Metal Head

This article is about the shooter video game. For other uses, see Metalhead.
Metal Head
Developer(s) Sega
Publisher(s) Sega
Director(s) Masahide Kobayashi
Producer(s) Koichi Nagata
Composer(s) Jun Senoue
Teruhiko Nakagawa
Platform(s) Sega 32X
Release date(s)
  • JP: February 24, 1995
  • NA: February 24, 1995
  • EU: 1995
Genre(s) First-person shooter
Mecha simulation game
Mode(s) One player

Metal Head is a 3D first-person shooter mecha simulation video game developed and published by Sega, and released in 1995 for the Genesis/Mega Drive's 32X add-on, allowing for fully texture-mapped polygons.[1]

Story

Five years after the 'World Federation' was established strife and war are still on the rise. In order to keep the peace the Federation Armed Forces, part of the Federation Police, build fully armed, bipedal Mechs also known as 'Metal Heads'. The Metal Head's success causes a heavy militarization of the countries of the Federation.

A sudden and chaotic revolution led by terrorists, armed with their own fully armed Mechs, breaks out and the terrorists take control of a whole country. The player character (in a Metal Head) is sent in with his team to liberate the country's capital.

The player character starts in a small border town and works his way in to reach the capital.

Gameplay

The game's North American box states "1 or 2 Players", but Sega has confirmed that this was a typographical error and that Metal Head is single player only.[2]

Metal Head's levels are broken down into missions, though most of the missions are to destroy all of the enemies in that particular area using the Mech's various projectile weapons. The time the user have remaining for each mission will count down and is displayed below the power gauge health bar. Before each mission a talking head appears of presumably one of the superior commanders in the Federation Armed Forces/Federation Police, and will instruct the user of the objective of the mission, which includes full voice-acting. A summary of the current mission will also appear when the game is paused.

Designed for Sega's 6-button controller, the games uses a first-person view looking through the windshield of one of the game's 'Metal Head' mechs. Below the screen is a control panel displaying the remaining health status, represented by a power-gauge and a percentage number, the time the user has remaining for the mission, the weapon the user is currently accessing and a screen displaying various other information for what is required (i.e. a 'miss' when the user does not hit an enemy target).

In the top-right of the quadrant of the screen is a map of the level. The user's vehicle is represented as a triangle and remaining enemies' vehicles are represented as pulsating circles, which allows navigation throughout each level.

Reception

Reception
Review scores
PublicationScore
EGM4.75/10[3]
Famitsu26/40[4]
Next Generation[5]

Metal Head received overwhelmingly negative reviews. The four reviewers of Electronic Gaming Monthly panned the game, with their main criticism being that the gameplay is boring.[3] Manny LaMancha of GamePro instead focused his criticisms on the graphics and sound, calling the digitized talking heads "laughable" and complaining of the rasping quality of the audio. He remarked that the missions are varied but ultimately boil down to the same actions, and summarized the game as "a promising programming experiment not taken to fruition."[6] A reviewer for Next Generation said that the game looks good in screenshots but suffers from slow pacing, glitchy graphics, awful control, pop-up, a poorly designed change-view feature, and clunky combat.[5]

References

  1. Metal Head at MobyGames
  2. "Metal Head Mistake Caught by Alert Reader". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (71): 20. June 1995.
  3. 1 2 "Review Crew: Metal Head". Electronic Gaming Monthly. Ziff Davis (69): 36. April 1995.
  4. NEW GAMES CROSS REVIEW: メタルヘッド. Weekly Famicom Tsūshin. No.324. Pg.42. 3 March 1995.
  5. 1 2 "Metal Head". Next Generation. Imagine Media (4): 90. April 1995.
  6. "ProReview: Metal Head". GamePro. IDG (79): 60. April 1995.
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