@MastaGambit play the game yourself. The first playthrough is trial and error and quite frustrating at times [so damn many pits and spikes], but so worth it. It's a great game. Get an emulator if you have to, long as you have a controller to use.
Second most favourite theme from MMZ1 and it sure give a picture for how well organized Neo Arcadia is with Copy X as a ruler....yes all good for human and that can happened by wasted many innocent repliods there in the process...this theme to me sure captured it all in here 👍👏.
Terrorist are terrorist cause they cause terror as defined by the authority. But in the terrorist's POV, that same authority is evil because power corrupts and despite the clean image they represent, they've also engage in shady dealings to ensure their power. So, in the end, who is the bad guy and who is the good guy? Who decides who is good and who is bad? What gave you the right to decide that Copy X is bad and we were playing as the good guy? In the Neo Arcadian's POV, Copy X is a good guy and you're(Zero) a Maverick by definition. It wasnt until Z4 that this perspective changed. The only plot-twist that actually might've been perfect for the game is that if it was the real X and not a copy, because that opens up ALOT of implications of the entire X series as a whole. Alas, it was vetoed because it was too depressing and it didnt feel right to make X the villain apparently.
@@ChaosMissile "What gave you the right to decide that Copy X is bad and we were playing as the good guy?" The part where the real X wanted a world where Reploids and Humans could live together in peace and harmony, not the one where Reploids are still treated as like slaves to humans that his Copy runs.
Played this game again recently, after I hadn't touched the series for over a decade... and I'm surprised over how little trouble I had. I think the worst spot for me was the factory stage with the huge pit... doubly so on the second visit where you had to disarm the bombs. But the Neo Arcadia stages were a cakewalk, for some reason. So I didn't get to hear this banger for very long...
Both draw heavily from ancient Greek architecture. Likewise, the artist for the music is using what sounds like sound samples that are similar to the synthesized sounds of the Yamaha YM2612 (the sound chip used by the SEGA Genesis, for which the first Sonic the Hedgehog was made). Particularly the pipe-organ emulating keyboard, drums, and bass guitar have a similar heavily compressed/electronic-generated twang to them.