Pre-release Upon its reveal at
E3 2015,
Metroid Prime: Federation Force received negative reception from many fans of the series. The game was criticized for lacking traditional
Metroid series elements and not resembling other
Metroid games, with criticism aimed toward the game's focus on first-person shooter combat and multiplayer over exploration and isolation, the lack of a single player mode, the graphics (both the technical aspect and the use of a cartoonish
super-deformed art style, which was considered unfitting with the
Metroid series' mature tones) and the absence of the series protagonist
Samus Aran. Moreover, as the series had been on hiatus for five years since the last released game in the series,
Metroid: Other M, the last acclaimed
Metroid game,
Metroid Prime 3: Corruption, was released eight years prior, and the game's release window coincided with the series'
30th anniversary, fans criticized Nintendo's choice of resuming the franchise after a half-decade of hiatus with a
spin-off title rather than a main series
Metroid game. The game became one of the most discussed and controversial games of both that year's E3 and 2015 in general: the debut trailer received over 25,000 dislikes and just 2,500 likes on
YouTube within the first day of its announcement, giving it a 90% dislike ratio, and reached 9,500 likes and 83,000 dislikes by the end of that year. A
Change.org petition calling for the game's cancellation was also created in the hours following the game's announcement, reaching 7,500 signatures in under 24 hours. Within 2 months this petition went up to 20,000 signatures. It was later announced that the game does have a single player mode and that Samus Aran would appear in-game as a non-playable character. This game would be a defining factor on the negative reception of Nintendo's presence at E3 2015 as whole, fueled by the announcement of
Animal Crossing: amiibo Festival and the lack of
The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Following a long silence on the game, Tanabe detailed the game further in a March 2016 Nintendo Direct, but an accompanying trailer on YouTube received a 2:1 dislike to like ratio (last recorded as 1,374 to 600) and resulted in Nintendo disabling the feature within hours of being available. Additionally, the game was not present at
E3 2016, even though its release was slated for a few months after the event.
Post-release Metroid Prime: Federation Force received a rating of 64/100 on the
review aggregator website
Metacritic, indicating "mixed or average reviews". In the United Kingdom, the game debuted outside of the all-format software charts, below older 3DS titles such as
New Super Mario Bros. 2 and
Tomodachi Life, and charting outside of the top ten on the 3DS charts, leading some outlets to describe the game as a commercial failure. == Legacy ==