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The SA-X is the main antagonist of the video game Metroid Fusion. She is a parasite that originally infected the protagonist, Samus Aran, as well as her Power Suit, before Samus was cured by injecting Metroid DNA into her. The SA-X later appears, having replicated her Power Suit, including all of her most powerful weapons from Super Metroid ...
Metroid Dread [a] is a 2021 action ... The Galactic Federation receives evidence that the X, a dangerous species of parasite that can mimic any creature it infects ...
The X Parasite is a unique parasite witnessed in Metroid Fusion, Metroid: Samus Returns, Metroid Dread and the Metroid manga. They are the main antagonists of Fusion . The appearance of an X Parasite is simple: a basketball-sized, floating gelatinous life form.
Metroid Dread continues where Fusion left off, with the Federation dispatching a squadron of advanced automatons known as E.M.M.I. to investigate the planet ZDR, where X parasites have been sighted. Samus is sent to the planet herself after contact is lost, coming into conflict with the X and a Chozo war criminal named Raven Beak, stopping both ...
Fusion is part of the Metroid series, and takes place between the events of Metroid: Other M and Metroid Dread. Players control the bounty hunter Samus Aran, who investigates a space station infected with shapeshifting parasites known as X. Like previous Metroid games, Fusion is a side-scrolling game with platform jumping, shooting, and puzzle ...
In Metroid Dread, the Galactic Federation receives a video from an unknown source showing an X Parasite alive in the wild on planet ZDR. To investigate, they send 7 EMMI (Extraplanetary Multiform Mobile Identifier) units, but after losing contact with the units, they hire Samus once again as she is the only being in the universe immune to the X.
Metroid (1 page), by George Caragonne, Mickey Ritter, Jan Harpes, Jade. Deceit Du Jour (10 pages), by Mark McClellan and Bill Vallely, Vince Mielcarek, Bob Layton, Jade, Joe Q and The Gradations. Super Metroid: Nintendo: Nintendo Power, issues #57–61 February–May 1994 [63] Notes: Five-part adaptation of the game by Benimaru Itoh. [64 ...
After MercurySteam pitched a remake of the 2002 game Metroid Fusion to Nintendo, the producer, Yoshio Sakamoto, hired them to create a remake of Metroid II instead. [3] MercurySteam collaborated with Nintendo again to develop a new game, Metroid Dread , for the Nintendo Switch . [ 4 ]