Medarot Navi

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Medarot Navi
メダロット・ナビ
Genre Strategy RPG
Platform Game Boy Advance
Developer Natsume
Publisher Imagineer
Release Date September 7, 2001


Medarot Navi is the first game in the Medarot series released for the Game Boy Advance system. It was released in two versions: Kabuto Version (represented by Granbeetle) and Kuwagata Version (represented by Sonic Stag).

This game features a different protagonist from previous entries in the series: Kasumi Asano, a bespectacled boy who discovers an alien Medarot, Mistral, underneath the auditorium of an abandoned school. A field trip to the Cluster space station goes awry with the "exile" of the class to the various modules and the reveal of the Space Robos!

Unlike the other entries in the series with their charge/cooldown "relay race" cycles, Medarot Navi features a tiled 9x9 map that more closely resembles Fire Emblem and an initiative system similar to Final Fantasy Tactics. Movement and Part Actions are carried out using "Action Points" that are distributed at the beginning of the turn and expended when a Medarot acts.

Battle Basics[edit]

Main article: Battle system (Medarot Navi)

Medarot Navi allows each side in a battle to command up to five Medarots per battle (up from three in traditional games). Kasumi himself will rarely command more than a single Medarot, however, instead relying upon his schoolmates and other acquaintances to back him up with their own signature Medarots. This roster of allies will grow as the game progresses, giving the player many options in a given battle without having to "grind" for parts.

At the start of each turn, all Medarots on the field receive AP (Action Points). When a unit's turn arrives they must decide on an Action; all Parts, Drives and other actions have unique AP costs. The Medarot can then spend its remaining AP to Move into position before acting and ending its turn; any AP left over will be converted into MF next turn. Robottles end when either one side's Leader ceases function or when the Turn Limit is exceeded.

If the player wins a Robottle, Kasumi will receive one random part from the enemy team; enough victories will fill out the Parts List and allow the player to build up Kasumi's Tinpets, allowing for the use of alternative Leaders or customized allies (the latter controlled by the unit's Medal via a pre-programmed Rotation). Completion of the Parts List relies on frequent battling and trading parts with the opposite version of the game.

Cluster, Module Security and Parts Research[edit]

The Space Robos are in command of many of Cluster's Modules at the start of the game. While the player is free to liberate any Module they can reach, they must station classmates as Security to prevent them from being retaken. Each Module has a dominant battlefield terrain and, by assigning classmates with compatible Medarots, it will be easier for Kasumi to gain ground in his ascent.

Some Modules contain Parts Research centers, each one containing data for a certain Medarot. Posting compatible allies as Security will allow them to develop these Medarots; when research reaches 100% Kasumi will be given a full set of the parts in question. Multiple instances of a given Medarot can be produced (and must be to fill out the parts list), but progress will return to 0% if the Module is retaken.

Continuity and Placement[edit]

According to the official Medarot Navi timeline, the game is set in 2024, two years after Medarot 2, 3, and 4.

Gallery[edit]

Box Art[edit]

Screen[edit]

See Also[edit]