this post was submitted on 13 Jun 2026
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I love variety and I could never point to one game being my favorite. What about you guys? :3

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[–] toomanypancakes@crazypeople.online 14 points 2 days ago (2 children)

Yup, Super Metroid. Game is basically perfect. i have other near favorites like Hollow Knight and Dead Cells that have generally remained in place too, but Super Metroid is amazing and always a fun, perfectly atmospheric time.

[–] cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com 5 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I used to say it was a toss up between A Link to the Past, Secret of Mana, and Super Metroid, because they’re all 10/10 games. I just haven’t been able to do the latter two lately. They’re not hard, I just don’t stick with them.

If you also play A Link to the Past, you should know there is a Randomiser that combines them. You start in Super Metroid. Going into a map room takes you to a random fortune teller and vice versa. The way both games are coded, none of their items share an ID, so you can find Metroid items in Zelda and Zelda items in Metroid. And it just works. Of course Link can’t use power bombs and Samus can’t use the Hookshot. The items are game specific. The goal is to beat Ganon and then Mother Brain and escape. I really can’t do that one.

[–] pishadoot@sh.itjust.works 1 points 1 day ago (3 children)
[–] cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 18 hours ago

Well... it randomises things. I don't know if there is a dedicated Super Metroid one, but if you're familiar at all with A Link to the Past, it's like this... the first chest (in Link's home) is always gonna have the lamp. If you skip it, the chest in the dungeon after you get the sword is the lamp — otherwise it's 5 Rupees (and vice-versa, if you get the lamp in dungeon, it's 5 Rupees back home). Then there are chests with keys, the compass, the map, Rupees, and a few have items (think Spazer, Varia suit, Ice beam etc. in Metroid — Link has his powerups, Samus has hers). Okay so there is a pool of chests. It gets... random. The uncle who gives you a sword is considered a chest, too. So you might get a sword upgrade in the first dungeon. However, it has logic. It'll never force you to go through a dark corridor without the lamp. It'll never make you go through a dungeon that requires the Hookshot without the Hookshot (imagine being forced to go through Norfair, I think it was called, without the Varia suit... doable but VERY painful). So that's the Zelda randomiser. The Zelda+Metroid one combines both games like I said.

Look into it. If you use an emulator, you can use the randomiser. All the emulators I know of support it. I've done runs on my iPhone with Delta and I've done them on the Super NES Classic/SNES Mini. But there isn't just one randomiser. It's seeded, so you can make one, run it, and whether you finish or not, you can go back and generate another seed.

Here's the Zelda one. I had that bookmarked: https://alttpr.com/en

Note that for that one, you will need a Japanese version of A Link to the Past. They fixed some things in the American/European releases. The randomiser translates the Japanese to English so you don't have to worry about that. But it also means you can do certain logic breaking glitches. You can even tell the randomiser to allow for this, so without knowing how to bomb jump or do "free flippers" the game could be impossible. That's an option and it's off by default, but it's used by more experienced runners. Free flippers is the only glitch I can pull off reliably, so I leave it off.

I only ever used the Metroid/Zelda one once. It kicked my arse. I don't have that bookmarked. This came up in Google and might be the right one, but I can't be 100% sure: https://samus.link/

[–] cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 18 hours ago

Well... it randomises things. I don't know if there is a dedicated Super Metroid one, but if you're familiar at all with A Link to the Past, it's like this... the first chest (in Link's home) is always gonna have the lamp. If you skip it, the chest in the dungeon after you get the sword is the lamp — otherwise it's 5 Rupees (and vice-versa, if you get the lamp in dungeon, it's 5 Rupees back home). Then there are chests with keys, the compass, the map, Rupees, and a few have items (think Spazer, Varia suit, Ice beam etc. in Metroid — Link has his powerups, Samus has hers). Okay so there is a pool of chests. It gets... random. The uncle who gives you a sword is considered a chest, too. So you might get a sword upgrade in the first dungeon. However, it has logic. It'll never force you to go through a dark corridor without the lamp. It'll never make you go through a dungeon that requires the Hookshot without the Hookshot (imagine being forced to go through Norfair, I think it was called, without the Varia suit... doable but VERY painful). So that's the Zelda randomiser. The Zelda+Metroid one combines both games like I said.

Look into it. If you use an emulator, you can use the randomiser. All the emulators I know of support it. I've done runs on my iPhone with Delta and I've done them on the Super NES Classic/SNES Mini. But there isn't just one randomiser. It's seeded, so you can make one, run it, and whether you finish or not, you can go back and generate another seed.

Here's the Zelda one. I had that bookmarked: https://alttpr.com/en

Note that for that one, you will need a Japanese version of A Link to the Past. They fixed some things in the American/European releases. The randomiser translates the Japanese to English so you don't have to worry about that. But it also means you can do certain logic breaking glitches. You can even tell the randomiser to allow for this, so without knowing how to bomb jump or do "free flippers" the game could be impossible. That's an option and it's off by default, but it's used by more experienced runners. Free flippers is the only glitch I can pull off reliably, so I leave it off.

I only ever used the Metroid/Zelda one once. It kicked my arse. I don't have that bookmarked. This came up in Google and might be the right one, but I can't be 100% sure: https://samus.link/

[–] cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 18 hours ago

Well... it randomises things. I don't know if there is a dedicated Super Metroid one, but if you're familiar at all with A Link to the Past, it's like this... the first chest (in Link's home) is always gonna have the lamp. If you skip it, the chest in the dungeon after you get the sword is the lamp — otherwise it's 5 Rupees (and vice-versa, if you get the lamp in dungeon, it's 5 Rupees back home). Then there are chests with keys, the compass, the map, Rupees, and a few have items (think Spazer, Varia suit, Ice beam etc. in Metroid — Link has his powerups, Samus has hers). Okay so there is a pool of chests. It gets... random. The uncle who gives you a sword is considered a chest, too. So you might get a sword upgrade in the first dungeon. However, it has logic. It'll never force you to go through a dark corridor without the lamp. It'll never make you go through a dungeon that requires the Hookshot without the Hookshot (imagine being forced to go through Norfair, I think it was called, without the Varia suit... doable but VERY painful). So that's the Zelda randomiser. The Zelda+Metroid one combines both games like I said.

Look into it. If you use an emulator, you can use the randomiser. All the emulators I know of support it. I've done runs on my iPhone with Delta and I've done them on the Super NES Classic/SNES Mini. But there isn't just one randomiser. It's seeded, so you can make one, run it, and whether you finish or not, you can go back and generate another seed.

Here's the Zelda one. I had that bookmarked: https://alttpr.com/en

Note that for that one, you will need a Japanese version of A Link to the Past. They fixed some things in the American/European releases. The randomiser translates the Japanese to English so you don't have to worry about that. But it also means you can do certain logic breaking glitches. You can even tell the randomiser to allow for this, so without knowing how to bomb jump or do "free flippers" the game could be impossible. That's an option and it's off by default, but it's used by more experienced runners. Free flippers is the only glitch I can pull off reliably, so I leave it off.

I only ever used the Metroid/Zelda one once. It kicked my arse. I don't have that bookmarked. This came up in Google and might be the right one, but I can't be 100% sure: https://samus.link/

[–] skulblaka@sh.itjust.works 3 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Chrono Trigger not being present in the toss-up here is nearly a crime. If you like the others that you've mentioned, and haven't played that one, definitely do. I don't know if I'd call it my favorite game ever, but it's very easily top 10, and might be my #1 top choice for the SNES.

I don’t disagree that Chrono Trigger is the better/more well received game, I beat it once (got one ending of, what, 13?), but I don’t like turn based. I do like Chrono Trigger, but I don’t love it. Of course it’s an essential SNES title, just not my genre.

[–] MurrayL@lemmy.world 3 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I played a bunch of 2D Metroid this year for the first time. Super Metroid definitely stood out as the best of the bunch, although I did miss some of the quality of life features from Zero Mission.