A facial unique-maximum coloring of a plane graph is a proper coloring of the
vertices using positive integers such that each face has a unique vertex that
receives the maximum color in that face. Fabrici and G\"{o}ring (2016) proposed
a strengthening of the Four Color Theorem conjecturing that all plane graphs
have a facial unique-maximum coloring using four colors. This conjecture has
been disproven for general plane graphs and it was shown that five colors
suffice. In this paper we show that plane graphs, where vertices of degree at
least four induce a star forest, are facially unique-maximum 4-colorable. This
improves a previous result for subcubic plane graphs by Andova, Lidick\'y,
Lu\v{z}ar, and \v{S}krekovski (2018). We conclude the paper by proposing some
problems.Comment: 8 pages, 5 figure