Our Wasteland friend Max Rockatansky is still pretty peeved; somewhat angry in fact, one could call him perturbed. After all, within the first few moments of this Warner Bros Entertainment video game, gone is his beloved XB Interceptor, captured and crushed by crazed War Boys of the Warlord, wait for it, Scabrous Scrotus.
With the release of the home version of Mad Max: Fury Road, and – more importantly to Warner Bros Entertainment – the release of the Mad Max video game on September 2 the Australian arm of WBE decided to do some apocalyptic artwork.
Warner Bros Interactive Entertainment has published a new teaser trailer for the upcoming Mad Max
Warner Bros Games has unleashed a new video giving a glimpse of Mad Max game-play
The explosive in-your-face movie is about to hit cinemas in 3D fiery violence. George Miller’s reboot of Max as the Road Warrior in Mad Max 4 Fury Road will no doubt attract a wide audience. The latest trailer for the video game has just been released, and beyond a tie-in to the movie, there has been a great deal of effort gone into constructing the game-play behind Mad Max due in September.
If you grew up through the 70’s and 80’s in Australia the Mad Max franchise of movies became Iconic, now with a new movie in the making and new game technology on the horizon Avalanche Studios are bringing an open-world style video-game to the market where you can play as Max Rockatansky himself, roaming the Wasteland in the endless violent conflict of survival.
Between the original 1979 movie and the iconic Mad Max 2 (The Road Warrior in the US) two years later there is a large leap of story line, but there are constants between the surreal setting of Max’s revenge tale and the post-apocalyptic world of the spectacular sequel. Mainly it was that black ’73 Falcon XB GT in the role of Pursuit Special V8 Interceptor.
With a new movie beginning production, Ford designers have taken the opportunity to reimagine a technical revamp of the classic Mad Max Ford Interceptor, with electrifying results.