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Though sequence breaking as a concept has existed almost since the inception of computer games complex enough to have sequential storylines, the first documented action in a video game to be called a sequence break occurred in the Nintendo GameCube game Metroid Prime, in a thread called "Gravity Suit and Ice Beam before Thardus". [2]
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 ...
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Super Metroid [a] [b] is a 1994 action-adventure game developed by Nintendo and Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo for the Super Nintendo Entertainment System.It is the third installment in the Metroid series, following the events of the Game Boy game Metroid II: Return of Samus (1991).
MB, nicknamed Melissa Bergman (メリッサ・バーグマン, Merissa Bāguman) by her adoptive mother Dr. Madeline Bergman, was created by the scientists of the Bottle Ship as a copy of the original Mother Brain, whose genetic material was harvested from Samus' Power Suit following Mother Brain's death in Super Metroid, in order to control ...
In Metroid: Other M, the Zero Suit is capable of materializing the Power Suit from within itself. [21] She is 190 cm (6 ft 3 in) and 90 kilograms (200 lb) while wearing the Power Suit. [22] The Super Metroid Nintendo's Player's Guide describes Samus as 6 ft 3 in (1.91 m) tall and weighs 198 pounds (90 kg) without her Power Suit. [23]
Metroid [a] is an action-adventure game franchise created by Nintendo.The player controls the bounty hunter Samus Aran, who protects the galaxy from Space Pirates and other malevolent forces and their attempts to harness the power of the parasitic Metroid creatures.
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 ...