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No! It can't be!

—Samus in Metroid: Other M

PTSD 1

Samus Aran reacts upon seeing Ridley's clone in Metroid: Other M.

Posttraumatic stress disorder (also known simply as PTSD) is a severe anxiety disorder that can develop after exposure to any event that results in psychological trauma. PTSD causes nightmares and flashbacks of the event that instilled it, often triggered unpredictably by stimuli related to those of the original event.

Samus Aran of the Metroid series has shown symptoms of this disorder which have so far been depicted only within a single game and in supplementary materials.

Super Metroid (Nintendo Power Comic)[]

The loose adaption of Super Metroid begins with Samus having a nightmare in which she is overwhelmed in combat by numerous alien creatures. She suddenly wakes up and sits upright in shock with her face covered in sweat. The entire sequence may be viewed as signs of PTSD; if so, the 1994 comic would be the earliest depiction of Samus suffering from this condition in the franchise.

Metroid Manga[]

PTSD 2

In volume 1 of the manga, Samus's home of K-2L is attacked by Space Pirates, during which she witnesses Ridley kill her mother right in front of her. This event causes Samus to exhibit symptoms of PTSD years later in volume 2 when she's confronted by Ridley for the first time since her childhood. Gray Voice is the first to notice her condition, with Mother Brain adding that Ridley has caused Samus to undergo emotional duress. She falls to the ground complaining that she can't breathe, and her Power Suit disappears. During this time, she also hallucinates Ridley holding her parents by their heads before he crushes them in his hands, causing drops of blood to splatter on her face.

She is next seen on the ground making hacking noises, presumably coughing. Ridley soon recognizes Samus as the child from K-2L and begins to torture her physically and mentally. He tells her how he healed himself after her father destroyed his warship: by consuming the dead flesh of the colony's citizens, even going so far as to taunt her by saying that her mother may have been one of his meals. As if to add insult to injury, Ridley also forces Samus to kneel while sarcastically demanding that the woman "pay her respects" in reference to her mom.

The last thing Ridley does to her before leaving is calling her pitiful. As her friends come out of hiding to free the prisoners, Samus stands up, with blank eyes, and begs to be killed. The Chozo that were imprisoned realize that all the repressed memories of her colony's demise are coming back to her, and they comfort her, telling her that she can let out all the emotion that she had been holding in. Eventually, she is able to recover, and shoots Ridley away when he attempts to attack Grey Voice.

Near the end of the manga, Samus overcomes her PTSD and triumphs in the battle against Ridley, seemingly killing him. She lets out a victorious war-cry as well.

In the actual game Metroid: Zero Mission, Samus' eyes are briefly seen through her visor as Ridley flies down to battle. She seems to have a shocked expression, but nothing more to establish a significant reference to her PTSD.

Metroid: Other M[]

At the beginning of the game, Samus states that she killed Mother Brain, and that Zebes then exploded, taking Mother Brain, the Space Pirates, the baby, and Ridley with it, but this later proves to be not entirely accurate, as all of them had each been secretly recreated on a Federation vessel.

Other M FMV Ridley Clone Samus dematerializes

Samus's Power Suit dematerializes as she is grasped face-to-face with her reborn nemesis.

Samus, on her mission to the BOTTLE SHIP, encounters Little Birdie, a small, white creature that stalks her. She believes it to be of no harm. When she finds a facility of interest, she is attacked by the Mystery Creature, an evolution of Little birdie, as she finds out after nearly being killed by it. It flees, and Samus' main objective is to track it down. Commander Adam Malkovich later contacts Samus and tells her that the monster appears to be headed to the Geothermal Power Plant, where Anthony Higgs was said to be going to destroy the magma-eruption port.

After Samus completes the latter objective, the lava increases the light in the room, and Samus finds that the monster in the room is a reborn Ridley. The shock of seeing Ridley alive again, despite the fact that his remains were consumed in the explosion that destroyed Zebes, makes her flash back to her first meeting with Ridley, paralyzing her like her child self as she loses her suit's composure. Adam saw the events and attempted to contact Samus, but she was unable to speak. He frantically attempted over and over again to communicate with her until his communicator was shut off by the Deleter. Ridley then dragged her across the wall until Anthony shot him, and she fell to the platform below, unable to stand up, until Anthony was seemingly killed. Samus regained her composure and destroyed Ridley in her rage. He managed to survive, as he always did, and escaped.

Before Adam walked off to Sector Zero, Samus was told to defeat Ridley as one of her several and final missions from him. She later found Ridley as a mummy in the Bioweapon Research Center, having been killed by the Queen Metroid. The corpse stayed there until the Galactic Federation invaded the station and was probably taken to the BSL, where it can be seen in a freezer.

Criticism[]

Metroid: Other M's PTSD scene has been heavily criticized by fans due to the fact that Samus, who has in the past (aside from the prequel manga) always been portrayed as being strong and competent, suffers a panic attack at the mere sight of Ridley. This is compounded by the fact that she has fought and defeated him seven times before, as victories often build confidence: Metroid: Zero Mission (both the authentic Ridley and a robot built in his image) Metroid Prime, twice in Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, Metroid: Samus Returns, and Super Metroid.

Some fans have only played the games and are unaware of the past connection between Samus and Ridley, which is not explained in the scene or anywhere in the game despite Other M's major focus on story telling. However, there are those who are aware of the past connections and still criticize it, citing her as never having displayed any signs of PTSD towards Ridley's numerous survivals in the other games, both preceding and succeeding; in the latter case, Samus also did not display any reaction when she encountered the frozen body of Ridley's clone in Metroid Fusion. Fans also argue that the ending of the Metroid manga, a prequel to the entire video game series, developed Samus' character into overcoming her trauma, depicted by her triumphing over Ridley and even going as far as mocking him.

Samus states in Other M to have killed Ridley definitively at the end of Super Metroid, only for him to suddenly appear before her alive and well, therefore explaining her immense shock. However, this is also a point of criticism for fans, due to the fact that Ridley has already been depicted dying in battles prior to Super Metroid, specifically in Zero Mission and Metroid Prime 3 where he is shown disintegrating entirely, therefore nullifying the justification to her belief that her nemesis had died once and for all during her second mission on Zebes.

Metroid: Samus Returns, a game released several years after Other M, and who's events take place between the Prime series and Super Metroid, also has no depiction of Samus suffering an episode of PTSD upon seeing Proteus Ridley. In fact, she showed no hesitation when she immediately jumped down from the cliff overlooking her Gunship to begin fighting him.

Because the only other source to depict Samus as having an episode of PTSD, the Magazine Z manga, was not officially released outside Japan, and the scene did not directly identify her as having PTSD, the scene was also criticized for having no lead-in (or at least, no apparent lead-in in the English localization), backstory or any indication of what exactly Samus was going through, leaving fans both new and old confused.

Those who criticize Samus' PTSD moment from Other M also argue that such an event would have been more fitting in Zero Mission, the game in which she fights and defeats Ridley for the first time in the chronology of the series. Furthermore, they argue that Zero Mission was fully capable of presenting cutscenes and dialogue, which Yoshio Sakamoto did not take advantage of to present a PTSD in Samus. This leads to the belief that Sakamoto chose to use her PTSD strictly as a convenient plot-device for Other M.

Trivia[]

A Piercing Screech Samus eyes

Samus's eyes in A Piercing Screech.

  • In the Story feature of Other M, Samus is described as "panic-stricken".
  • Klaus Schneider has his own episodes of PTSD after being narrowly killed by the Alpha Splinter in Metroid Prime: Episode of Aether.
  • Samus's PTSD appears to be referenced in A Piercing Screech, the CGI animated trailer that revealed Ridley as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. After Ridley reveals himself, there is a brief close-up of Samus's visor that shows Samus's eyes in a state of panic. However, following the gameplay transition, Samus recovers and launches herself at him, suitless, with a look of anger.
    • On a similar note, the manner in which Ridley kills Mario (where he snaps his neck) in the trailer resembles Samus's PTSD hallucination in the manga, where she sees Ridley murder her parents in a similar manner.
  • In the Japanese version of Metroid: Other M, when recalling the circumstances behind being called "Lady" by Adam Malkovich and her feelings on the matter, she mentioned she didn't like feeling weak and delicate from the name due to "fear of recalling things best left forgotten", implying that the phrase acted as a trigger to PTSD regarding past events that left her helpless. Whether it was a reference to the Space Pirate raid on K2L or the events of Mother Brain's betrayal on Zebes is left unclear.[1] This detail was omitted from the English localization.

External links[]

  1. ^ (September 2, 2010). メトロイド アザーエム. Nintendo Wii. Nintendo. Samus: (Translation: "He was always needling me with that. In those days, I hated being treated like a child. Even being treated differently because I was a woman was barely tolerable. It's not like I hated Adam over it. But I could not bear being called anything that made me feel weak... for fear of recalling things best left forgotten. I could not bear being called something like Lady.")
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