Metroid Prime (creature)
Metroid Prime | |
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Metroid series character | |
File:Mp2prime.jpg | |
First game | Metroid Prime |
Created by | Nintendo |
Metroid Prime is a fictional creature from the Nintendo GameCube video game Metroid Prime. It is most notably recognized as the title character of the first Metroid Prime game.
History
Template:Spoiler The first two installments of the Metroid Prime story revealed little information pertaining to Metroid Prime’s past. According the Metroid Prime website, Metroid Prime is a native of SR388[1] , the home world of the Metroid species. Additional logs from the game reveal that the fictional Chozo race encountered the creature long before the events of the game. The game strongly implies that Metroid Prime was the leading cause of the Chozo’s decline on Tallon IV.
Prime arrives on Tallon IV long before the initial events of Metroid Prime. Samus Aran, the protagonist of the Metroid series, encounters the creature while investigating Zebesian Space Pirate operations on the planet. Amidst the struggle, Samus discovers the ruins of Chozo civilization, and learns about an astronomical object that brought the once glorious and peaceful society to near extinction.
Depending on the regional version of the game, there are two scenarios pertaining to Prime’s involvement with the Space Pirates. According to the North American version, the pirates capture Prime for an unspecified amount of time, but in the European and Japanese versions they are only able to detect its bio-signs. Furthermore, the North American release goes on to state Metroid Prime's name is eponymous to the Metroid species, due to unmistakable genetic similarities. Because the Space Pirates fail to capture Metroid Prime in the European and Japanese versions of the game, the whereabouts of Metroid Prime's name are more inconsistent compared to its North American counterpart. (See Inconsistencies section)
Physiology
Metroid Prime will duel Samus using two forms, the first being a heavily armored insectoid form, and another phantasmal form reminiscent to a regular Metroid. Despite the two physically diverse variations, Metroid Prime statically retains its signature characteristic to stare through Samus with a piercing neon gaze.
Exoskeletal form
Samus first encounters Metroid Prime deep within Tallon IV’s “impact crater” in its exoskeletal form. While this form is already lethal in terms of size and relatively explicit strength and dexterity, it has undergone much transformation to develop special energy attacks that mimic Samus’ elemental power beam variations.
Furthermore, due to advantageous genetic flaw, Metroid Prime has developed the ability to screen various weapon attacks by altering its chemical build. In other words, Metroid Prime is able to become temporarily invulnerable to all but one of Samus’ elemental weapons at a time. However, despite possessing such a powerful characteristic, the genetic flaw acts as an Achilles heel, limiting the utilization of only one elemental weapon per phase.While in this form Metroid Prime attacks by shooting powerful beams from a mouthlike hinge on the bottom of its shell. It also shoots energy orbs that can be destroyed by the weapon Metroid Prime is currently using.
An interesting note about this form is that unlike all other substances and enemies that deflect a beam or missle they are not vulnerable to, shots that reflect off Metroid Prime's shell (or miss its weak spot) can damage Samus.
According to Metroid Prime’s log entry, it has mysteriously assimilated various mechanical devices into its body. While the North American version of the game suggests Metroid Prime acquired this technology from the Space Pirates, the European version bypasses the details. Due to Samus’ intervention with the Space Pirates on Tallon IV, all research regarding Metroid Prime has been destroyed.
Core form
After Samus is able to beat Metroid Prime’s exoskeleton form, it will reveal its “core essence”. While in this form, Metroid Prime will resemble an organism similar to a Metroid. Despite possessing such “animalistic” characteristics, Metroid Prime’s core essence features a more humanoid face.
Unlike its preceding form, Metroid Prime is permanently impervious to all of Samus’ elemental weapons. Furthermore, the entity can bend light, leaving it invisible to the naked eye without the aid from a x-ray or infrared device. Also, Metroid Prime is capable of secreting puddles of Phazon, as well as producing a plethora of Metroids.
By using these puddles as a source of corrupt energy, Samus can momentarily utilize her Phazon Beam, and deal prodigious damage to Metroid Prime. After delivering a catastrophic blast of Phazon energy, Samus is able to send Metroid Prime into a state of extreme molecular instability, leading it to revert to a mere pulp of phazon. As Samus attempts to leave the doomed battle site, she is ensnared by a tentacle from the remains of Metroid Prime, downgrading her Phazon Suit, and then spontaneously combusting shortly thereafter.
Continuity
After suffering a catastrophic defeat, the entity that resided in Metroid Prime is able to regenerate its body using Samus’ Phazon Suit. After Samus’ departure of Tallon IV, a secret cutscene reveals Dark Samus beginning to emerge from a patch of Phazon. Dark Samus goes on to confront Samus in Metroid Prime 2: Echoes and Metroid Prime 3: Corruption.
Inconsistencies
This article possibly contains original research. |
Lore Entries from the PAL version of the game suggest that Metroid Prime arrived on Tallon IV via a meteorite infested with Phazon. After a short period of time, Metroid Prime, antagonized by the Chozo as "The Worm", slowly began to produce malicious Phazon-based toxins that soon corrupted the planet, bringing a spiraling decline to the Chozo's once glorious civilization.
However, in the NTSC version, the capturing of Metroid Prime by the Space Pirates and Metroid Prime's imprisonment by the Chozo seem to contradict one another. In the Chozo Lore, it is claimed that "The Worm" was imprisoned in the Impact Crater which the Chozo had separated from Tallon IV itself, and that the would-be prison was sealed by the Cipher, a containment device created by the Chozo. However, many Pirate Data entries state that Metroid Prime is not only captured, but escapes and "Absorb[s] various weapons and a shielding system". The Pirate Data entries also state that Metroid Prime was encountered "In a series of tunnels," rather than a sealed chamber. This would imply that Metroid Prime either had found a way out of its prison or had been freed by Space Pirate excavation. Due to the power and ingenuity presented by the Chozo, the former seems highly improbable. Furthermore, there exist other Pirate Data entries indicating that the Space Pirates' attempts to open the Cipher were frustrated. Given that Samus only encounters Prime within the impact crater and no evidence of Space Pirates is present, it seems unlikely that they ever breached the chamber.
Conclusions
Through the reading of various log entries throughout the game, as well as the final sequences within the game and the presence of Dark Samus in Metroid Prime 2, it is concluded that Metroid Prime is in fact a Metroid that encountered and absorbed the very essence of Phazon, the Phazon Core. Due to the organic nature of the Impact Crator, it can be determined that at one point the phazon meteor was perhaps a living being, and the Phazon Core was the brain of the beast, in a manner of speaking. Through the digging of the space pirates, an alternate path was created that allowed a Metroid to enter the Impact Crater and was subsequently devoured by the Phazon Core. The new creature, Metroid Prime, obtains space pirate technology, and through unknown means incorporates it as part of it's body. When this shell is defeated, it reveals it's Metroid Prime form, where you can see the Phazon Core inside. Once beaten, the phazon core grabs Samus in an attempt to devour her, but is only partially succuessful. Pulling an X parasite trick, it absorbs most of Samuss powers and enhances them to the enth degree. It is likely that blue Phazon is this creatures waste matter. Whether or not that Gorea from Hunters is the same species as Metroid Prime is undetermined, but quite possible. Template:Spoilerend
Notes
- ^ Information is accessible by visiting the official Metroid Prime website and utilizing the “Inter-Stellar Network” Game