If you choose that route, make sure to pick up a Super Game Boy while you're at it - the Super Nintendo Accessory's custom color palette is absolutely the best way to play the original version of Metroid II. Your only other option is tracking down the original cartridge. At present, Nintendo only sells a digital version of the game on the Nintendo 3DS eShop. Rather play the original Game Boy version of Metroid II? You'll face the same limitations. Also like Zero Mission, you'll need to pick up some old hardware to play it: Metroid: Samus Returns is only available on the Nintendo 3DS. Like Zero Mission, it's more than a straight remake of the original game, offering players updated gameplay, new abilities and areas to explore and plenty of new and challenging boss fights to take on. Nintendo reimagined Metroid II: Return of Samus into the similarly-named Metroid: Samus Returns for the 3DS. The original Metroid may have been the first game in the series to get an overhaul for modern audiences, but it wasn't the last. Metroid Dread is made by the same team that took on Samus Returns. Version of Metroid Prime, provided you have Metroid Fusion, a GBA and a special link cable. It also unlocks after you beat Metroid: Zero Mission on regular difficulty, or on the The original NES version of Metroid may be showing its age, but at least it's easy to access: Samus' first game can be found on the Nintendo Switch Online NES library, the Nintendo 3DS eShop, the Wii U eShop and the NES Classic mini console. As the inaugural three-dimensional Metroid title in the series following 2D side-scrolling titles in 2001-02, its reception was immense. If you don't have Nintendo's last-gen console, your only option is to track down an original GBA cartridge. Metroid Prime Rom developed by Retro Studios for Nintendo’s GameCube system in 2002, was widely lauded upon release. Currently, Nintendo only sells Metroid: Zero Mission on the Wii U eShop's virtual console library. The only downside? You'll need older hardware to play it. The remake offers a more dynamic retelling of the first game's story, complete with quality-of-life updates like save points and mini-maps and other features standard in modern Metroid titles. Fortunately, Nintendo revisited the first Metroid game in 2004 with Metroid: Zero Mission for the Samus' original 1986 adventure might be a classic, but like most games from the NES era, it's a bit rough around the edges by modern standards. When it comes to long-running video game franchises, starting at the beginning isn't always the best idea. The GBA remake of Metroid is one of the all-time best in the series.
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