The game is fully tested & guaranteed to work. It’s the cartridge / disc only unless otherwise specified.
Metroid Zero Mission GBA Game Boy Advance Game Cartridge Cleaned Tested and Guaranteed to Work!
PRODUCT DETAILS
UPC:045496733445
Condition:Used
Genre:Action & Adventure
Platform:Game Boy Advance
Region:Region Free
ESRB:Everyone
SKU:GBA_METROID_ZERO_MISSION
———This game is fully cleaned, tested & working. Includes the Disc/Cartridge Only. May have some minor scratches/scuffs.This description was last updated on October 28th, 2020.
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Awesome game! Remake of the original Metroid on NES plays very smoothly a mixture of Super Metroid on SNES and Metroid Fusion on the Gameboy Advance! I’d highly recommend playing it!!
Great game a must have on the gba 100 percent confirmed
I have been looking for this game and was very excited to find it. I definitely would order it again.
In 1986, The Nintendo Entertainment System brought to us the game Metroid. The 8-bit game introduced the mysterious bouny hunter heroine Samus Aran, the life-sucking Metroids, and set you alone on the massive planet Zebes to explore. Metroid has been hailed as one of the best games ever created, though time has certainly taken its toll on some aspects of it. With the return of the Metroid franchise through Metroid Prime and Metroid Fusion, Nintendo decided to give Samus’s original mission, her "Zero Mission", an all-out remake for the GameBoy Advance.Gameplay: If you are unfamiliar with the concept of a Metroid game, here’s the basics: Explore your surroundings, blast alien creatures in your way, collect upgrades that enable you to venture further and defeat the various bosses you’ll encounter. The same is said for Zero Mission. The game begins with a mini cuts-cene depicting Samus landing on Zebes, following this you’ll have control of the hunter in the upper levels of Brinstar. As will most Metroid games, her power and abilities are particularly weak until finding upgrades, you’ll even have to acquire the Long Beam which hadn’t been seen since the original Metroid itself.Now, for the a comparison to previous 2D Metroid titles, Zero Mission in my opinion stands out as one of the best. Metroid Fusion was a very good game, but was far too linear for many fans and, in my case, a bit of a cakewalk for much of it. Zero Mission gets back to simply dumping you on a planet,.
Anyone who had the original Nintendo (NES) is bound to know of this game. This is essentually a remake of that game, and a solid one at that.Here’s a short list of some features added to the remake:- More areas to explore.- Added cutscenes and improved visuals.- The original NES Metroid (unlocked after finishing Zero Mission).- Improved sound effects and soundtrack.- Added story elements.Lets start with the differences. The most obvious change is the visuals. Nintendo started off with a clean slate here, and the outcome is a game that looks similar to Super Metroid (for the SNES) or Metroid Fusion. The control takes a page from Metroid Fusion, though Zero Mission seems almost as though it’s running at a quicker speed (as noted by the short hangtime during jumps). The sound is also updated, though it’s fairly standard stuff here. Although, thankfully, the sound from the Power Bombs won’t cause as much problem with your ears, unlike with Metroid Fusion. The music, I feel, is one of the better touches here. For the most part they keep the melodies the same, while also adding a few new ones, but they are updated to GBA quality. The music for the first area would be enough to give any fan of the original game a trip down memory lane. Also, in addition to all this, the game has been expanded with more areas than the original, but given the differences in control the time comparisions between them are extremely relative.It should also be noted that this game has the origin.
While this is pretty much a remake of the original Metroid tale, it is still highly recommened to al GBA owners.The music and mission of this game holds true to the original and will make you remember the classic like it was 1987 all over again… if youre old enough to remember.Plus the added bonuses, like including the original Metroid game in its entirety, and including bonus galleries and a 15% challenge puts this Metroid game a cut above just about any other game out there.
It took a little while to get here but the game works and is beautiful…
I’m not exactly sure when I grew to love the “Metroid” series but I’d say it would have to be with the first Prime on Gamecube. While my first playthrough made me think it was just simply okay, my second play made me see all the great gameplay features and fantastic artistic design despite the fact its sequel, Echoes, was basically the same but slightly harder. Of course it helps to play the one that started it all and so we have Zero Mission, a redone version of the original Metroid. Many of its basic gameplay elements will feel familiar and while I prefer the first Prime, Zero Mission was still a fun playthrough.Story: Samus has been tasked to go to the planet of Zebes to destroy Metroids, a strange creature with life-absorbing qualities. But there’s more to the planet than on its surface as we get environments, many of them hostile filled with creatures and huge beasts, not to mention 2 big baddies and series staples and we’ll get to see some insight into Samus’ origins.Graphics: The Metroids on the handhelds (and Super Metroid) never really had outright fantastic graphics. They were merely serviceable and aside from the well done cutscenes, the graphics ingame work within the context of the game but since this was Game Boy Advance, levels have a better amount of detail than before but nothing earth-shattering.Sound/Music: No voice acting but the music is typical of the series, where it has that sort of techno ambience and there’s a couple classic themes and even some appe.
Received within a few days, no issues!
Being in the Nintendo age, Metroid and Zelda were the series that I fell in love with when they first came out. Almost 20 years later, the original Metroid gets a COMPLETE facelift/overhaul for the GBA. The graphics, locales, soundtrack, and play control have all been updated.You will recognize certain weapons from the Super Metroid days — Super Missile, Super Bomb, Space Jump and Gravity Suit. But the most delicious part is when you actually start PLAYING the game. My favorite soundtrack is from the get-go — when you begin in Brinstar. And once you get to Norfair and eventually Kraid, the music gets even better. But for ALL the Metroid fanatics out there, the greatest part is when you finally reach Tourian and have to defeat those pesky Metroids!!Surprisingly, both Kraid and Ridley are very easy to defeat. I’m a bit disappointed though — they were much harder (and more satisfying to beat) in the Super NES prequel Super Metroid.Mother Brain is a bit more difficult this time around because you can’t hit her unless her eye is open. And watch out — it’s a doozy. After you defeat her, it’s time to vacate Zebes before it blows up! But wait, just when you thought the game was over — the storyline expands! A horde of Space Pirates finds Samus and forces her ship to crash-land! Stripped of her entire weaponry, she now has to infiltrate the Space Pirate Mother Ship with only a blue-colored Skinsuit and a stun pistol. Watch out for the Space Pirates themselves, they a.