For those of you who've been following me lately, you know I'm completely obsessed with
Metroid at the moment. I've always loved it, but for some reason when I was fiddling with my new MP3 player and ripping music for it, I started listening to the all the
Metroid soundtracks again and just got obsessed. So I played through
Fusion, started going through
Zero Mission again on hard, picked up and started playing
Hunters, and bought a Wii so I could both replay
Prime 2 (and actually finish the second half this time), and play
Prime 3. I did finish 2 and am already underway with 3.
Anyway, there's been something special about this series for years, but it seems I'm only now realizing just how deep it goes and how much has happened behind the scenes. Too, I couldn't have expected how much I'd come to love the series after playing that first game all those years ago on my NES, and it's yet another reminder of what games have done for my life, consistently inspiring me mechanically, artistically, musically, and with their endless and varied fictions.
Metroid is right up there with the
Mana (or
Seiken Densetsu) games,
Doom &
Quake, and
The Elder Scrolls games as examples of things that I played when I was younger and still love today. My affection for these franchises did not merely hold steady, it increased as time has gone by, which is why I went out on a limb and picked up this
polystone figure of
Samus in her Varia Suit by First4Figures. A bit on the pricey side, but when I saw the afternoon sunlight reflect off of her suit for the first time, I knew exactly why it was worth it to me. I also finally had the spare money to get
this piece of fanart which I've been wanting to hang on my wall for some time now. Yes, I know I've been buying a lot of stuff, but this is entirely thanks to my grandmother, who left me some money very unexpectedly when she passed from us a short while ago. Thanks, grandma! Your generosity hasn't been *entirely* wasted on the bank, only mostly!
Anyway, I've been celebrating my love of all things
Metroid for almost a month now, and have come across some cool stuff in my obsessive travels. I've thrown some of it around here or there, but I thought I'd go one better and just make a thread with some concentrated goodness. This place has been a little lifeless lately anyway, so we can always use something else to read, right?
Sites you should really visit - To begin with,
this is the best fansite ever. It's got a ton of everything (including a
nice review of the aforementioned Samus statue), but most importantly, you can find what has to be nearly every piece of
Metroid-related music ever composed, be it from an OST or a compilation or from another Nintendo game which featured something of Samus or her little friends. Wish I'd found that out *before* I'd gotten nearly all of sets which didn't get a CD the hard way.
Another kickass site I'll mention is
Metroidhat.com, which is both insanely awesome and kind of creepy. It was made by some little Asian girl who decided one day to... well,
make a Metroid hat. She even expanded it to a plushie. I find this immensely amusing, whereas her creepy little lesbian fan-comic (I pray it's just a joke), not so much. She makes up for it, however, by hosting
chapters 3 - 7 of the Metroid manga, which many of us Westerners have never even seen. And yes, it's translated. You can also see from that link that the first 2 chapters were done as e-manga, which you can still view (I have... they're pretty fun), and there's a guy who took stills from that and translated them (that link is also provided there). Apparently this is considered actual canon, and the first chapter shows Samus as a child when her folks got blown to kingdom come by Ridley and gang. And while it isn't
Metroid, the
Storytime of Epicness is kind of amusing.
Lastly, I somehow forgot to include
MetroidGuide.com, which I'd seen a while ago and promptly failed to visit again for years. Looks like they're still doing their thing, and they've got a lot of general information on the fiction and stuff (a lot of it pulled from the Prime encyclopedias and such, looks like). Really nice interface, too.
Along the same lines is
Wikitroid, which has tons of stuff in a nice, standard Wikia layout. Go there and learn things like:
why yes, the Galactic Federation does have a home planet, and:
this solar system is totally schizophrenic.
Three fangames you're all but guaranteed to want - It was from the first of the aforementioned sites that I found
SR388, a traditional 2D Metroid fangame that was originally made with
Super Metroid assets like the Samus sprite, which now has a plethora of new and extended animations. The trailer there is a little old, as vonrichter now claims that Samus is the only thing taken from
Super Metroid, with everything else being completely original work from the team. And as you can see from the trailer, there's some real potential there. You should also definitely check out
this fan remake of Metroid II, which is also linked in that Destructoid article. See if you can check out the trailer... I can only see bits of it because YouTube hates me again.
A new addition to the list, I also came across
Super Metroid Redesign, and you can find a short writeup about it
here. There's also a gigantic map to show you what's included. Hardcore! Apparently it's extremely difficult, but looks to be fairly well developed and well thought out beyond that. If you're looking to test yourself, it could be worth a look. Myself, I may throw it on the PSP at some point and give it a whirl on the go, but we'll see.
Super awesome music of doom - Yes!
Metroid music on Piano by Daniel Brown!
Metroid Metal! Don't forget
Relics of the Chozo! And when you've run out of other random crap, get
even the most obscure Metroid music from games like
Super Smash Bros. / Melee / Brawl,
Tetris, and even
Warioware at the Metroid Database! Also, check out
Virt's arrangements! You know he's good because they got him to do the soundtrack to
Contra 4, which is
pretty fucking good for a freelance musician dude.
But I'm not done, oh no. Next, you are required to check out game cover band
Armcannon, and I'm
totally fucking serious. Watch the YouTube link for awesome Kraid music medley, and then check their MySpace page and listen to the Zelda track at the top (and don't get impatient, give it at least a couple minutes... around 2:30 I grinned a lot). These guys are actually quite talented musicians. There's other
Metroid music that they do, but I haven't spent the time in trying to find it (you can find live versions on YouTube, but the one I watched didn't have the best sound quality).
Metroid Prime articles and interviews - First, we have an
awesome article from IGN featuring an assload of commentary from the Retro artists who worked on (mostly) the first
Prime game. It's about 8 pages, but there's tons of cool stuff in there. Well worth a look.
Next, there's
a much shorter, but really interesting article/transcript of a talk Michael Kelbaugh and Mark Pacini gave at the 2007 Montreal Games Summit, also very worth reading as it's got some stuff about what they first pitched to Nintendo and how remarkable it is they were given the franchise in the first place (which the first article also gives some insight into).
I hate to link to anything MTV is involved in, but
there's a decent little article around which is mostly noteworthy for a couple great quotes, like: "You can ask any artist here what the first 'Prime' was about and they'll say cracks. All we did was put thousands of cracks everywhere. For some reason at the time I was real big into cracks and everything had to be beveled." Gold. But this confirms that yes, every crack in
Prime was custom. There were no copies. Sy and I were talking about that just the other night. The rest of the article is mostly about the Wiimote and its use in
Prime 3.
There's a little more remote talk at this
Next-Gen.biz interview, which I include here mostly for the interesting comments relating to the way Retro works with Nintendo (and which known Japanese
Metroid design personalities have their say about things, such as
Kensuke Tanabe).
Kenji Yamamoto is the guy responsible for the music, also obviously on the Japanese end, and there's a nice little interview with him
here where he talks about the music for
Prime 3.
<idol>pics?</idol> - Tons and tons of wallpapers, including some from other Nintendo games. Unfortunately, they're all limited to 1024x768. But still, there's an assload of them, so that has to count for something.
A few good ones here as well.
As of July 11th, the
Metroid Database also officially has full-resolution gallery art from
Prime and
Echoes up. This is quite nice and something I've been looking for for quite some time now. So... awesome! Check out the
Prime 1 and
Prime 2 galleries for some pretty awesome artwork, concept and otherwise.
Also, metroid jello.
EDIT - I've added a bunch of stuff here and there, but I should really be tracking it. Latest edit is another fangame, Super Metroid Redesign. It's a romhack, but apparently quite a good one.