Metal Slug X

| Console | Playstation 1 (PSX) Roms > ROMs |
|---|---|
| Publish | 11 Feb 2026 |
| Emulator | PSX Bios (SCPH1001.bin) |
| Genre | Action |
| Region | USA/Europe |
| Size | 72 MB |
| Format | Bin/CHD |
| Downloads | 911 |
Metal Slug X for PlayStation is pure arcade energy in a PS1 format. It feels fast, loud, and instantly readable: run, jump, shoot, and survive the screen-filling chaos. The controls stay simple, but the game rewards timing, movement, and smart weapon use, which is why it still works perfectly for quick sessions and repeat runs.
Arcade pace with sharp level flow
This entry is often seen as a refined take on the Metal Slug 2 formula, with tighter pacing and a constant push forward. Stages keep moving, enemy waves arrive in bursts, and boss fights demand focus without dragging. That rhythm is the reason the game stays exciting even after you learn the layouts.
Weapons, vehicles, and score routes
Power-ups are the main thrill. A strong pickup can flip a tough section in your favor, but it never lasts forever, so you keep adapting. Heavy fire, rockets, flames, and other iconic options each change how you approach a room. Vehicles add another layer, with the Metal Slug tank and other machines delivering a short power spike before the game pulls you back into danger at the right time.
Prisoner rescues also matter. They can reward you with useful support and push your score higher, which makes routes and risk decisions feel more meaningful across multiple playthroughs.
Co-op sessions that stay fun
Two-player co-op is where Metal Slug X becomes even better. You can split pressure, cover angles, and recover from small mistakes more easily, while the action gets more chaotic in a good way. It is easy to start together, and it stays interesting as you both get sharper at patterns and timing.
PS1 formats and setup basics
PlayStation disc images are commonly seen as BIN/CUE, ISO, or CHD. Keeping the BIN and CUE paired helps avoid track-related issues in some setups, while CHD is a popular option for saving space. For the smoothest results, using a good dump from a disc you own and matching region settings in your emulator can reduce audio quirks and loading oddities.

Tips for smoother runs
Metal Slug X rewards clean movement more than nonstop firing. Short hops, quick retreats, and knowing where enemies enter the screen usually matter most. Strong weapons feel amazing, but saving them for dense waves or late boss phases can turn a rough run into a clear. After a few retries, patterns become obvious, and that is when the game gets even more satisfying.
Metal Slug X remains one of the strongest run-and-gun options on PlayStation. It is straightforward, skill-driven, and packed with personality, with memorable stages and bosses that stay fun long after the first clear.
