Shadow Complex

A woman and the man interested in her go on a date that involves spelunking. You think this would be a fun little date, right?

Nope. The woman is captured by black ops troopers, and the man pursues her and her captors into an underground base, where a sinister organization called the Restoration is waiting to bring forth what it believes will be a new golden age for America and the world. Starting with only a pistol, a flashlight, and some climbing gear, the man begins to tear the base apart looking for a way out...

Part of the Empire universe, by Orson Scott Card - the Empire novel was actually written for this game, not the other way around. Developed by Chair Entertainment in association with Epic Games, it was heavily promoted and released to near-universal acclaim on Xbox Live Arcade. The gameplay is essentially just like that of a refined Super Metroid: the protagonist, Jason, runs around a 2D base, gaining equipment, items, and levels as he explores more and more of the place and unravels the sinister plot that is about to be put into action. It uses the Unreal Engine 3 and notably introduces "2.5D" elements smoothly into classic Metroidvania gameplay, such as allowing Jason to shoot enemies in the background of the stage.

It's short, but it's also only $15 and is easily available to anyone with an Xbox 360 and an Internet connection. With 50 experience levels, 100 items to collect, and an intriguing story interwoven with compelling gameplay, $15 is quite a steal for one of the best games of the Xbox Live Arcade platform.

This game contains examples of:
"Jason: Oh, crap, crap, crapcrapcrap! * runs like hell*"
 * 100% Completion: Required if you want the Completion achievement.
 * Air Vent Passageway: A fairly prominent method of slipping through the complex, both to avoid combat and just to get around. Some of the vents are reinforced with plating that renders them resistant to everything short of a missile launcher.
 * AKA-47: With the exception of the two made up weapons, this is almost painfully true. For the most part this consists of adding some zeros to the end of the name and switching out the real company for the fictional WhiteSands, in example: H&K MP5 becomes the WSMP50, the model is almost exactly the same as well.
 * A Taste of Power: The first segment gives you the second-best weapon and a mostly-complete suit of armor to play with before switching to Jason.
 * Bag of Spilling: Justified. The few skills you start the game with are lost due to the player characters' death. The rest of the game is played using a different character.
 * Bait and Switch Gunshot: At the end of the game, Particularly amusing if Jason has the Inertial Element, as he will.
 * Beehive Barrier: The representation of energy shields, on the large walkers and from the Fusion Helmet.
 * Bling Bling Bang: Finding all the Gold Bars grants you golden versions of all the weapons in the game.
 * Blown Across the Room: Meleeing soldiers in Power Armor is quite satisfying.
 * Boom! Headshot!: You get an achievement for a certain number of these, and it deals more damage to the sturdier enemies.
 * Collapsing Lair:

"Jason: Killing's getting easier. Not sure if that's good or bad. [shaky breath]"
 * Color Coded for Your Convenience: Shining Jason's flashlights on destructible walls will reveal what tool he can use to destroy them: normal bullets, grenades, foam, missiles, or high-velocity collisions.
 * Cool Airship:
 * Dramatic Irony: Jason runs into a Torture Technician who tells him "You don't look like a killer" in an attempt to psych him out. (By this point in the game, the player has probably killed a few dozen Restoration goons, and a tank or two.) Jason simply shoots the guy in the head from point blank range.
 * Elaborate Underground Base: The entire game takes place in one.
 * Enemy Chatter: You can overhear mooks talk about this-and-that as you sneak around the base, sometimes about trivialities, sometimes about their plans for the U.S.
 * Expy: Thanks to Nolan North's distinctive voice as well as being highly competent in a bad situation while using sarcasm as a coping mechanism, Jason Fleming is what happens when Nathan Drake gives up treasure hunting for a steady girlfriend.
 * Faceless Goons: The Progressive Restoration's entire membership all seem to enjoy wearing helmets that don't even possess a visor. Glowing lights on the side of the masks seem to indicate cameras of some sort. Interestingly, the hero can become faceless should he pick up the breathing mask and/or the fusion helmet!
 * Fake Difficulty: The "difficulty" in shooting bad guys in the background or being shot by bad guys from offscreen.
 * Fan Nickname: The Big Bad evil guy is nicknamed "Cobra Commander" by the fans. And the developers.
 * Flat Character: Name one notable thing about Jason.
 * He's voiced by Nolan North?
 * He's no one. And everyone.
 * Flunky Boss:
 * Follow the Leader: The developers have eagerly admitted that they based the gameplay off Metroidvania styles. Everyone has noticed - and it's been pretty unanimously been declared an excellent game.
 * Freeze Ray: The Foam Gun is effectively this, in that it's a weapon that instantly immobilizes enemies ala Harmless Freezing by covering them in rapidly-hardening plastic foam.
 * Grappling Hook Pistol: Called the hookshot.
 * Groin Attack: Once you get the Omega Armor, this is the default melee attack - the player can send enemies flying hundreds of feet away with a simple punch to the groin.
 * Humongous Mecha: Several of the bosses.
 * Infinite Supplies: The gun has unlimited ammo, with reloads. Later in the game, it's possible to earn infinite foam, grenades, and missiles, either through collecting power ups or simply reaching a high enough level.
 * Infinity-1 Sword: The inertial element can one-hit kill any minor enemy and do massive damage to bosses. On the other hand, it has the lowest rate of fire and one of the smallest clip sizes in the game, forcing you to actually aim rather than spread bullets willy-nilly.
 * Internet Backlash: A minor one. Thanks to some anti-homosexual themes in Empire, there was brief talk of a boycott of the game. It ultimately didn't matter since the story of the game and the book barely cross over.
 * It Gets Easier: At one point in the game, Jason notes with a chill that it's rather easy for him to shoot people now. In a bit of playing around with the trope, he wonders to himself whether that's a good or a bad thing...

"Jason: [runs into room, points gun at Claire's torturer] Let her go! Mr. Sweet:: Welcome. [slowly advances, knife in hand] You don't look like a killer to me... Jason: [shoots him without a word]"
 * Implacable Man: You, if you find the Fusion Helmet. As a bonus, the forcefield that allows this requires that you don't increase your movement speed beyond Unflinching Walk if you want it to stay active.
 * Killer App: One of the major releases of summer 2009 for Xbox Live Arcade.
 * Kill Him Already: Subverted:

"Dallas: At least... At least the Vice President is safe. [black SUV explodes in the background] Voice: Oh, that Vice President?"
 * Lost Forever: The Inertial Element is the only powerup that you can render completely un-collectible.
 * And one foam pack. Less important, but still annoying.
 * Macross Missile Massacre:
 * Made of Iron: Even before he gets the Omega Armor, Jason can take a surprising amount of gunfire in only a shirt, compared to the armored guards he fights who can only take one or two shots.
 * Megaton Punch: Taken to new heights of literalness once you get the Power Armor.
 * Minimalist Run: The game acknowledges two different levels of this challenge - there is an Achievement for finishing the game with 13% or fewer items, and a 'Master Challenge' for only collecting four percent - which doesn't include a gun.
 * Actually, the basic pistol is included in the 4%, as its required to advance (and presumably, to use the sub-weapons).
 * Metroidvania: A pitch-perfect example of one.
 * Minecart Madness: One brief section of the game involves riding a mine cart over a cliff and jumping out, using the extra momentum to clear the jump. At the base of the complex, there is also an optional mine cart shortcut that you can use as much as you wish.
 * Though to be honest, by the time you have access to the shortcut, you probably have the, making the minecart kind of pointless.
 * Mistaken for Spies: This is what happens to Claire and Jason in the beginning of the game,
 * Multiple Endings:
 * New Game+: Automatic, and with permanent upgrades (both levels and collection bonuses) that make subsequent jaunts through the Complex much easier.
 * Not the Fall That Kills You: You don't take damage from falls. Granted, this is pretty much the only way a Metroidvania can work, but it can feel a little silly sometimes when you can fall down a few stories without worrying.
 * Oh Crap: Verbatim, and in excess, when.
 * Olympic Swimmer: Presumably, Jason's pre-game fitness regimen included a lot of swimming.
 * The Only One: Halfway through the game, Jason stumbles into the Restoration's factory, and Claire basically says "Hey, since you're doing such a good job anyway, why don't you put looking for a way out on hold and single handedly destroy the enemies' supply line." Jason points out how silly that is, but does it anyway. Claire is actually surprised when he tells her what he's done.
 * : Courtesy of Lucius.
 * Oxygen Meter: The player is subject to one of these... until Jason picks up the SCHCA Mask.
 * Point of No Return: When, you can no longer access a certain area without starting the final battle.
 * Powered Armor: You eventually come across the Omega Armor. It is deeply entertaining to use, especially when fully assembled.
 * Railing Kill: You get an achievement for doing it 100 times!
 * Right Man in the Wrong Place: Guards make more and more alarmed comments about how unusual it is that one intruder could possibly cause so much damage.
 * Scenery Porn: Go to the surface, and pick pretty much any location.
 * Sequence Breaking: The Foam allows this, with proper use. In fact, the game seems designed around encouraging sequence breaks, which is appropriate.
 * Shout-Out: To Metroid of course, although the grappling hook pistol is called the hookshot... The developers also mention G.I. Joe as an inspiration.
 * The third spider tank boss fight is an homage to the fight at the end of Ghost in the Shell. The design of the tanks themselves are pretty blatantly modeled after the GitS tank, as well.
 * I see where your name comes from, Jason Fleming!
 * One of the Master Achievements is called Jason Bailey, a reference to Metroid's Justin Bailey password.
 * Shotguns Are Just Better: The final weapon upgrade is a super-shotgun that can kill anything in one hit, at super-long range.
 * The Slow Walk: The final piece of your armor basically makes you Immune to Bullets as long as you do this.
 * Soundtrack Dissonance: Despite little music being present in the game, a calming piano piece plays when you have to.
 * Story Breadcrumbs: Much of the plot can be gathered from guards who talk to one another when you're not killing them.
 * Super Speed: About halfway through the game you are given Friction Dampeners that triple your speed. A few of the more interesting power-up placements involve solving a few logic puzzles that can only be solved with the gravity-busting properties of the boots. Sadly, you cannot shinespark, but you can use a later triple-jump ability to abuse the boots' charge-up time.
 * Tempting Fate: In the opening sequence, the Player Character's armour locks up, via a security measure, after he beats all the bad guys attacking the Vice President. Then his Voice with an Internet Connection reveals he's actually working for the bad guys.
 * Tempting Fate: In the opening sequence, the Player Character's armour locks up, via a security measure, after he beats all the bad guys attacking the Vice President. Then his Voice with an Internet Connection reveals he's actually working for the bad guys.

"."
 * Ten-Second Flashlight: Well, more like Two Minute Flashlight, but this is one of Jason's most valuable tools, as it will highlight destructible walls in the proper colors.
 * The Other Rainforest: The setting of the game.
 * The Unfought:
 * Video Game Cruelty Potential: The soldiers scream when you send them flying (whether by uppercutting them with the Omega Armor, blowing them up with missiles or grenades, dive-bombing them with the Ground Pound, or plowing into them with the Friction Dampener), and there's an achievement for making a hundred of them scream.
 * Villain Ball: Lucius and the Restoration really should have read the Evil Overlord List to avoid things like Air Vent Passageway escape and Just Between You and Me, but their biggest mistake has to be
 * Villainous Breakdown: Lucius has a pretty impressive one.
 * Was It All a Lie?:.


 * "Well Done, Son" Guy: Jason.
 * Xanatos Roulette: Jason taking down the complex was all planned, and encouraged during the process, by.
 * X Meets Y: The developers have outright stated that this game was born of their love for Super Metroid and G.I. Joe.