

Metroid: Samus Returns Metroid II: Return of Samus Metroid: Other M Metroid Prime Super Metroid, nintendo, superhero, nintendo, video Game png 1254x1600px 1.8MB.Super Metroid Super Nintendo Entertainment System Metroid Prime 3: Corruption Metroid: Zero Mission, nintendo, super Mario Bros, text, orange png 1600x887px 392.42KB.I believe that Sakurai, Iwata, or Miyamoto back in 08 said that Nintendo didn't like the concept of loading patch data every time a game is started and weren't allowing anyone to do it same with accessing the SD card. At lease now you don't start over so it's definitely a Nintendo style improvement. If you wanted, Nintendo did have a disk replacement program but you still had to restart. You had to delete your save file and start over to move on. (They did add a checkZeldaSavefile function into the system menu to kill the twilight hack, but that just reads Link and Epona's names and see if they're too long and deletes it. That's not true, Nintendo never made a patch to fix it in firmware. Putting the burden of fixing the issue on the consumer by having them send in their Wiis or SD card saves is not acceptable.

Nintendo should re-author the discs with the fix and offer a trade-in program for those who wish to swap out their discs.

I said this previously in the Other M topic, but this "fix" is pathetic in the age of online patches ( even Nintendo used a firmware update to help fix the Twilight Princess cannon glitch). The bug is more or less triggered by someone playing Metroid like a Metroid game! Case in point: we all instinctively knew the ideal solution because we don't have Nintendo focused tunnel vision.Īnd this lets me get a dig in on Other M as well! ) If they designed this like a REAL Metroid game instead of having arbitrary locked doors and disabled abilities that open when the game says so then maybe such a bug wouldn't exist. If they left their little Nintendo bubble for ten minutes the CORRECT solution would be obvious to them. Nintendo can sell a billion copies of Wii Sports but when it comes to the really obvious stuff they just don't get it. This is the exact sort of "solution" I would expect from a company with their head up their ass completely oblivious to what the rest of the industry is doing.

Well maybe if Nintendo went online last gen when the rest of the videogame industry did they would be familiar enough with how this internet stuff works to offer a real solution.
