Super Smash Bros. Ultimate: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 15:41, 21 January 2019
This article is incomplete. Please feel free to edit this article to add missing information and complete it. Reason: Poké Ball Pokémon damages |
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate 大乱闘スマッシュブラザーズ SPECIAL | |
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Boxart of Super Smash Bros. Ultimate | |
Basic info
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Platform: | Switch |
Category: | Versus Fighting |
Players: | 1-8 players simultaneous |
Connectivity: | Nintendo Switch Online |
Developer: | Sora, Ltd. Namco Bandai |
Publisher: | Nintendo |
Part of: | Generation VII spin off |
Ratings
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CERO: | A |
ESRB: | E10+ |
ACB: | PG |
OFLC: | PG |
PEGI: | 12+ |
GRAC: | All |
GSRR: | 6+ |
Release dates
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Japan: | December 7, 2018 |
North America: | December 7, 2018 |
Australia: | December 7, 2018 |
Europe: | December 7, 2018 |
South Korea: | December 7, 2018 |
Hong Kong: | December 7, 2018 |
Taiwan: | December 7, 2018 |
Websites
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Japanese: | Official site |
English: | Official site |
Japanese boxart
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Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (Japanese: 大乱闘スマッシュブラザーズ SPECIAL Great Fray Smash Brothers Special) is the sixth installment in the Super Smash Bros. series. It was first teased March 8, 2018, and was then revealed in full on a Nintendo Direct on June 12, during E3. It released worldwide on the Nintendo Switch on December 7, 2018. The game brings together all fighters from previous installments together in one game, as well as some new fighters.
Playable characters
Bold denotes a Pokémon character. Italics denote a newcomer. ε denotes an Echo Fighter.
Outside of the World of Light, the initial character roster is the same as that of the first Super Smash Bros. game.
Default characters
Unlockable characters
- Dark Samusε (Echo of Samus)
- Luigi
- Ness
- Captain Falcon
- Jigglypuff
- Peach
- Bowser
- Ice Climbers
- Sheik
- Zelda
- Dr. Mario
- Pichu
- Falco
- Marth
- Young Link
- Ganondorf
- Mewtwo (Mega Mewtwo Y)
- Roy
- Mr. Game and Watch
- Meta Knight
- Pit
- Zero Suit Samus
- Wario
- Snake
- Ike
- Pokémon Trainer
- Diddy Kong
- Lucas
- Sonic
- King Dedede
- Olimar
- Alph*
- Lucario (Mega Lucario)
- R.O.B
- Toon Link
- Wolf
- Villager
- Mega Man
- Wii Fit Trainer
- Rosalina & Luma
- Little Mac
- Greninja (Ash-Greninja)
- Mii Fighter
- Palutena
- Pac-Man
- Robin
- Shulk
- Bowser Jr.
- Duck Hunt
- Ryu
- Kenε
- Cloud
- Corrin
- Bayonetta
- Inkling
- Ridley
- Simon
- King K. Rool
- Isabelle
- Incineroar
Downloadable content
Following the trend set by Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS/Wii U, DLC Characters will be added over time after the game's launch with six different characters. The first DLC character was revealed as Piranha Plant from the Super Mario series and will be available for free to anyone who purchases the game and registers it before January 31, 2019. The later five will come in Challenger Packs which will also have a stage and a set of music tracks. The first of these packs features Joker from Persona 5. The DLC will conclude in February 2020.
- Piranha Plant (released February 2019)
- Joker
Pokémon stages
- Saffron City
- Pokémon Stadium
- Pokémon Stadium 2
- Spear Pillar
- Prism Tower
- Unova Pokémon League
- Kalos Pokémon League
Pokémon music
Music based on the Pokémon series can now be played on any Pokémon stage.
New
- Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire - Battle! (Steven)
- Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire - Battle! (Lorekeeper Zinnia)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - Battle! (Wild Pokémon)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - Battle! (Trainer Battle)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - Battle! (Gladion)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - Battle! (Island Kahuna)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - Battle! (Elite Four) / Battle! (Solgaleo and Lunala)
- Pokémon Sun and Moon - The Battle at the Summit!
Returning
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Pokémon Stadium
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Pokémon Main Theme
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Road to Viridian City (From Pallet Town / Pewter City)
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Pokémon Center
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Pokémon Gym / Evolution
- Pokémon Red and Blue - Poké Floats
- Pokémon Gold and Silver - Pokémon Stadium 2
- Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire - Battle! Wild Pokémon
- Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire - Victory Road
- Pokémon Diamond and Pearl - Battle! Wild Pokémon
- Pokémon Diamond and Pearl - Battle! (Champion) / Champion Cynthia
- Pokémon Diamond and Pearl - Battle! (Team Galactic)
- Pokémon Diamond and Pearl - Route 209
- Pokémon Diamond and Pearl - Battle! (Dialga/Palkia) / Spear Pillar
- Pokémon Black and White - Route 10
- Pokémon Black and White - N's Castle Medley
- Pokémon Black and White - Battle! (Reshiram/Zekrom)
- Pokémon Black 2 and White 2 - Route 23
- Pokémon X and Y - Battle! Wild Pokémon
- Pokémon X and Y - Battle! (Team Flare)
- Pokémon X and Y - Battle! (Trainer Battle)
- Pokémon X and Y - Battle! (Champion)
- Pokémon X and Y - Victory Road
- Pokémon X and Y - Lumiose City
Poké Ball and Master Ball Pokémon
# | Pokémon | Move | Description | Damage | |
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026 | Alolan Raichu | Surge Surfer | Rides its own tail in a surfing attack, dealing electric damage to anyone who gets hit. | % | |
037 | Vulpix | Incinerate | Shoots out fireballs that create a pillar of fire where they land. | % | |
037 | Alolan Vulpix | Frost Breath | Breathes out an icy blast that freezes opposing fighters. | % | |
052 | Meowth | Pay Day | Throws coins at opponents over a wide area. | % | |
063 | Abra | Teleport | Teleports opponents to different locations on the stage. | N/A | |
101 | Electrode | Explosion | Causes an Explosion that affects any fighter. Can also be picked up and thrown just before detonating. | % | |
103 | Alolan Exeggutor | N/A | Uses its large body to get in the way of fighters. Acts as a moving wall. | % | |
118 | Goldeen | Splash | Flops around to no effect | 0% | |
120 | Staryu | Swift | Chases after the nearest opponent, then locks itself into position and shoots a flurry of 38 stars. Also damages on contact. | % | |
132 | Ditto | Transform | Transforms into the fighter who threw the Poké Ball, and then attacks enemies. That fighter also gets any KOs it pulls off. | % | |
133 | Eevee | Take Down | Slams its body sideways into nearby opponents up to five times. | % | |
143 | Snorlax | Body Slam | Jumps up out of view, then returns much larger and Body Slams any foe on the way down. | % | |
146 | Moltres | Fly | Rises away from the battlefield and burns opponents that touch it. | % | |
151 | Mew | Fly | Nothing happens except a realization that you're quite lucky to have seen one. | % | |
175 | Togepi | Metronome | Randomly uses one of several moves | % | |
182 | Bellossom | Sweet Scent | Uses Sweet Scent to put nearby opponents to sleep. | N/A | |
212 | Scizor | Metal Claw | Dashes into the air toward opponents, slashing at them with steel claws. | % | |
244 | Entei | Fire Spin | Generates a huge column of fire, trapping opponents for severe damage and launching them at the end. | % | |
245 | Suicune | Aurora Beam | Shoots a powerful Aurora Beam directly forward, freezing opponents. Also damages on contact. | % | |
249 | Lugia | Aeroblast | Flies into the background and fires Aeroblast at a section of the stage. | % | |
282 | Gardevoir | Reflect | Creates a large sphere that reflects all enemy projectile attacks, then traverses the stage with it. | N/A | |
376 | Metagross | Earthquake | Steps on foes to trap them, then launches nearby grounded opponents with a stomp. Done four times in total. | % | |
380 | Latias | Steel Wing | After the released Pokémon flies off-screen, both Pokémon zoom back and forth 3-5 times using Steel Wing. Those who barely avoid being hit are blown by the turbulence. | % | |
381 | Latios | ||||
382 | Kyogre | Hydro Pump | Floats about the stage, shooting blasts of water to push opponents off the battlefield. Damages foes who touch its mouth. | % | |
386 | Deoxys | Hyper Beam | Floats up into the air and fires Hyper Beam at the ground, causing repeated damage. Also damages on contact. | % | |
460 | Abomasnow | Blizzard and Ice Punch | Releases a swirling wind that sucks in and damages nearby foes, then punches and freezes them. | % | |
484 | Palkia | Spacial Rend | Temporarily flips the camera upside-down. Also damages on contact. | % | |
487 | Giratina | Dragon Breath | Releases a whirlwind that repeatedly damages opponents and may carry them off-screen. Also damages on contact. | % | |
491 | Darkrai | Dark Void | Puts nearby fighters to sleep and damages them repeatedly. | % | |
493 | Arceus | Gravity | Stomps on the stage with Gravity, slamming nearby airborne opponents down. | N/A | |
494 | Victini | Victory Star | Generously gives the fighter who threw its Poké Ball a Final Smash. | N/A | |
495 | Snivy | Razor Leaf | Faces a direction and fires 14 leaves in quick succession. | % | |
501 | Oshawott | Surf | Charges at an opponent while riding on water to deal damage and push them off the stage. | % | |
571 | Zoroark | Fury Swipes | Brings an opponent to the top of the screen, slashes them 14 times with its claws, then slams then down to the ground with both arms. | % | |
646 | Kyurem | Icy Wind | Blows freezing wind over a wide, horizontal area. | % | |
647 | Keldeo | Secret Sword | Approaches foes and slashes with its horn in a large, upward arc. Done seven times in total. | % | |
648 | Meloetta | Echoed Voice | Releases vocal attacks that bounce off of surfaces, opponents, and the edges of the screen. | % | |
649 | Genesect | Techno Blast | Jumps around the stage while shooting four Techno Blasts from its cannon, fires a wide, long-range laser, then repeats. Both attacks can go through walls. | % | |
650 | Chespin | Seed Bomb | Shoots explosive seeds around itself five times. | % | |
653 | Fennekin | Incinerate | Releases fireballs in front of it that explode into pillars of flame, causing repeated damage. Alternates facing right and left twice. | % | |
661 | Fletchling | Peck | Hops around the stage, Pecking its target numerous times. | % | |
665 | Spewpa | Stun Spore | When hit, releases a powder to temporarily stun opponents. | % | |
673 | Gogoat | Take Down | Charges left and right, ramming opponents along the way and leaping periodically. Can be jumped on and ridden. | % | |
684 | Swirlix | Cotton Spore | Slows down nearby opponents. | N/A | |
686 | Inkay | Topsy-Turvy | Attacks the ground, causing all foes on land to trip. Done five times in total. | % | |
702 | Dedenne | Discharge | Jumps into the air and emits a large, X-shaped electric field that slowly rotates counter-clockwise, repeatedly shocking opponents and launching them at the end. | % | |
716 | Xerneas | Geomancy | Turns the user gold and greatly enhances their launching power for a time. | N/A | |
760 | Bewear | Hammer Arm | Deals a devastating uppercut to any foe that gets too close. | % | |
771 | Pyukumuku | Counter | Punches opponents who step on it, and whoever summoned it can throw it. | % | |
777 | Togedemaru | Zing Zap | Calls down a lightning bolt on itself in order to shoot out sparks from its body. | % | |
778 | Mimikyu | Let's Snuggle Forever | Drags the opponent into its body. If the affected fighter has taken significant damage, the attack can be an instant KO. | % | |
785 | Tapu Koko | Electric Surge | Creates an electric field that stuns opponents. It also shoots out electricity. | % | |
791 | Solgaleo | Sunsteel Strike | Enters its Radiant Sun phase and will charge at enemies, engulfed in flames. | % | |
792 | Lunala | Moongeist Beam | Enters its Full Moon phase and shoots a powerful ray from a distance. | % | |
802 | Marshadow | Spectral Thief | Leaps from an opponent's shadow and lets loose with a powerful punch. | % |
Master Balls will only contain Legendary Pokémon, Mythical Pokémon, Zoroark, and Goldeen.
Spirits
The trophies of previous Super Smash Bros. games since Super Smash Bros. Melee have been replaced with Spirits. These mostly represent non-playable characters that provide power-ups for the playable characters, similar to Stickers in Super Smash Bros. Brawl's Subspace Emissary.
Trivia
- This is the first Super Smash Bros. game to:
- Have a planned worldwide simultaneous release.
- Not introduce a new Pokémon stage.
- Introduce a playable Pokémon character from an odd-numbered generation after Generation I.
- Have less Pokémon than Assist Trophies.
- On the German cover of the game, Yoshi was removed to make room for the USK rating and Pikachu was moved further up due to popularity.[1]
- All of the new Pokémon that come out of Poké Balls are from Generations I or VII.
- The second remix of the Diamond and Pearl Wild Battle theme, which debuted in Smash Bros. for Wii U, is the only Pokémon track previously featured in a Super Smash Bros. game to not be featured in this title.
- Scizor returns as a Poké Ball Pokémon after its absence from Brawl and Smash 4.
References
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This article is part of Project Sidegames, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon Sidegames. |