The poetic journey of a dolphin across the oceans, with its hypnotic mood and demanding puzzles. A game apart, unforgettable on the Mega Drive.
Your verdict
Category
Action Adventure1 player3+
Description
Ecco the dolphin dives into ocean depths to find his missing pod in this Sega masterpiece. Published by Sega, released in Europe in March 1993. Action-adventure with Ecco exploring ocean abysses, environmental narration, varied aquatic enemies and bosses.
Ecco the Dolphin review
4/5
Art direction
★★★★★
"Striking"
MAX
Music
★★★★★
"Legendary"
3/5
Story
★★★★★
"Solid"
Signed by Spencer Nilsen, the music weaves ethereal, drifting pads that recreate the silent immensity of the oceans. Between contemplation and muffled unease, it accompanies Ecco's dives with a rare atmospheric beauty. This new-age mood, unexpected on the console, remains one of the most spellbinding in its catalogue.
The European edition of Ecco the Dolphin from Novotrade/Sega, distributed by Sega in a large Mega Drive print. Its collector interest comes from the game's legendary difficulty and from the cartridge remaining one of the most iconic Sega Mega Drive releases of its era, founder of the Ecco sub-series.
A cult cover
A dolphin leaps from a turquoise sea toward golden light, the star etched on its brow, in a marine painting of almost sacred calm. Far from the console's brawling heroes, the illustration banks on the grace and mystery of the deep and intrigues at once. Elegant and serene, it promises an aquatic voyage as beautiful as it is enigmatic.
Is Ecco the Dolphin still worth playing in 2026?
A singular work by Novotrade and Sega, Ecco the Dolphin offers a narrative marine adventure in which you play a dolphin gone to find his lost pod. The fluid swimming, the echolocation based puzzles and the science fiction tinged story make this experience a total singularity. The Mega CD version offers a sumptuous redbook soundtrack by Spencer Nilsen that elevates the adventure. Difficult and contemplative, the title remains an atypical reference that largely deserves discovery still today truly here on the Sega CD machine for newcomers.