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The '''''Metroid Prime'' series''' is a three-dimensional series starting with [[Metroid (series)|the series']] revival in 2002, as the series [[Metroid 64|did not see a release]] on the [[nwiki:Nintendo 64|Nintendo 64]] as fans hoped would happen. Instead, the games were released on the next two generations of video game consoles. The titles were released on two home consoles and one handheld; two on the [[Nintendo GameCube]], two on the [[Nintendo DS]], and two on the [[Wii]]. ''Metroid Prime'' consists of a [[Metroid Prime: Trilogy|trilogy]] containing the opening and closing of the [[Phazon]] saga. Another set of titles on the handheld was a game considered as a [[Metroid Prime Hunters|spin-off game]], which was very different from the ''Prime'' series in terms of storyline, and a [[Metroid Prime Pinball|retelling]] of the first game in the series in the form of a fast-paced pinball-based game. Until ''[[Metroid: Other M]]'', games in the ''Prime'' series were the only games taking place behind Samus's visor.
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{{Game-infobox
|image = {{#switch:{{#var:A}}||mp1=[[File:Metroid Prime Logo.png|250px|Metroid Prime Logo]]
|mp2=[[File:MP2 Logo.jpg|250px|Metroid Prime 2: Echoes Logo]]
|mp3=[[File:MP3 Logo.jpg|220px|Metroid Prime 3: Corruption Logo]]
|mph=[[File:MPH Logo.jpg|250px|Metroid Prime Hunters Logo]]
|mpp=[[File:MPP Logo.jpg|250px|Metroid Prime Pinball Logo]]|<span class="plainlinks">[http://www.metroidwiki.org/index.php?title=Metroid_Prime_(series)&action=purge click here to see image]</span>}}
|caption= {{#switch:{{#var:A}}|mp1=''[[Metroid Prime (game)|Metroid Prime]]'' Logo
|mp2=''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes|Echoes]]'' Logo
|mp3=''[[Metroid Prime 3: Corruption]]'' Logo
|mph=''[[Metroid Prime Hunters]]'' Logo
|mpp=''[[Metroid Prime Pinball]]'' Logo|<span class="plainlinks">[http://www.metroidwiki.org/index.php?title=Metroid_Prime_(series)&action=purge An error has occurred, click here to correct it.]</span>}}
|publisher=Nintendo
|developer=Nintendo, Retro Studios
|genre=Action-adventure game
|strategywiki= none
}}


Chronologically, the ''Prime'' series falls between the events of ''[[Metroid (game)|Metroid]]''/''[[Metroid: Zero Mission]]'' and ''[[Metroid II: Return of Samus]]''.  
The '''''Metroid Prime'' series''' is a subset of the [[Metroid (series)|''Metroid'' series]] published by Nintendo and developed by Retro Studios. The ''Prime'' series consists of a main [[Metroid Prime: Trilogy|trilogy]] and two titles released on handheld systems: a [[Metroid Prime Hunters|spin-off game]], which deviated from the trilogy storyline, and a [[Metroid Prime Pinball|retelling]] of the first ''Prime'' game in the form of a fast-paced pinball-based game. The ''Prime'' games were the first ''Metroid'' titles using a three-dimensional first-person perspective.


==Phazon Saga==
==Overview==
The [[Metroid Prime: Trilogy|''Prime'' trilogy]] is considered the center of the ''Prime'' series. It consists of ''[[Metroid Prime (game)|Metroid Prime]]'', ''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]'', and ''[[Metroid Prime 3: Corruption]]''. These three games, along with ''[[Metroid Prime: Trilogy]]'', a combination of the three aforementioned games, were developed by [[Retro Studios]] and [[Nintendo]]. The main focus of these games are to stop the widespread disease of Phazon Corruption and to prevent planets all over the galaxy from entering a Phazon-producing state. [[Samus Aran]] is the main protagonist in the ''Prime'' series.
The games heralded a revival of the ''Metroid'' series in 2002 after an eight year absence, as the series [[Metroid 64|did not see a release]] on the [[nwiki:Nintendo 64|Nintendo 64]] console as fans had hoped it would. Instead, the games were released on the next two generations of video game consoles: two on the [[Nintendo GameCube]], two on the [[Nintendo DS]], and one on the [[Wii]]. The three main titles were later combined with enhanced controls and released on the Wii as the ''[[Metroid Prime Trilogy]]''.


==Games in the Series==
Chronologically, the ''Prime'' series falls between the events of ''[[Metroid (game)|Metroid]]''/''[[Metroid: Zero Mission]]'' and ''[[Metroid II: Return of Samus]]'',<ref>{{cite web|quote= 最初のファミコンディスクシステムと、次の『メトロイド2』の間のお話です。外伝として切り離して作るアイデアもあったんですが、外伝って逃げの部分がありますよね? それで、田邊と相談しまして、一番自然に入れるところに入れたんです。現地のスタッフがよくがんばってくれて、シリーズ内の1作品として、うまくできあがったと思いますよ。| url= http://www.nintendo.co.jp/nom/0303/4/index.html| title= 「メトロイド」に託す思い 坂本賀勇インタビュー| site= Nintendo.jp}}</ref> but the storyline is greatly self-contained and has little effect on future games.
*''[[Metroid Prime (game)|Metroid Prime]]''
*''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]''
*''[[Metroid Prime 3: Corruption]]''
*''[[Metroid Prime: Trilogy]]''


==Spinoff Games==
The ''Prime'' series trilogy - ''[[Metroid Prime (game)|Metroid Prime]]'', ''[[Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]'', and ''[[Metroid Prime 3: Corruption]]'' - follows [[Samus Aran]] as she combats [[Space Pirate]]s experimenting on [[Metroid (species)|Metroids]] with the recently discovered mutagenic substance known as [[Phazon]]. Samus must save several planets from the spread of Phazon, which has the ability to decimate entire ecosystems, while battling enemies who would use the power of Phazon for their own purposes. One such enemy is a mutated Metroid known as [[Metroid Prime (specimen)|Metroid Prime]], who absorbs DNA from Samus and becomes [[Dark Samus]], and is the main antagonist of the series.  Along the way Samus discovers the origin of all Phazon and must destroy it to save the galaxy.
*''[[Metroid Prime Hunters]]''
*''[[Metroid Prime Pinball]]''


==''Metroid Prime''==
==Installments==
Metroid Prime is the predecessor to the other '''First Person Adventure''' games in the series. It was released for the Nintendo GameCube in 2002. The game takes place on the planet [[Tallon IV]]. It is known as the very first video game to be a First-Person Adventure, which does not focus on shooting enemies, but on exploring the the main setting of the game. ''Metroid Prime'' was very well received by various video game sites and is considered as the greatest Nintendo Gamecube title of all time for its very tight controls and stunning visuals.
===Console Titles===
====''Metroid Prime''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime (game)|Metroid Prime}}
''Metroid Prime'' was released for the Nintendo GameCube in 2002 and was the first 3D Metroid game. The game is officially classified by Nintendo as a first-person adventure rather than a first-person shooter, though there are many combat sequences, because of the extensive exploration elements in the game.


==''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes''==
[[File:Samus vs Ing.jpg|thumb|right|200px|''Echoes'' artwork]]
The successor to the highly-acclaimed First Person Adventure, ''Metroid Prime''. It is the second installment in the ''Prime'' series. It was released for the Nintendo Gamecube in 2004. The game takes place on the planet Aether, which is infected by [[Phazon]], creating a hellish mirror image dubbed as [[Dark Aether]]. This is [[Dark Samus]]'s first major appearance as the main antagonist of the ''Prime'' series. It is also the first ''Metroid Prime'' game in the series to feature a multiplayer function. ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'' received a reputation for having punishing difficulty and devilish puzzles, however still its reception was well-received.
Samus follows the distress signal of a Space Pirate [[Frigate Orpheon|frigate]] to the planet [[Tallon IV]], a former [[Chozo]] colony. On the surface she uncovers a series of Space Pirate operations involving a powerful substance known as Phazon, which was brought to the planet on the back of a strange [[Leviathan|meteor]] and was slowly devastating the local ecosystem. She dismantles the Space Pirate [[Glacier One|labs]] and [[Phazon Mines|mining]] operations and heads into the [[Impact Crater]] of the meteor, where she encounters an intensely-mutated Metroid known as [[Metroid Prime (specimen)|Metroid Prime]]. Though Samus defeats the creature successfully, it manages to survive, and using DNA from the [[Phazon Suit]] it rips from her, Metroid Prime becomes the entity known as [[Dark Samus]].


==''Metroid Prime 3: Corruption''==
====''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes''====
The final game in the Metroid Prime series and the sequel to ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes''. It was the first Metroid game ever to be released for the Nintendo Wii in 2007. The game's setting is mainly on the planets [[Norion]], [[Bryyo]], [[Elysia]], and the source of all Phazon, [[Phaaze]]. ''Metroid Prime 3: Corruption'', like ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'', accomplished a milestone as well besides being the first Metroid title to be released on the Nintendo Wii. The game revolutionized the control scheme for later First-Person Shooters on the Wii. The same controls were used in the [[New Play Control!]] versions of ''[[New Play Control! Metroid Prime|Metroid Prime]]'' and ''[[New Play Control! Metroid Prime 2: Echoes|Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]''. In ''Metroid Prime: Trilogy'', the same control scheme was used. The game was very well received for its tight controls and gameplay, but some considered it as the black sheep in the series because of the close resemblance of First-Person Shooters instead of an action-adventure game. Some video game websites criticized it because of its overly easy difficulty and lack of reliance on puzzles and that the game was very short compared to its predecessors.
{{Main|Metroid Prime 2: Echoes}}
The successor to the highly-acclaimed first-person adventure ''Metroid Prime'', ''Echoes'' is the second installment in the ''Prime'' series. It was released for the Nintendo Gamecube in 2004 and was the first ''Metroid'' game in the series to feature a multiplayer function. ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'' received a reputation for having punishing difficulty, but was still well-received.
 
In this installment, Samus is hired by the [[Galactic Federation]] to make contact with and render assistance to a [[GFMC Task Force Herakles|squadron]] of [[Galactic Federation Marines]] that went missing in the Dasha region.<ref>{{cite|--- Mission File 02543 --- 8 days ago, contact with Galatic Federation trooper squad Bravo was lost.<br>--- Contract Agreement --- Locate Federation troopers and render assistance.<br>--- Data Confirmation --- Last transmission received from a rogue planet located in the Dasha region called Aether.|Samus Mission File|Metroid Prime 2: Echoes}}</ref> She follows the marines to the planet [[Aether]], which had also been infected by [[Phazon]] after a meteor impact, creating a hellish mirror image known as [[Dark Aether]] infested with dark creatures called the [[Ing]]. [[Dark Samus]] and the Space Pirates also ventured to the planet, attracted by the Phazon there.
 
The marines she was sent to assist were dead before Samus arrived. She makes contact with the local people, known as the [[Luminoth]], and uses [[Portal]]s that connect the two dimensions on the planet to repel the Ing, as well as the Space Pirates who were mining Phazon on the planet and experimenting on [[Tallon Metroid]]s. She manages to destroy the Ing presence, collapse Dark Aether, and seems to destroy Dark Samus as well. But the threat of Phazon still exists.
{{clear}}
 
====''Metroid Prime 3: Corruption''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime 3: Corruption}}
 
[[File:Metroid Prime 3 Poster.jpg|left|thumb|200px|''Corruption'' artwork]]
The final game in the ''Prime'' series and the sequel to ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'', ''Corruption'' was the first Metroid game to be released for the Nintendo Wii in 2007. It used the revolutionary control scheme used in the [[New Play Control!]] versions of ''[[New Play Control! Metroid Prime|Metroid Prime]]'' and ''[[New Play Control! Metroid Prime 2: Echoes|Metroid Prime 2: Echoes]]''. The same controls were recycled for use in the ''Metroid Prime: Trilogy'' release. The game was very well received for its tight controls and gameplay, but received some criticism for its easy difficulty and lack of reliance on puzzles, and that the game was relatively short when compared to its predecessors.
 
During the events of ''Corruption'', the Federation begins using Phazon as a weapon, and gives Samus this ability in the form of the [[PED Suit]]. These [[Phazon Enhancement Device|devices]] gradually corrupt the wearer, however, and Samus must complete her mission under constant threat of complete [[Phazon Corruption]].
 
In the midst of her adventure the origin of all Phazon is revealed, a sentient planet called [[Phaaze]]. [[Leviathan]]s, living Phazon-laced meteors, are birthed on Phaaze and launched towards other planets, which they infect with enough Phazon to eventually transform their targets into more sentient planets. [[Dark Samus]] takes control of Phaaze and a force of [[Space Pirate]]s in an attempt to spread Phazon throughout the universe. Samus works closely with the [[Galactic Federation]] in this title to end the Phazon's corrupting effects on three Federation worlds: [[Norion]], [[Elysia]], and [[Bryyo]].
 
Samus successfully defeats Dark Samus and destroys the planet Phaaze, eliminating all Phazon in the galaxy.
{{clear}}
 
====''Metroid Prime: Trilogy''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime: Trilogy}}


==''Metroid Prime: Trilogy''==
''Trilogy'' is the Collector's Editon of all three ''Metroid Prime'' games in the series, with the first two being ported for the Nintendo Wii in 2009. The game borrowed the controls from the New Play Control! versions of the first two ''Metroid Prime'' titles released in Japan. It also has the Multiplayer of ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'' with the new controls as well. The game featured concept artwork and other extras to those who purchased the package. ''Metroid Prime Trilogy'' is one of the few titles on the Nintendo Channel with a Platimum rating, indicating its replay value and its gameplay elements. The trilogy is defined as a must-own of three of the most highly-acclaimed games for their systems. The game, like the others, had good reception and included all three games into one package. Its production, however, is discontinued.
''Trilogy'' is the Collector's Editon of all three ''Metroid Prime'' games in the series, with the first two being ported for the Nintendo Wii in 2009. The game borrowed the controls from the New Play Control! versions of the first two ''Metroid Prime'' titles released in Japan. It also has the Multiplayer of ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes'' with the new controls as well. The game featured concept artwork and other extras to those who purchased the package. ''Metroid Prime Trilogy'' is one of the few titles on the Nintendo Channel with a Platimum rating, indicating its replay value and its gameplay elements. The trilogy is defined as a must-own of three of the most highly-acclaimed games for their systems. The game, like the others, had good reception and included all three games into one package. Its production, however, is discontinued.


==''Metroid Prime Hunters''==
It was later re-released as a digital download on the Wii U in January 2015.
A spinoff game of the ''Metroid Prime'' series, released for the touch-screen capable handheld called the Nintendo DS. While it still incorporated qualities of the main games, some features were changed from the games. ''Metroid Prime Hunters'' takes place between ''Metroid Prime'' and ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes''. It is the first ''Metroid'' game ever to feature competitive online multiplayer support, and it pioneered the way for other online Nintendo DS titles to follow. It is the first ''Metroid'' title ever to feature Full Motion Video (FMV) in its cutscenes. The game was not given the same good reviews from the other games, but it was praised for its online support.
{{clear}}
 
====''Metroid Prime 4''====
{{main|Metroid Prime 4}}
A fourth main installment of the ''Metroid Prime'' series was announced during E3 2017. It is slated for release on the [[Nintendo Switch]] console.
{{clear}}
 
===Handheld Titles===
====''Metroid Prime Hunters''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime Hunters}}
[[File:Hunters mph Artwork.png|200px|thumb|right|''Hunters'' artwork]]
 
''Hunters'' is a spinoff game in the ''Prime'' series, released in 2006 for the touch-screen capable handheld, the Nintendo DS. It is the first ''Metroid'' game ever to feature competitive online multiplayer support, and it pioneered the way for other online Nintendo DS titles to follow. It is also the first ''Metroid'' title ever to feature Full Motion Video (FMV) in its cutscenes.
 
''Hunters'' deviates from the ''Trilogy'' storyline, recounting a mission in which Samus encounters neither Phazon nor the Metroid Prime creature. It takes place between the events of ''Metroid Prime'' and ''Metroid Prime 2: Echoes''. After the [[Galactic Federation|Federation]] intercepts a telepathic message promising great power, they send Samus to retrieve the power for the Federation or destroy it before it can fall into enemy hands.<ref>{{cite|---MISSION FILE 79109---<br/>"The secret to ULTIMATE POWER lies in the ALIMBIC CLUSTER."<br/>---DATA CONFIRMATION---<br/>This repeating neural thread, originating from an uncharted region of the TETRA GALAXY known as the ALIMBIC CLUSTER, was recently intercepted and translated by federation empaths. ---ROGUE CONTRACT---<br/>1. Discover the meaning behind this mysterious telepathic message.<br/>2. If the "ULTIMATE POWER" can be secured, ensure Federation control.<br/>3. If the power cannot be secured, ensure that it remains secret or destroy it.|Introduction|Metroid Prime Hunters}}</ref> Several other [[Bounty Hunter]]s also intercept the message and rush towards its [[Alimbic Cluster|point of origin]] to claim it for themselves. In the end, the message proves to be a trap, and the Bounty Hunters must fight together to survive.
 
====''Metroid Prime Pinball''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime Pinball}}
 
''Metroid Prime Pinball'' is a pinball-style title that was released in 2005 for the Nintendo DS. The game loosely follows the events of the original ''Metroid Prime'', retaining many of its thematic and graphic elements. Samus's [[Morph Ball]] acts as the pinball. She can progress through various stages resembling all but the [[Chozo Ruins]] area from ''Metroid Prime'' and must defeat bosses along the way.
 
====''Metroid Prime: Federation Force''====
{{Main|Metroid Prime: Federation Force}}


==Trivia==
''Metroid Prime: Federation Force'' is a multiplayer spinoff game and focuses primarily on a team of Galactic Federation Marines as they complete a variety of missions. The game comes bundled with ''Metroid Prime: Blast Ball'', a 3-on-3 sci-fi sport in the Metroid universe.
*''[[Metroid Prime Hunters]]'' defies the words "[[Metroid (species)|Metroid]]" and "Prime" in its title. The game does not contain any Metroids as part of the main storyline in it, nor does it contain any mention to Phazon Corruption in the galaxy unlike the other three ''Metroid Prime'' installments.
{{clear}}
{{clear}}


{{refbar}}
{{Games|2}}
{{Games|2}}
[[Category:Metroid Prime series|M]]
[[Category:Metroid Prime series|M]]

Latest revision as of 19:32, 17 October 2017


Metroid Prime (series)
Metroid Prime 3: Corruption Logo

Metroid Prime 3: Corruption Logo

Publisher Nintendo
Developer(s) Nintendo, Retro Studios
Genre Action-adventure game
Walkthrough and Guide at Strategy Wiki


The Metroid Prime series is a subset of the Metroid series published by Nintendo and developed by Retro Studios. The Prime series consists of a main trilogy and two titles released on handheld systems: a spin-off game, which deviated from the trilogy storyline, and a retelling of the first Prime game in the form of a fast-paced pinball-based game. The Prime games were the first Metroid titles using a three-dimensional first-person perspective.

Overview[edit | edit source]

The games heralded a revival of the Metroid series in 2002 after an eight year absence, as the series did not see a release on the Nintendo 64 console as fans had hoped it would. Instead, the games were released on the next two generations of video game consoles: two on the Nintendo GameCube, two on the Nintendo DS, and one on the Wii. The three main titles were later combined with enhanced controls and released on the Wii as the Metroid Prime Trilogy.

Chronologically, the Prime series falls between the events of Metroid/Metroid: Zero Mission and Metroid II: Return of Samus,[1] but the storyline is greatly self-contained and has little effect on future games.

The Prime series trilogy - Metroid Prime, Metroid Prime 2: Echoes, and Metroid Prime 3: Corruption - follows Samus Aran as she combats Space Pirates experimenting on Metroids with the recently discovered mutagenic substance known as Phazon. Samus must save several planets from the spread of Phazon, which has the ability to decimate entire ecosystems, while battling enemies who would use the power of Phazon for their own purposes. One such enemy is a mutated Metroid known as Metroid Prime, who absorbs DNA from Samus and becomes Dark Samus, and is the main antagonist of the series. Along the way Samus discovers the origin of all Phazon and must destroy it to save the galaxy.

Installments[edit | edit source]

Console Titles[edit | edit source]

Metroid Prime[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime

Metroid Prime was released for the Nintendo GameCube in 2002 and was the first 3D Metroid game. The game is officially classified by Nintendo as a first-person adventure rather than a first-person shooter, though there are many combat sequences, because of the extensive exploration elements in the game.

Echoes artwork

Samus follows the distress signal of a Space Pirate frigate to the planet Tallon IV, a former Chozo colony. On the surface she uncovers a series of Space Pirate operations involving a powerful substance known as Phazon, which was brought to the planet on the back of a strange meteor and was slowly devastating the local ecosystem. She dismantles the Space Pirate labs and mining operations and heads into the Impact Crater of the meteor, where she encounters an intensely-mutated Metroid known as Metroid Prime. Though Samus defeats the creature successfully, it manages to survive, and using DNA from the Phazon Suit it rips from her, Metroid Prime becomes the entity known as Dark Samus.

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime 2: Echoes

The successor to the highly-acclaimed first-person adventure Metroid Prime, Echoes is the second installment in the Prime series. It was released for the Nintendo Gamecube in 2004 and was the first Metroid game in the series to feature a multiplayer function. Metroid Prime 2: Echoes received a reputation for having punishing difficulty, but was still well-received.

In this installment, Samus is hired by the Galactic Federation to make contact with and render assistance to a squadron of Galactic Federation Marines that went missing in the Dasha region.[2] She follows the marines to the planet Aether, which had also been infected by Phazon after a meteor impact, creating a hellish mirror image known as Dark Aether infested with dark creatures called the Ing. Dark Samus and the Space Pirates also ventured to the planet, attracted by the Phazon there.

The marines she was sent to assist were dead before Samus arrived. She makes contact with the local people, known as the Luminoth, and uses Portals that connect the two dimensions on the planet to repel the Ing, as well as the Space Pirates who were mining Phazon on the planet and experimenting on Tallon Metroids. She manages to destroy the Ing presence, collapse Dark Aether, and seems to destroy Dark Samus as well. But the threat of Phazon still exists.

Metroid Prime 3: Corruption[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime 3: Corruption
Corruption artwork

The final game in the Prime series and the sequel to Metroid Prime 2: Echoes, Corruption was the first Metroid game to be released for the Nintendo Wii in 2007. It used the revolutionary control scheme used in the New Play Control! versions of Metroid Prime and Metroid Prime 2: Echoes. The same controls were recycled for use in the Metroid Prime: Trilogy release. The game was very well received for its tight controls and gameplay, but received some criticism for its easy difficulty and lack of reliance on puzzles, and that the game was relatively short when compared to its predecessors.

During the events of Corruption, the Federation begins using Phazon as a weapon, and gives Samus this ability in the form of the PED Suit. These devices gradually corrupt the wearer, however, and Samus must complete her mission under constant threat of complete Phazon Corruption.

In the midst of her adventure the origin of all Phazon is revealed, a sentient planet called Phaaze. Leviathans, living Phazon-laced meteors, are birthed on Phaaze and launched towards other planets, which they infect with enough Phazon to eventually transform their targets into more sentient planets. Dark Samus takes control of Phaaze and a force of Space Pirates in an attempt to spread Phazon throughout the universe. Samus works closely with the Galactic Federation in this title to end the Phazon's corrupting effects on three Federation worlds: Norion, Elysia, and Bryyo.

Samus successfully defeats Dark Samus and destroys the planet Phaaze, eliminating all Phazon in the galaxy.

Metroid Prime: Trilogy[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime: Trilogy

Trilogy is the Collector's Editon of all three Metroid Prime games in the series, with the first two being ported for the Nintendo Wii in 2009. The game borrowed the controls from the New Play Control! versions of the first two Metroid Prime titles released in Japan. It also has the Multiplayer of Metroid Prime 2: Echoes with the new controls as well. The game featured concept artwork and other extras to those who purchased the package. Metroid Prime Trilogy is one of the few titles on the Nintendo Channel with a Platimum rating, indicating its replay value and its gameplay elements. The trilogy is defined as a must-own of three of the most highly-acclaimed games for their systems. The game, like the others, had good reception and included all three games into one package. Its production, however, is discontinued.

It was later re-released as a digital download on the Wii U in January 2015.

Metroid Prime 4[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime 4

A fourth main installment of the Metroid Prime series was announced during E3 2017. It is slated for release on the Nintendo Switch console.

Handheld Titles[edit | edit source]

Metroid Prime Hunters[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime Hunters
Hunters artwork

Hunters is a spinoff game in the Prime series, released in 2006 for the touch-screen capable handheld, the Nintendo DS. It is the first Metroid game ever to feature competitive online multiplayer support, and it pioneered the way for other online Nintendo DS titles to follow. It is also the first Metroid title ever to feature Full Motion Video (FMV) in its cutscenes.

Hunters deviates from the Trilogy storyline, recounting a mission in which Samus encounters neither Phazon nor the Metroid Prime creature. It takes place between the events of Metroid Prime and Metroid Prime 2: Echoes. After the Federation intercepts a telepathic message promising great power, they send Samus to retrieve the power for the Federation or destroy it before it can fall into enemy hands.[3] Several other Bounty Hunters also intercept the message and rush towards its point of origin to claim it for themselves. In the end, the message proves to be a trap, and the Bounty Hunters must fight together to survive.

Metroid Prime Pinball[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime Pinball

Metroid Prime Pinball is a pinball-style title that was released in 2005 for the Nintendo DS. The game loosely follows the events of the original Metroid Prime, retaining many of its thematic and graphic elements. Samus's Morph Ball acts as the pinball. She can progress through various stages resembling all but the Chozo Ruins area from Metroid Prime and must defeat bosses along the way.

Metroid Prime: Federation Force[edit | edit source]

Main article: Metroid Prime: Federation Force

Metroid Prime: Federation Force is a multiplayer spinoff game and focuses primarily on a team of Galactic Federation Marines as they complete a variety of missions. The game comes bundled with Metroid Prime: Blast Ball, a 3-on-3 sci-fi sport in the Metroid universe.

References

  1. "最初のファミコンディスクシステムと、次の『メトロイド2』の間のお話です。外伝として切り離して作るアイデアもあったんですが、外伝って逃げの部分がありますよね? それで、田邊と相談しまして、一番自然に入れるところに入れたんです。現地のスタッフがよくがんばってくれて、シリーズ内の1作品として、うまくできあがったと思いますよ。" 「メトロイド」に託す思い 坂本賀勇インタビュー, Nintendo.jp
  2. "--- Mission File 02543 --- 8 days ago, contact with Galatic Federation trooper squad Bravo was lost.
    --- Contract Agreement --- Locate Federation troopers and render assistance.
    --- Data Confirmation --- Last transmission received from a rogue planet located in the Dasha region called Aether.
    " —Samus Mission File (Metroid Prime 2: Echoes)
  3. "---MISSION FILE 79109---
    "The secret to ULTIMATE POWER lies in the ALIMBIC CLUSTER."
    ---DATA CONFIRMATION---
    This repeating neural thread, originating from an uncharted region of the TETRA GALAXY known as the ALIMBIC CLUSTER, was recently intercepted and translated by federation empaths. ---ROGUE CONTRACT---
    1. Discover the meaning behind this mysterious telepathic message.
    2. If the "ULTIMATE POWER" can be secured, ensure Federation control.
    3. If the power cannot be secured, ensure that it remains secret or destroy it.
    " —Introduction (Metroid Prime Hunters)


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