Princess Elise of Soleanna is the key to the "Flames of Disaster," which Dr. Eggman wants to combine with the power of the seven Chaos Emeralds to rule through all time. Just happening to be around town, Sonic the Hedgehog must protect Elise from Eggman and, with his friends, foil the mad doctor's scheme. Meanwhile, a telekinetic hedgehog from the future aptly named Silver (even though he looks like he's actually white) and a cat named Blaze come to the present to prevent their Bad Future by destroying the "Iblis Trigger." Elsewhere, Shadow the Hedgehog and Rouge the Bat must contend with Mephiles the Dark, who wants to activate the Iblis Trigger.Released near the end of 2006 for the Xbox 360, and then a few months later for the PlayStation 3, Sonic the Hedgehog was an attempt by Sega to undo the Polygon Ceiling that the series had been struggling with for some time, such as camera issues and occasionally wonky controls and physics.However, by forcing the game out for a Christmas release and developing it for two advanced, brand-new consoles, what we got instead was a veryObvious Beta that not only failed to address the flaws the franchise was hit with in the 3D realm, but actually accentuated them. The controls were slipperier than ever, the camera was even more offensive, the Havok physics engine was clearly implemented for the sake of having a physics engine, and the loading times were some of the worst to ever hit a console game — and that's not even mentioning the tangled web that was the plot. To add insult to injury, this was the title that marked the Hedgehog's 15th anniversary, and somehow, after spending an extra six months working on a Playstation 3 port, they somehow managed to make it even worse without fixing any of the previous version's issues.With Sonic being a certified Long RunningCash Cow Franchise, however, the game still sold well enough to be inducted into the Xbox's Platinum Hits line. Even to this day, you may sometimes find, hiding in some obscure corner of the Internet, a few valiant defenders of the game. Your Mileage May Vary as to whether the game is playable, outright broken, or if nothing else had some good ideas going — but the one thing most people agree on is that most of the ideas were not implemented well, and that they alone were insufficient to save the game.This was the nadir of Sonic's career, but Sega, luckily, realized it; they have all but disavowed the game and have made sure to produce, by general reception's consensus, steadily better games since. And if nothing else, even the Broken Base can agree that things can't get any worse for the series than they did with Sonic '06. However the game is still canon, as games such as Sonic Generations have demonstrated.An extremely popular Let's Play video marathon session of the game was done by Something Awful goons pokecapn, Kung-Fu Jesus, medibot, and IlluminatusVespucci; to view the tropes used in those videos, visit here.
This game exhibits examples of:
Accentuate the Negative: No one is calling this game a masterpiece, (Well...) but most people tend to view it as the most awful game in the entire history of existence. Even when it first came out it managed to receive a few (mildly) positive reviews (Game Informer gave it a 6.0 out of 10 for example - and they hatedShadow the Hedgehog), but due to its reputation, it's become one of the most despised games ever, even beating out Big Rigs as Worst Game Of The Decade.
Airborne Aircraft Carrier: The Egg Carrier mkII, which looks more like a scaled-up fighter-style vehicle in this than the bulky flying base from Sonic Adventure.
Anyone Can Die: Let's see the death count for this game; Duke Soleanna, his fellow researchers, Princess Elise and Dr. Eggman (Until Sonic goes back in time to avert the disaster that kills them), and even Sonic himself in the last episode.
Apathetic Citizens: Apparently, it's a better usage of the Soleanna city guards' time to concoct inane "figure out who our Captain is!" puzzles for Sonic to solve rather than, y'know, searching for the captured princess they're supposed to protect. As far as Soleanna's police force is concerned, it's entirely up to Sonic to save their princess. For extra idiocy, the Captain in the aforementioned puzzle? He's the one who gives you the mission in the first place, that is, the one you talk to first.
Apocalypse How: And how!Solaris definitely tried to pull a class Z on us.
Iblis managed to pull something between Class 2 and 4.
Bad Future: Silver's future has been devastated by Iblis who was released due to the death of Elise in the present.
Bald of Evil: The removal of Eggman's goggles played up his chrome-dome.
Barrier Maiden: Elise and Blaze take turns being Iblis' living seal.
Beehive Barrier: One of the enemies can shield itself that way from Silver.
Behind the Black: A cutscene has Eggman literally hiding Elise there, pulling her on-camera from just off to the side after a wide shot showing only him, and nothing she could be hiding behind.
Big Bad: Dr. Eggman for Sonic, Mephiles for Shadow, and Iblis for Silver. And Solaris (the complete form of Mephiles and Iblis) for the Last Episode.
Big "NO!": Shadow lets out one that sounds like "NUUUOOOOAAAAGGHHHH!!!" whenever he falls down a Bottomless Pit during gameplay. Elise also delivers one as a Skyward Scream during a cutscene in the Last Episode when Mephiles kills Sonic. Silver also lets one out when he falls into Bottomless Pits.
Came Back Strong: The controversial kiss from Princess Elise not only revives Sonic from dead-but-not-really-death, but also transforms him into Super Sonic for the final boss.
Wave Ocean features a whale chase a la Emerald Coast from the first Sonic Adventure. The Egg Carrier '06 is a fancier, redder upgrade to the Adventure Egg Carrier.
Tails' line "Whoa! My head's spinning!" when he's running a large loop returns from Sonic Heroes.
Blaze the Cat. A common fan theory is that Blaze's world in the Rush games is merely the "good" future, while the Blaze in this game is from the "bad" future. This doesn't hold very much ground, since Sonic Rush Adventure went into further detail about the nature of Blaze's dimension. The game explains that Blaze's world is bound parallel to Sonic's via the "Power of the Stars" contained within the Jeweled Scepter. It's pretty clear that it's intended to be more than merely the future of Sonic's universe.
Silver's ending does mention that Blaze sealed herself in another dimension in an attempt to rid her and Silver's future of Iblis, which may explain why she was in another dimension in Sonic Rush.
She does make note of Sonic when Silver says "A blue hedgehog" after Mephiles shows him the "Iblis Trigger," as if she knows who Sonic is already, making this even more confusing.
Complexity Addiction: Mephiles' entire scheme to become Solaris again. It's even more insulting because all he needed to do was one simple task in order to make Elise cry and release Iblis, and he seems averse to the idea of just killing her outright.
Cosmic Retcon: Pretty much the entire game's plot is eliminated with the Solaris-killing time paradox.
Convection Schmonvection: Flame Core, Crisis City and the final scene where Sonic and Elise are fleeing an exploding Egg Carrier and he can't quite reach the ledge but a large explosion manages to shoot him and Elise up to safety.
Crate Expectations: Generic cubic crates with stars on the sides, for that matter. Some are wooden, some are metal, some are explosive and a few of them release electric shockwaves.
Cue the Sun: After Iblis' defeat at the end of Silver's story.
Darker and Edgier: Given the fact that the main villain, Mephiles, is a demonic psychopath who is trying to eradicate time itself, and one of the main characters comes from a post-apocalyptic future, and Sonic actually dies in this game, it's pretty evident that this title is among the darkest in the series.
Death Is Cheap: Sonic's death. He was revived one level later.
Decapitated Army: Certain groups of Mooks have palette-swapped "commanders"; if Sonic kills the commander, everyone else dies instantly, presumably due to a spontaneous lethal power vacuum.
Deus ex Machina: Elise feeling "Sonic's presence in the wind" saves reality.
Escort Mission: Several short and almost random ones. Sonic has to protect a woman named Anna because she knows "a secret". Silver has to protect another woman and later Shadow has to protect a man in a Lord. Technically these all allow the player to move onto the next level. All of them are simple enough; the people in question don't run towards the enemies and cower and hide until the next section has been cleared.
Evil Laugh: Mephiles has a big one when he kills Sonic.
Every Car Is a Pinto: Any vehicle that Shadow drives. The Armed Buggies respond to flipping over by exploding. If you take the Hovercraft over a ramp, it can explode upon landing in the water (and it's not like the developers weren't expecting players to use this ramp, considering that it had boost-pads at the top). And the Bike in the "Radical Train" section can explode for no visible reason whatsoever.
Everything Trying to Kill You: There are far, far more things in the environment that will damage you than things that won't. Enemies spawn out of nowhere, random elements of the levels will blast down on you without any warning, and sometimes it seems the level geometry itself is trying to throw you into the perpetual bottomless pits. This is exemplified in Sonic's Mach Speed sections, where brushing up against anything — fences on the side of the road, the smallest rock, robots that spawn right in front of you with barely any time to react — will send Sonic spiraling along the ground.
Explosion Propulsion: Happens at the ending cinematic of Sonic's part of the story.
Silver throwing you just to catch you, giving him a one-hit kill.
There is at least one of those spring things that will throw you right into a bottomless pit if you don't hit it just right.
In the last Rouge level, there's a structure far off in the distance that looks like you can go to it. You can, but you fall right through.
Remember grinding on rails in Sonic Adventure 2 and Sonic Heroes and how easy it was to jump to an adjacent rail? Doesn't work in this one, rendering several rings and power-ups pretty much unobtainable.
In the last Silver level, all sand is quicksand, even in places where all logic suggests it would be harmless.
Falling Into His Arms: At one point, Elise jumps out of the Eggmobile and Sonic catches her in the nick of time.
Flashback: Most of them are about times when Elise was young and Duke was alive.
Fusion Dance: Solaris is reborn through the fusion of Mephiles and Iblis.
Game-Breaking Bug: The hedgehogs will occasionally enter a scripted sequence and miss. You can tell the QA team wasn't getting paid a whole lot when the player can die during a portion they're not even in control of.
Game Mod: The game is written entirely in the Lua programming language, making the entire code accessible by hackers and the modding potential huge for a console-exclusive game. Before interest died out, a few modders successfully swapped characters around and modified Sonic's running and jumping speed.
Gameplay and Story Segregation: The shops have equipment for Silver, despite the fact that he won't exist for another 200 years.
Ham-to-Ham Combat: Any conversation between Shadow and Mephiles. They get cheesy lines, but they act the hell out of them—and the bombastic orchestral music backing them makes everything dramatic.
Have We Met Yet?: When Shadow first meets Mephiles after the latter is released from the Scepter of Darkness, Mephiles is already familiar with him. Later on, Shadow travels back in time to the Solaris Project disaster and finds himself sealing Mephiles into the Scepter, prompting Mephiles to memorize him.
The Hero Dies: Sonic temporarily dies in the Last Episode.
Heroic Sacrifice: A rare non-death example. Blaze seals Iblis inside herself, then seals herself in another world. Immediately before she did become the sacrifice, Silver was trying to do the same thing, only to find that he wasn't an acceptable vessel.
Indy Escape: In Sonic's White Acropolis stage, you have to escape a giant snowball at one point.
I Just Want to Be Normal: Princess Elise admits as much in a cutscene late in Sonic's story, and expresses relief that Sonic's adventure has allowed her to be "just myself... a girl."
It's Up to You: AI partners won't do anything more than follow you. They won't attack nearby enemies, they'll jump as little as possible (leading to several falls down bottomless pits screaming annoying death cries, only to reappear a few seconds later), and they don't even have animations on the stage results screen.
Knight of Cerebus: Mephiles, due to having no sympathetic excuse for his actions or any comedic quirks, and simply doing evil because it's fun for him, and also being one of the first villains in the entire franchise to actually murder a canonical character.
Knights and Knaves: The "find the captain" game you play early on; all the police officers will give you hints, but at least one is lying (hint: It's the guy who tells you to find the captain in the first place, better known as "the captain, sending you on a wild goose chase").
Last Ditch Move: After defeating it, the Egg Genesis pulls this in an attempt to land on the player.
Leitmotif: Sonic has "His World," Shadow has "All Hail Shadow," and Silver has "Dreams of an Absolution". The Big Bads have their own leitmotifs as well, with Eggman's being carried over to Sonic Unleashed and Sonic Colors.
Lens Flare: Most notably seen when Elise jumps out of the Eggmobile.
Light is Not Good: Solaris is supposed to be a god of light and time. He's also completely insane.
Literal Split Personality: An accident ten years ago caused Solaris to split into two entities: Mephiles and Iblis. In the Last Episode, they recombine for the True Final Boss.
Loads and Loads of Loading: A good chunk of the game is spent waiting 15-30 seconds at a time staring at a blank loading screen. Incidentally, the rather dull loading screen from this game is the trope's page image.
Lull Destruction: Captain Obvious is here because Sega wanted the characters to say something during each level, no matter how pointless or obvious it was.
Milking the Giant Cow: There is at least one talking animation with ridiculously over the top hand gestures.
New Powers as the Plot Demands: Characters use the Chaos Emeralds to purposes that are never seen again, including Time Travel and interdimensional transportation. Also, Amy is somehow able to turn invisible.
Pinball Protagonist: Sonic. He has his own "storyline", but it's Silver and Shadow that actually do the plot related stuff - Sonic doesn't even meetMephiles directly. Sonic has more relevance in Last Story than in his own, where he is suddenly important almost randomly.
Power Limiter: As with Sonic X, the rings around Shadow's wrists — he removes them in his episode's ending in order to take on the army of Mephiles clones.
Power Trio: Team Sonic (Sonic, Tails and Knuckles), Team Silver (Silver, Blaze and Amy), and Team Dark (Shadow, Rouge, and E-123 Omega). Also, Sonic, Shadow and Silver when they go super to stop Solaris.
Quicksand Sucks: One entire desert level has every sand area as a giant bottomless sand pit, most notably in Shadow's play of Dusty Desert which requires you to navigate tricky terrain in a hovercraft and one wrong move will send you to your death.
Real Is Brown: Most of the time, the game is dominated by its "realistic" look.
Recycled Title: As this was intended as a rebirth of the series.
Red Oni, Blue Oni: Iblis is destructive and completely mindless. Mephiles is calm, cunning, and manipulative. They are two halves of the Eldritch Abomination known as Solaris.
Ruins for Ruins' Sake: Kingdom Valley. While the presence of the ruins is explained in-story (they're the old castle, abandoned after the Solaris Incident ten years ago), they still don't make any sense as buildings that the royal family would live or hold court in.
Say My Name: Sonic yells "Eliiiiise!" after the Egg Carrier explodes.
Schizophrenic Difficulty: The game just puts easier and harder levels at random in each of the 3 campaigns.
Scratch Damage: Vulcan Cannon fire will only take away one ring at a time and won't cause knockback, while missiles or actively touching an enemy makes you lose all your rings.
Sealed Evil in a Can: Iblis. He can be released by killing his host, or making the host cry. Mephiles as well: he was sealed into the Scepter of Darkness by Shadow the Hedgehog himself.
Send In the Clones: Shadow's story ends with Shadow, Rouge and Omega surrounded by Mephiles clones. The intro to the Last Episode reveals Shadow made short work of them.
Shaggy Dog Story: Several levels don't actually have much point to them other than simply forcing the characters to go through every one. Generally, if the characters return to Soleanna after completing a level, they haven't accomplished much unless that was their goal in the first place (i.e., traveling back in time from the future). For example, Sonic doesn't even catch up to the Egg Carrier after Wave Ocean; Tails simply tells him "We've lost it. Let's go back to town and get some more information!"
Mephiles the Dark: It's futile. The world will betray you. Why fight at all? Why risk your life for those who will persecute you later?
Shadow the Hedgehog: If the world chooses to become my enemy... I will fight like I always have!
Super Title 64 Advance: Unofficially the game is often refereed to as Sonic 360, thanks to the Xbox 360 tech demo shown at E3 2005 which provided the first glimpse of the game. It was also known as Sonic Next/Sonic Nextgen before its formal reveal at E3 2006.
Slow Motion Fall: Sonic gets one at the beginning of the final story.
The Slow Path / Write Back to the Future: Rouge tells Omega, in the present, to help Shadow, in the future, against Mephiles this way and gives him a Chaos Emerald to help him. Omega gets written back into the story when he travels back to the present with Shadow, along with the Chaos Emerald.
Someone Has to Die: The end of Silver's story has Blaze becoming the new vessel for Iblis and sealed in another dimension.
Space Whale Aesop: Be a strong leader who never cries in the face of adversity and trials... because otherwise, you'll release a demonic monstrosity that was sealed within you and tear apart the space-time continuum... wait, what?
Stable Time Loop: Several, actually, but the biggest one: Silver gives Elise the blue Chaos Emerald as a baby, which she ends up keeping until Eggman kidnaps her (for the first time), when she throws it away to Sonic, who surrenders it to Eggman, who... drops it in his base for Silver to find and travel back into the past with and give to Elise. One of the biggest points of contention with the game's plot: if that was where the blue Chaos Emerald was, how on earth could the rest of the Sonic games have happened? True, the games events were erased from history, but...
Tech Demo Game: Sega attempted to shove every "next gen" feature they could think of into the game, such as motion blur*
Even though the game is designed to run at 60 frames per second, so you usually can't even see it.
, real-time shadows*
An important step towards having a day-night cycle, though Sega abandoned that
and a physics engine. Unfortunately, people weren't impressed so much as annoyed by the primitive lighting, broken physics and the massive slowdowns in Soleanna.
Tennis Boss: Silver's battles with Iblis and the Egg Genesis.
Unexpected Gameplay Change: Worse than in other Sonic games: you'll frequently be switching characters (and thus playstyles) mid-level. In one particularly bad case, mid-boss fight.
Well-Intentioned Extremist: Silver in the beginning of the game. He legitimately wants to help the world have a better future that doesn't have Iblis, but he went about it the wrong way by trying to murder Sonic.
What the Hell, Hero?: Amy calls out Silver for trying to destroy the "Iblis Trigger", aka Sonic.
Why Don't You Just Shoot Him?: When Mephiles's plot to have Silver kill Sonic fails, he decides to do it himself. It takes him all of about five seconds.
You Look Familiar: Mephiles, who's very similar to Shadow in appareance, with grey streaks instead of red, and no visible mouth. Knuckles even acknowledges this in one cutscene and when Shadow confronts Silver, Silver mistakes him for Mephiles.
You Never Asked: Amy did not know for a long time that both Elise and Silver were actually following Sonic.