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Wii Warm Up: All things Metroid
And so Metroid Week comes to an end. For those of you who picked it up, how far along are you now? How are the controls treating you? The difficulty? For us, exploring has really been the only thing we've had a little trouble with -- sometimes it takes a bit to find what we're looking for -- but we haven't found anything difficult otherwise. This is both good and bad.For those who don't have it yet, did you see anything this week that colored your opinion of the title? If nothing else, at least you get to read everyone's reviews first.
Metroid Week: Judge a Metroid by its cover (part two)

Continuing our romp through the Metroid series's boxart history, we're ending today with a look at covers from Samus's prime installments on both handhelds and consoles. We've also thrown in the packaging designs from the NES Classics releases which we neglected to include yesterday, though none of you noticed. As for music pairings, the boxarts past the post break go best with The Commodores's "Three Times a Lady." Seriously, try it.
Friday Video: Oh no you're not
This is it. This is why odd little events like Metroid week are so great. Not only do we get to wallow in all things Metroid, but as the week winds down, we get to celebrate with a great little song and video from Uncle Monsterface about one of gaming's biggest revelations. Let's take a little trip back in time -- and behind the break -- to see what it's all about.Wii Warm Up: Has Metroid set the standard?

In fact, now that we've seen something so fantastic, our standards are likely to be a little higher. Are we alone in this? Fun is fun, certainly, so we'll still love anything that's a good time, but for anything that claims an epic experience, Corruption is setting the bar pretty high.
Metroid Week: Judge a Metroid by its cover
You know how much we love to discuss boxart here at Wii Fanboy, so it seemed obvious to us that we should take a look back at past Metroid covers during our commemorative week. We've gathered up all the packaging art we could find from Samus's tenderfoot days on the NES to her later outings on the Game Boy Advance, and have posted them all past the post break for you to scroll through. Feel free to queue up Kenny Rogers's "Through The Years" for maximum enjoyment.
Virtually Overlooked: Zillion
Welcome to our weekly feature, Virtually Overlooked, wherein we talk about games that aren't on the Virtual Console yet, but should be. Call it a retro-speculative.Metroid Week leaves us in kind of a tight spot in terms of Virtually Overlooked content. We at the Virtually Overlooked Research Center want to be team players, but it's hard to imagine a less obscure franchise than Metroid. Samus Aran is often mentioned in the same breath as Mario and Link, and, unlike those two extremely well-known characters, she has no terrible CD-I game to her credit.
We suppose we could talk about Metroid II and Metroid Fusion, the two main-series Metroid games not on the VC, but that seems kind of obvious. Instead, here's a Sega Master System game that is one of the earliest post-Metroid Metroidvania games.
Metroid Week: Legotroid
Flickr user graznador has a whole set of Metroid-inspired Lego scenes that will surely solicit a squeal from even the hardest of hearts among you. Who can resist Lego Samus? Not us, that's for sure.
Wii Warm Up: The best and the worst

Metroid Week: A browser game mash-up
The controls aren't the best and you actually control Mega Man the entire time, but it's still got enemies and areas from the original Metroid title.
Wii Warm Up: How many hours have you sunk in so far?

But, without stating any spoilers, we'd like to know how far along you are. How many hours have you put into the game already? How much fun have you had with it so far?
Metroid Week: The many faces of Samus Aran

Metroid Week: We love Metroid's music
The whole Metroid series has had incredible music, from the booming Crateria theme in Super Metroid to the chant-techno of the Metroid Prime title screen. But even if Super Metroid is the height of the series in terms of gameplay (it totally is), the mind-blowingly excellent Metroid music peaked in 1986 with Hirokazu "Hip" Tanaka's soundtrack.Even on extremely simple sound hardware, the Metroid soundtrack holds up extremely well today. The title music is atmospheric and gloomy; the main Brinstar theme evokes an adventurous feeling. Tanaka's use of the NES sound chip's sounds as instruments exceeds the normal beepiness, and seems to be the most listenable NES soundtrack even to people who hate 8-bit music (speculating here, because we love chiptunes.) It's no surprise that the melodies from Metroid tunes found their way into Prime.
Stemage's Metroid Metal is a fantastic interpretation of the Metroid soundtrack (and now Super Metroid) done with blazing guitars. It's an amazingly rocking tribute to Tanaka's masterpiece, and definitely merits a listen. But for our money, the best way to rock out to Metroid tunes is to download an NSF player and listen to the real thing, either ripped from the NES cartridge or the Famicom Disk System. Because of the FDS's superior sound hardware, that version actually sounds better.
Wii Warm Up: Are you in or are you out?
Not long ago, we asked you if you were picking up Metroid Prime 3: Corruption; this was not long after the clarification came down about the lack of online multiplayer, and a lot of feathers were ruffled. But a month has passed, we've seen more from the game, and the hype train has left the station. If you were planning on simply renting or borrowing the latest Metroid -- or even skipping it altogether! -- have you changed your mind? If you were already planning on picking up the game, are you getting it today, or waiting a while?Metroid Week: Ads we've seen and loved

Wii Warm Up: Was it enough?
Prior to "Metroid month" (and perhaps even after), some people were complaining that Nintendo wasn't spending enough time or money hyping and advertising MP3: Corruption. Of course, after that, Nintendo showed up with the videos and commercials -- but was it enough? Do you feel that the latest Metroid received the attention that it deserves? Will it sell well? The title has made a fair showing on Amazon so far, which is not bad, considering that Bioshock's release and Halo 3 preorders are competing for the shooting spotlight. Our thoughts were best summed up in this recent Penny Arcade news post: most of the people muttering about a lack of hype on Metroid not only knew about the game, but whether or not they would buy it. But hey, we're only one opinion in a sea of Nintendo fans. What's yours?











