Metal Wolf Chaos
Metal Wolf Chaos | |
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Cover art | |
Developer(s) | FromSoftware |
Publisher(s) | FromSoftware |
Director(s) | Keiichiro Ogawa |
Producer(s) | Masanori Takeuchi |
Designer(s) |
Masato Miyazaki Tomoko Kamiyama Kouji Iwayagano |
Composer(s) | Kota Hoshino |
Platform(s) | Xbox |
Release date(s) |
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Genre(s) | Third-person shooter |
Mode(s) | Single player |
Metal Wolf Chaos (メタル ウルフ カオス Metaru Urufu Kaosu) is a third-person shooter video game developed and published by FromSoftware, released for the Xbox in Japan on December 22, 2004.
The game revolves around a fictitious President of the United States named Michael Wilson. Using a suit of powered armor named Metal Wolf, he battles forces who have taken over his country in a coup d'état, including his nemesis, Vice President Richard Hawk.
Although released exclusively in Japan, Metal Wolf Chaos has full English voice acting.
Plot
In the early 21st century, America has plunged into a state of civil and economic unrest, and several states attempt to secede from America to protect their own interests as a result, leading to a conflict known as the Arizona Insurrection. During that time, Richard Hawk and Michael Wilson fight and crush the Insurrection, paving the way for development of powerful military weapons.
Michael Wilson, a relative of Woodrow Wilson, soon becomes the 47th President of the United States, drawing parallels to the real life presidency of George W. Bush at the time of the game's release.[1] Vice President Richard Hawk decides to usurp Wilson's presidency, shifting the armed forces' loyalty to him and attacking Wilson with their support. Hawk begins a reign of terror and makes numerous detrimental actions as president, from re-instituting slavery to committing outright atrocities.
However, Wilson escapes from the White House in his powered armor "Metal Wolf", and after reaching Air Force One, flies to the west coast of the United States. He then begins to take America back by liberating cities and outposts, traveling from west to east across the country and facing many of his former comrades from the Insurrection, all of whom have defected to Hawk's side. The conflict comes to a head when Hawk threatens collective punishment on everyone in the United States still sympathetic to Wilson's cause, including Wilson's aide Jody Crawford. However, Wilson refuses to let another trusted comrade of his die, and saves her before returning to the Capitol.
When Wilson returns to the White House, Hawk is not there. Wilson discovers that he is in Las Vegas and goes there to fight his usurper, but Hawk escapes in a rocket and goes to a space station. Wilson and Hawk battle in space, with Wilson ultimately defeating Hawk and saving the United States of America from nuclear destruction.
Demo
The Official Xbox Magazine's Holiday 2004 issue's game disc (issue #39) has a hidden demo of the game. Weapons in the game demo include a cluster missile launcher, a dumb-fire rocket launcher, an M134, a SPAS-12 shotgun (double-size), and an M79 grenade launcher (also double-size). The powered armour that the President uses contains all of these weapons in shoulder pods.
Reception
Despite not receiving a Western release, Metal Wolf Chaos gained cult status after a series of YouTube videos depicting the game's voice acting and plot were released. The game was one of the fastest to gain collecting value — in 2012 (only 8 years after release) its average value on Ebay ranged from $150 to $170.[2]
1UP.com named it one of the "most insanely patriotic video games ever",[3] and thought that the premise was "perfect for a mech game and dinnertime conversation".[1] Michael Wilson is ranked first in Electronic Gaming Monthly’s list of the top ten video game politicians.[4]
References
- 1 2 Ryan Payton (2005-01-19). "Metal Wolf Chaos Review from 1UP.com". Retrieved 2010-02-15.
- ↑ Static link (26 Jun 2012 23:02 ).
- ↑ Sharkey, Scott. "Top 5 Insanely Patriotic Videogames". 1up.
- ↑ Scott Sharkey, “EGM’s Top Ten Videogame Politicians: Election time puts us in a voting mood,” Electronic Gaming Monthly 234 (November 2008): 97.
External links
- Official website (Japanese)
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