Main Deck

The Main Deck is the first area that Samus Aran ventures into while aboard the Biologic Space Laboratories research station during the events of Metroid Fusion. The Main Deck serves the purpose of connecting to other sectors of the station, as well as containing the living quarters for the station's crew members and the operations room that allows the flight course of the station to be changed; another part of the Main Deck is the Sub-Zero Containment room, a cold storage which houses the lifeless, frozen husk of Ridley.

In M.U.G.E.N, the Main Deck has been made twice by Enscripture, with both versions using sprites of the Sub-Zero Containment room from Metroid Fusion.

Enscripture's first version
Enscripture's first version uses sprites of the Sub-Zero Containment room and Ridley's frozen husk taken from Metroid Fusion, with the husk visible on the left side of the stage. The stage has some minor changes from its appearance in the source game, such as the floor on the right side of the door that would block access to Ridley being moved up so that the whole floor is level, as well as the door itself being being made taller instead of a piece of the ceiling coming town to meet the door halfway; the falling snow that's visible throughout the stage is also different from how it appears in the source game, as it falls slightly faster and has a smoother animation. Due to the nature of the sprites being used, there isn't a lot of horizontal space and extremely limited vertical space, as the camera does not follow a character if they were to move upwards.

Enscripture's second version
Highly similar in appearance to the creator's first version, Enscripture's second version primarily increases the size of the sprites so that combatants have more room to move around, though a character using a Super Jump will still disappear off the top of the screen despite the camera now being able to follow an upwards moving character. A pulsating effect has been added to the majority of stage elements that makes everything brighter, while the falling snow has been slowed down to match its speed in Metroid Fusion, though an oversight in the tiling effect means that a thin blue line occasionally scrolls down the the stage. Despite the stage coming with two .def files, the differences between the two of them are not extensive, as the .def marked as 'MF-Sub-Zero2' has smaller snowflakes with more of them on screen at a time, on top of certain stage elements having the dimmest part of their pulsating animation be slightly brighter, such as the stage floor and Ridley's frozen husk.