Metroid Prime 4 Gets Proof of Life During Nintendo Direct

Metroid Prime 4 Gets Proof of Life During Nintendo Direct
Metroid Prime 4 Gets Proof of Life During Nintendo Direct

It has been in development since before the dawn of time, and now, as foretold in the Elder Scrolls, our faith can become a fact. . Metroid Prime 4, announced for the first time in 2017, then re-announced In 2019, it is confirmed that it will be a game that one day we will be able to buy. The game will be released in 2025 and has a subtitle: Metroid Prime 4: Beyond.

Nintendo aired a brief look at the Switch game during its Nintendo Direct on June 18, which showed protagonist Samus Aran fighting aliens on a battle-worn Planet. It looks like he will still be scanning, shooting and rolling into a ball to get into tight spaces. the trailer below:

Metroid Prime 4: Beyond – Announcement Trailer – Nintendo Switch

Last time we saw a suitable new entry in the Metroid Prime The franchise was—brace yourself—2007. That was the launch of Metroid Prime 3: Corruption on the beloved Wii. Since then, we have had re-releases and remastersand we all agree that we are not talking about 2016 Metroid Prime: Federation Force. But now, some 17 years later, we have some evidence of life for Samus’s first-person adventures.

The game was originally being developed by series producer Kensuke Tanabe and a new team apparently involving Bandai Namco, rather than series stalwarts. Retro games. However, in 2019, Nintendo’s Shinya Takahashi described its progress as “very challenging” and that development would begin again. this time involving Retro.

At the time, Takahashi said that “it will be a long way until the next time we can update you on development progress,” adding that “the development time will be long,” although no one probably imagined he was referring to another five years. But that’s how long it’s been since more information was provided.

But the wheels have been turning in the franchise, most notably with the release last year of a Switch remaster of the first game, along with the hugely popular 2D platformer Metroid: fear. There is no doubt that people want to play metroid both now and always, and Major The branch of Samus’s adventures has lost none of its fervent appeal even though people born when the last game came out can now drive.

This content has been automatically translated from the original material. Due to the nuances of machine translation, there may be slight differences. For the original version, click here.

 
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