


Left of the raised floor is another platform, comprised of delayed-reaction Pit Blocks. Underneath this are four Wario crystals disguising an Energy, Missile, Super Missile and Power Bomb Tank (one each) in the bottom right corner, and in the bottom right corner, one more of each tank in plain sight, suspended in a shallow pool of water. The final room is a long, stretched corridor with a raised floor, across which is a line of Pit Blocks (resembling the n00b bridge in Super Metroid). The door on the right leads into test room 3. Curiously, it will only react to her presence if it sees her, meaning she can shoot and kill it from a distance without it fighting back. (similar to Mario Bros.) One Space Pirate is found here. Above each ledge is an open exit when taken, Samus warps to the other side of the room. Above the leftmost ledge is an S block, a leftover from Wario Land 4. The Blue Door on the right wall leads into test room 4.Ī video showcasing the test rooms, including this one, can be viewed here: Ī simple, square-shaped room with a long midair platform in the center of the screen, and above it, two ledges with slopes. The other block walls are intangible and can be passed through.įive double-sided doors, colored grey, Blue, Red, Green and Yellow, are found floating in the top right corner. The first of them has five columns, the leftmost of which are made of Pit Blocks, and the rightmost of Fake Blocks. Under them is a floor made of Screw Attack Blocks.Ībove the raised floor is a long platform with three cube-like walls along it. On the top left of the room is a line of light brown blocks, above which are a Missile Tank, Energy Tank, Power Bomb Tank and Super Missile Tank floating in midair. On either side of the room are Blue Doors which can only be opened with Missiles. It is possible that this room was used to test the Shinespark, given the sloped platform, and part of the raised floor consists of Boost Blocks (taking the appearance of yellow blocks from Wario). The first is a long, rectangular corridor with a raised section of floor that slopes on either side, and a floating platform with two sloped sides, and Fake Blocks in between them.

The bricks have the same properties as blocks in Zero Mission, but using Wario sprites. Zero Mission uses the same, albeit heavily modified engine as Metroid Fusion, which itself was modified from Wario Land 4. Notably, they contain many bricks from Wario Land 4. Several testing rooms exist within the game's data.
