Sonic the Hedgehog 4 has been previewed, played, reviewed, picked apart, dissected and a whole host of other actions. We’re not here today to do any of those things. This article isn’t about how Sonic 4 Episodes I & II played or the behind-the-scenes politics of how the game came about. This article is about how a few fans with too much time on their hands bothered SEGA enough about silly little details.
Way back in 2010, SEGA revealed Sonic the Hedgehog 4, and speculation ran rampant. How would it play? How would it tie to Sonic 3 & Knuckles? Could we expect a Sonic 4 Happy Meal? These and many more questions were asked. Now, six years later, many of those questions have been answered and with the upcoming Sonic Mania, fans are looking towards the future while Sonic 4 Episodes I & II remain in the past. But one little question has always gone unanswered, and that question is “What is the name of the island in Sonic 4?”. Following the game’s release, I reached out to SEGA for an answer, but I came back with just a few names of the bosses from Episode II. We tried again last year in an interview with Aaron Webber, but aside from his own head canon answer there was no apparent official name.
Flash forward to July. Sonic Retro’s own David the Lurker was given the official unofficial go-ahead to name the island in Sonic 4 (and by extension, the island containing Sonic CD‘s Never Lake). The reasoning? No name was ever given, and it is likely SEGA will never revisit the Sonic 4 games (this is our speculation, not official word from SEGA), so we might as well name it now and stop asking SEGA about it. The only part I played was drawing up the certificate and finding a moment during Sonic the Hedgehog’s 25th Anniversary Party in which David, Aaron and myself were assembled to reveal the name and sign the certificate. David is the real star here. Following the event, when Aaron was outside the San Diego House of Blues talking to a crowd of fans, we managed to catch his attention for a minute to get him to sign the certificate. There will never be paintings of “The Signing of the Sonic 4 Island Name Certificate”, but if there was you’d probably see a slightly confused Aaron, David explaining what was happening, and Barry trying to find a flat surface to write the Island’s name down.
So let’s get to the name! With David being the creative guy that he is, he didn’t want to just say the name, he wanted a bit of back story. So without further ado, here is the story of the island from Sonic 4 Episodes I & II and the intro animation to Sonic CD:
In a time long since forgotten, two small islands coexisted in harmony. Be’en, known for its rolling hills, and Kalow, an atoll of pristine lakes. The isle of Be’en had been slowly drifting towards its sister island, and so the two tribes strived to unite just as their land was.
One day, a small satellite appeared over the sky of Kalow, whom the locals took as a sign of the gods blessing them. Those of Be’en took great offense, saying they were both blessed. The unity that was to be their combined world instead became that of turmoil, what had been promised vanishing in an instant.
Thinking that their blessings would become evident if they made it to the mysterious land above, both peoples plotted to somehow make it up there. As the war raged, they made it to the surface, and discovered the secret this little planet held: the Time Stones.
Learning that these gems were able to control time itself, the warring tribes desires became dark. Seeking to slip into the past, they thought the best way to win was to stop the war from happening at all, erasing their enemies. When the stones made it to Earth and were used, the battle of a thousand years happened in but three seconds. The two civilizations thrived, died, and blinked into almost nothing.
With only the faintest hint that anyone once lived upon the land, the gods took back the Time Stones, making sure they were safe. As Be’en finally merged with Kalow, the Never Lake shimmered as the Little Planet disappeared back into the mysterious space it came from.
The names of the two tribes faded, and those who would later settle the whole of the isle would rename its rolling hills. Sensing in the air that something else once thrived there, the whispers of a forgotten past and a destined future inspired them to call their home Mirage Island.
[Note: Aaron Webber identifies as Big the Cat, and we don’t blame him.]
13 Comments
Okay, cut the B.S. guys.
Big’s 6’7″. You guys are in no way, shape, or form that tall.
No problems here otherwise. As canon as the first motobug in Green Hill Zone now being named Jim.
Big was hit by the Sonic CD Shrink-Ray on the way to the photoshoot.
Oh so it’s truly called Mirage Island now? Yay!! All that hard work paid off. Not since the signing of the Declaration of Independence have I been so happy to have someone write their name on a piece of paper.
It was an honor to have Witnessed such an event.
Congrats David and all you other sonic fans :3
Nice nod there to a certain SEGA of Antarctica employee.
Damn it, now my headcanon name of “Southwestside Island” is ruined.
“Mirage Island” still sounds cool though.
Why does this sort of madness always happen when I’m not in the UK? =P
So, “Mirage Island”, as in “illusion”, as in “Sonic 4 never happened”? =D
Like it or not, Sonic The Hedgehog 4 is canon and those of you who disagree (Icekinght and Blue Blood) are idiots.
Thanks for letting us know Sonic4
Pretty sure Sonic 4 isn’t Canon. Canon doesn’t make video games.
Mirage Island, eh? Seems like a fitting name actually, and kudos on devising a backstory to go with it.
…Sonic 4 actually could’ve used a bit more of that itself…but that’s all in the past now.
Sonic 4 never happened
How about Miragia Islands? Sounds more Sonic to me.