Machi (video game)
Machi (街, literally "City") is a visual novel and the third entry in the "Sound Novel Evolution" series published by Chunsoft. It was ported to PlayStation (retitled Machi: Unmei no Kousaten (街 〜運命の交差点〜, lit. "City: The Intersection of Fate")), and for PlayStation Portable as Machi: Unmei no Kousaten: Tokubetsuhen (街 〜運命の交差点〜 特別篇, lit. "City: The Intersection of Fate - Special Version").
| Machi | |
|---|---|
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| Developer(s) | Chunsoft | 
| Publisher(s) | Chunsoft | 
| Director(s) | Kazuya Asano | 
| Producer(s) | Koichi Nakamura Toshiki Kobuko  | 
| Programmer(s) | Hidefumi Itano | 
| Writer(s) | Shukei Nagasaka | 
| Composer(s) | Kota Kato Chiyoko Mitsumata Hideyuki Hayashi Shoji Morito Shinichi Itakura  | 
| Platform(s) | Sega Saturn PlayStation PlayStation Portable  | 
| Release | Sega Saturn
 
 
  | 
| Genre(s) | Adventure, Visual novel | 
| Mode(s) | Single-player | 
Gameplay
    
The game features a branching narrative.
Characters
    
- Keima Amemiya: a detective
 - Jintarō Umabe: an actor
 - Masami Ushio: a gangster
 - Yoshiko Hosoi: a part-time worker
 - Masashi Shinoda: a university student
 - Ryūji Takamine: a legion deserter
 - Fumiyasu Ichikawa: a screenwriter
 - Yōhei Tobisawa: an idol
 - Atsushi Takamine: Ryuji's father
 - Norio Aoi: a pariah
 - Isamu Sagiyama: an assistant director
 - Patrick Dandy: a marriage swindler
 - Shōjirō Kaizuka: a politician
 
Reception
    
The game sold 164,866 copies in Japan.[1] Famitsu scored the game 33 out of 40.[2] It ranked fifth at the top 100 reader poll of their favorite games of all time.[3] A proposed sequel to Machi was cancelled, but a chapter of it was adapted as a 1998 television miniseries Tōmei Shōjo Ea (Invisible Girl Ea). 428: Shibuya Scramble is set in the same location with many references. In 2017, Famitsu readers voted it one of the top five adventure games of all time.[4]
References
    
- "Game Search". Game Data Library. Famitsu. December 8, 2019. Retrieved December 29, 2019.
 - プレイステーション – サウンドノベル・エボリ 街~運命の交差点~. Weekly Famitsu. No.915 Pt.2. Pg.5. June 30, 2006.
 - Collin Campbell (2006). "Japan Votes on All Time Top 100". Archived from the original on January 10, 2012. Retrieved October 2, 2009.
 - "Steins;Gate is voted the best Adventure game of all time". Japanese Nintendo. June 7, 2017. Archived from the original on June 18, 2017.
 
