Metroid Prime 2: Echoes

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes

Our Price - $19.99

31 Used - from $10.75

22 New - from $31.42

2 Collectible - from $24.99

Availability - Currently Unavailable

 
 

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes lets you explore the light and dark worlds of a doomed planet, as the powerful bounty hunter Samus Aran! In this highly anticipated sequel to Metroid Prime, she is hunted by a mysterious entity and a warring race called the Ing. Discover strange secrets while augmenting her suit's weapons and abilities, and fighting for her survival.

 

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes Accessories

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Gamecube Memory Card 251
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Official Nintendo Metroid Prime 2: Echoes Player's Guide

 

Metroid Prime 2: Echoes Reviews

You play the first level with most of your equipment, but it get's stolen, Deja Vu of MP 1. It's pretty comparable to Metroid Prime, but some details such as the graphics and. Oh well, some things never get old do they.

Would I recommend this game. This is the best, most difficult game I'll ever play. weaponry have changed, mostly for the better.You have limited ammo like most first-person shooters, and three thumbs up to Retro Studios and Nintendo for more cutscenes.

The plot isn't any deeper than it's prequel, you're just more involved through details such as the trooper logs and Luminoth journals. Oh yeah. I really don't have much bad to say about this game.

 

The Space Pirates successfully created a Metroid that feeds off Phazon, a highly unstable super energy that they're hoping to reproduce and once again make a go at galactic conquest. Metroid Prime 2 leaves off after the first Metroid Prime. The plot is not as good this time around, the light and dark world idea has been done before, and the dark world was very frustrating to go through in the early stages as you constantly lose health while not in certain areas. ***spoilers***. The plot lines that is a mix of cool futuristic electronic gadgetry and biotech gone amuck makes great Sci-Fi and the sheer amount of stuff that you can do is mindboggling.

This game is essentially why I got a Gamecube. Metroid always resonated with me since Super Metroid completely blew my mind over a decade ago. What makes Metroid so unique is the incredible amount of immersion that is in the game. It's more open than most games, making the player really feel that he's traversing an alien planet. It really feels like you're exploring the world as opposed to being spoon fed where to go next. Now I might have to get a Wii just to finish the series.

Now the Metroid is back on another planet on the brink of collapse(Samus sure seems good at finding these), where dark symbiotes called the Ing are destroying a proud civilization. Instead of long drawn out expository dialogue that insults your intelligence it lets you find out for yourself, and fill out the pieces of the history of the world you're exploring. The difficulty definitely went up a few notches from the original, so there is plenty of new challenge.

Overall, not as good as the original Prime, but still a classic. The rest of the gameplay is incredibly intuitive and the sheer volume of stuff you can do as you go from from a weak hunter to a near demigod at the end leaves the player always enthralled. Everyone's favorite Bounty Hunter heroine Samus successfully defeats the Metroid but it manages with a dying gasp to suck her Phazon suit away as well as some of her DNA, gradually morphing into what will become Dark Samus.

One of the most enthralling parts of Metroid Prime is the ability to scan areas, ghiving information on the critters, plantlife, and architecture of the new world. The first Metroid Prime was arguably the best console game I ever played, and Metroid Prime 2 is more of the same. Now Samus must defeat the Ing and Dark Samus, not to mention the ever-present Space Pirates, coming back for their prey.

 

It was a great game but it is not as good as the first one. It felt like something was missing playing this game.

 

The graphics are richer and more vibrant. You'll see how much more flushed out the game is the first time you reach the all-morphball-combat boss fight. Tapping the B button that third time and watching Samus slip out into third person is a true pleasure - and there is a creative, new underwater twin to this ability too which you will find earlier in the game. Metroid Prime 2: Echoes, on the other hand, is everything Retro Studios really wanted to offer - the game that can exist now that the original Prime has served as a bridge between the old Metroid world and the new. Metroid Prime was a beautiful recreation of the previous Metroid world in a 3D, first-person perspective world - it was more or less Super Metroid in a new format. This was executed with much more skill than in the original, making backtracking less of a hassle. The plot is deeper and more significant. All told I love where the developers went with this game.

The final product is more compelling. Highly recommended. Add to all of this the inclusion of the Screw Attack (wonderfully executed, though later perfected in Prime 3: Corruption) which was absent from the original Prime. So many of the reviews of this game focus on the fact that this is essentially another round of what the original Metroid Prime had to offer, but this is misleading. Overall all of the more tiresome elements of the original prime have been mitigated if not completely corrected. This is just one example of the intelligent, challenging variety offered by Prime 2: echoes. Basically everything has been improved in at least some small, subtle way.

This is not to say the game strays from the Metroid style; it simply moves the Metroid world forward, something which hasn't happened to this series in all too long. A multiplayer option is also present, but should be treated as a fun, unimportant extra - it isn't groundbreaking but sure doesn't hurt the game either, and hey, we were all wondering where it was in Prime 1 anyway, so stop complaining. This intelligence in game design is shown again the way each area becomes so much easier to traverse as you gain powerups. I've never written an Amazon review before but felt this game deserved a clear statement of its superiority to the original Metroid Prime. The scanning system has also been improved significantly with a more graphically pleasing and less cumbersome color coded system. The enemies, powerups, locations, and gameplay are more interesting.

 

Yes, because Metroid is one of Nintendo's most long-running and successful gaming franchises, Metroid Prime 3 had no choice but to be created and released. Remember the original Metroid on the NES, Metroid 2 on the Game Boy, and Super Metroid on the Super NES. While it's fun, the lack of exploring hurts the game a LOT and prevents it from having much in the way of replay value. The first three Metroid Prime games however, are all basically the same. However, this review will work for MP2 as well. It's *really* not like Nintendo to ever milk a series, but for some reason, they're letting it happen with the Metroid series. In Metroid Prime 3, you predictably go through one hallway after another shooting whatever you see. It was never like that in the past.

Also, the first three Metroid games ever made for the NES, Game Boy and Super NES were REALLY different from each other and that's another thing that made each of them appealing to gamers everywhere. I also hate how it takes such a long time to defeat some of the bosses in the game. It's probably time they stopped working on making Metroid games and focused on another creation, because innovative gaming in the Metroid series is probably now a thing of the past.

First of all, I apologize for posting a review for Metroid Prime 3 on the MP2 page. The Metroid Prime 3 page won't accept my review no matter how many times I try to post it. But you know, it's certainly NOT a classic because it's basically the same as the first two Metroid Prime games but with better graphics, sound effects, and sweet-looking explosions.

These games were released a long time ago, and what made them so fantastic was how the gameplay emphasis on each of them was on "exploration".

 
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