Pelea de arte de caja – Duelo: Metroid Prime 3: Corrupción
Hola a todos, and welcome back to another edition of Pelea de arte de caja!
Antes de comenzar con la batalla de esta semana, let’s see how things panned out last time. Mirábamos Turok 2: Seeds of Evil for the N64 and golly gosh, was it a close one. It seemed many of you weren’t too keen on either design, but ultimately, it was the western variant that won the day with 51% del voto.
This time, with the full reveal of Metroid Prime 4: Más allá de fresh in our minds, we’re checking out the last mainline game in the series: Metroid Prime 3: Corrupción. Launched for the Wii in 2007, it took full advantage of the console’s motion controls for a sublime gameplay experience that felt natural and evolutionary (just make sure to switch the motion controls to ‘advanced’!).
We’ve got another duel on our hands this time, with North America and Europe teaming up to take on Japan. Así que sin más preámbulos, let’s get on with it.
Asegúrese de emitir sus votos en la siguiente encuesta; pero primero, echemos un vistazo a los propios diseños de box art.
Europa / América del norte
The western design for Corruption play heavily into the dynamic between Samus and Dark Samus, with the two standing back-to-back against a beautiful background set in space. Concedido, we’re not sure why there’s a disembodied image of Dark Samus de nuevo in the top left, but heck, we’ll take it.
Japan
The Japanese variant, mientras tanto, features almost all of Corruption’s main players, including Samus, Dark Samus, Meta Ridley, and the three hunters: Rundas, Ghor, and Gandrayda. ¡Ay, and a little Federation soldier at the back, allí. Lindo. We love the composition of this one, but does it hold up to the awesome light vs. dark dynamic of the western design..? Mmm.
Gracias por votar! We’ll see you next time for another round of Box Art Brawl.