Rune Factory Frontier

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Rune Factory: Frontier
File:Rune Factory Frontier Coverart.png
Developer(s) Neverland Co.
Publisher(s)
    Director(s) Masahide Miyata
    Fumio Shimoyama
    Producer(s) Yoshifumi Hashimoto
    Artist(s) Minako Iwasaki
    Writer(s) Hiroyuki Asada
    Composer(s) Tomoko Morita
    Series Rune Factory
    Platforms Wii
    Release date(s)
      Genre(s) Simulation, role-playing video game
      Mode(s) Single-player

      Rune Factory: Frontier (ルーンファクトリー フロンティア Rūn Fakutorī Furontia?) is a simulation/role-playing video game developed by Neverland Co. and published by Marvelous Entertainment in Japan, XSEED Games in North America, and Rising Star Games in Europe for the Wii video game console. It is the third game in the Rune Factory series.

      Plot

      Frontier begins with Raguna searching for a missing girl, Mist, who has moved to a new town because someone is calling to her in her dreams. Raguna moves into the town as well, living in the house next to her with a field. Then Raguna finds out that the whale island in the sky is in danger of falling on the town. Somehow Mist and another girl named Iris's fates are tied with the whale's. He then starts to fight monsters in the dungeons and slowly make a living in Trampoli. After going through the dungeons, he soon finds something peculiar is happening.

      Gameplay

      The player can own a farm. There are 4 distinct seasons, 3 of which you can grow different types of crops. Examples include: Strawberries and turnips in the spring, tomatoes and pineapples in the summer, and yams in the fall. There are many other crops, and you can grow flowers, which can all be sold for gold (the game's currency.) Farming is only half of the game. The other half is dungeon crawling. There are four very different dungeons, three of which represent the four different seasons (the third dungeon represents both autumn and winter). In these dungeons, crops of that dungeon's seasonal affiliation can be grown. The fourth dungeon, Whale Island, is omni-seasonal, and all crops can be grown there at any time.

      Another feature is the concept of Runey distribution. Runeys come in four different variations: water, rock, tree and grass. Runeys represent the ecosystem of Trampoli; when Runeys are in perfect harmony, the area that they occupy reaches a state of Prosperity, and crops in that area will grow much faster than normal. However, should even one area of Trampoli become devoid of Runeys, the ecosystem suffers, and crops grow much slower than normal. Runeys can be re-distributed from area to area using a tool called the Harvester. Every nine ripe crops in the field in front of the character's house spawn one Runey daily.

      Also standard to games related to Harvest Moon is the social system and marriage system. In Rune Factory: Frontier, there are a total of 13 marriageable women, as well as many other townspeople whom Raguna can socialize with. The social system involves speaking with the townspeople as well as giving them gifts, which may increase, decrease, or make their affection stay the same. As the player, you must find out what each townperson likes and dislikes and give them gifts accordingly. Additionally, you may gain affection by participating in and winning festival competitions, or doing something arbitrary that increases only a certain person's affection, such as simply maintaining your farm.

      Development

      The game was announced during an interview between Cubed³ and Yasuhiro Wada, the creator of the Story of Seasons series, on June 6, 2007. A year later, the game was fully revealed on June 4, 2008 in the Japanese magazine Famitsu.

      References

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      External links