EggXpert.com
23 October 2007

Metroid Prime 3 Review

So, I finally finished the game and now I am going to tell you what I think of it. First and foremost, I have to point out genius of making the Metroid series of console games into a first-person platformer (it is not, contrary to popular belief, a first-person shooter). This gave the original Metroid Prime a sense of scale that no other game at that time could even come close to matching. Add to that the masterful level-design, puzzle layout design, and beautiful environmental effects and you get a game that defines its generation in every way. A sequel was inevitable; Metroid Prime 2: Echoes (also known as Dark Echoes) didn't particularly raise the bar that its predecessor had set so high, but regardless, the game was well-received by critics and players alike. Echoes introduced what would be a critical component of Corruption's plot: Dark Samus. The concept of phazon corruption really gave the game a nice good vs evil feel, although I'd say that they went a bit overboard with that. I would have liked to have seen phazon be treated more like an indiscriminant disease or plague (maybe something like the Flood in Halo or the creatures in The Thing). Anyway, this is a Metroid Prime 3 review is it not? So let's talk about Corruption. I didn't finish Echoes so I couldn't tell you if Corruption picks up right where that left off or if it's a few indeterminable time frames later. But without spoiling the game for you I can honestly say that Metroid Prime 3 is by far the most intense, and satisfying game I've played in a long time. The locales Samus visits are jaw-droppingly gorgeous, and mind-bendingly dangerous at the same time. The enemies can scare you if your not careful and the puzzles are flawlessly designed to make you think, not throw the controller in frustration, and upon figuring it out, you are left satisfied, even if the reward is only that you've found another puzzle to solve. The controls (I'm sure someone thought I was going to mention this first) are solid, and the game really makes you use both the remote and nunchuck in very logical and fun ways. The grappling hook, for instance, requires the player to target a context sensitive area, then push the nunchuck forward as if tossing a rope, then when the hook (it's a plasma beam) latches, pull back. The back of the case will tell you that the game has the best FPS controls ever made; now I would definitely say the game has the best CONSOLE fps controls ever, but it's hard to beat a mouse and keyboard for fps games. Now onto the Audio; guess what? it's awesome too! The music is, and this has been the case with every Metroid game, absolutely stellar. The musical score has the perfect mix of epic, adventurous, and scary and the sound effects compliment it well. The extra content is really cool also, the concept art, story boards, and such are actually worth unlocking, and the bonus content is definitely worth the effort. If you have enough points (earn point by scanning new creatures, finding secret areas, etc..) then you'll be able to buy the ability to take screen shots or you could get decals for your Hunter ship. All the music can be unlocked for full-playback as well, which is nice, because a lot the music makes for good ambient sounds while your busy with something else.

The only issues I have with this game are the loading time and the friend voucher. in the previous Metroid games, the moment you shoot a door to open it, it opens, but in MP3 you'll almost always have to wait no less than 3 seconds, sometimes up to 10 seconds. the friend voucher feature, while it makes perfect sense, is really just annoying. Friend vouchers act just like the awards you get for in-game achievements, and most of the unlockable content requires at least one friend voucher. That's a problem because in order to get one of these vouchers I have to send one to a friend (friend meaning that they are in my wii address book) that also has a wii and the game. Once I send that voucher, the friend has to accept it, giving him/her a voucher and then once he/she adds me to their wii address book, they can send a voucher to me. It's a complicated process and unless I go online to some random forum about friend vouchers and trade them with people I've never even met before, I'm not going to get very far into the unlockable content.

I'm giving Metroid Prime 3: Corruption a 9.5/10

Comments

# Blog Picks said:

Metroid Prime 3 Review Thanks the author for sharing his review…. Created by ac3raven , 10-23-2007

22 October 07 at 11:38 PM
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