Sagaās biggest issue: itās empty. Metal Saga has a huge world, and a tonne of Wanted Monsters to hunt, but not a lot in between.
Itās always been a series standard to kind of just let you loose on the world with a few gates to keep you from wandering straight to the end of the game. Metal Saga is much the same, but thereās less to distract you. Thereās a dearth of side quests, and they’re actually difficult to bump into. There are so many rooms in the dungeons and towns that are just empty, and that takes a lot of the fun out of exploration.
Those empty rooms might be by design rather than just an indication of unfinished content, but thatās actually worse. I donāt want to check each and every room in case one of them might have a fridge to loot.
There was one dude credited with monster design, Masato Kimura, and he went absolutely nuts. This big empty world is absolutely packed with different monster attacks, including howitzers wearing fishnets and a stealth bomber that is actually just a big manta ray. According to a guide I found, there are 232 types of regular monsters. While some of them are mostly palette swaps, a huge number of them are unique. It also doesnāt lean too hard on just recreating monsters from past games. Itās an impressive effort.
Optimus Swine
At this point, Iāve played a decent chunk of the Metal Max series. I have to say, Metal Saga currently sits near the bottom of my list of favorites. The core gameplay that I love so much about the series is still there. Everything built around that isnāt anything too insulting, but itās a lot weaker than anything that came before it.
On the other hand, before Metal Max Xeno, this was the only game in the series that came West. Even now, the only way for hardcore anglophones to experience the other games is to use fan translations. In no small way, Metal Saga is way better than no Metal Max at all. If fan translations arenāt your thing, then this is absolutely something you should play.
My eyes are constantly peeled for any news on the series. Cygames bought the rights up in 2022 directly after the release of Metal Max Xeno Reborn and the cancellation of Metal Max Xeno: Wild West. The series director (who actually didnāt have a creative role in Metal Saga) is even on board. Currently, it looks like weāre getting a remake of the first game of the series, but I have my fingers crossed that theyāll also look to finally localize previous games in the series. At the very least, re-release Metal Saga.
The series has had a mess of ownership issues. It has never really received the attention or the love that it deserves. Iām hoping Cygames winds up being the parent it really needs. I just want someone to love Metal Max as much as I do.
For other retro titles you may have missed, click right here!
Published: Jun 16, 2023 04:00 pm