Editing Hitlag
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As shown by the formulas, the general amount of hitlag on moves is at its lowest in ''Melee'', and has since increased throughout the series, with ''Ultimate'' having the most hitlag. In all games, hitlag is higher the more damage a move deals; weak attacks such as [[Mario]]'s [[jab]] have minimal hitlag, but the hitlag of strong or {{b|sweetspot|hitbox}}ted attacks can last much longer. For example, a move that deals 15% damage with no other factors would inflict hitlag of 10 frames in ''Smash 64'' (9 in the Japanese version), 8 frames in ''Melee'', 9 frames in ''Brawl'' and ''Smash 4'', and 15 frames in ''Ultimate''. In addition, ''Brawl'' introduced the mechanic of hitlag multipliers, causing variance in the hitlag duration of attacks; this is in contrast to ''Melee'' and ''Smash 64'', where the duration of hitlag was predictable. | As shown by the formulas, the general amount of hitlag on moves is at its lowest in ''Melee'', and has since increased throughout the series, with ''Ultimate'' having the most hitlag. In all games, hitlag is higher the more damage a move deals; weak attacks such as [[Mario]]'s [[jab]] have minimal hitlag, but the hitlag of strong or {{b|sweetspot|hitbox}}ted attacks can last much longer. For example, a move that deals 15% damage with no other factors would inflict hitlag of 10 frames in ''Smash 64'' (9 in the Japanese version), 8 frames in ''Melee'', 9 frames in ''Brawl'' and ''Smash 4'', and 15 frames in ''Ultimate''. In addition, ''Brawl'' introduced the mechanic of hitlag multipliers, causing variance in the hitlag duration of attacks; this is in contrast to ''Melee'' and ''Smash 64'', where the duration of hitlag was predictable. | ||
==Properties== | ==Properties== | ||
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As characters originating from other fighting game series, {{SSBU|Ryu}}, {{SSBU|Ken}}, and {{SSBU|Kazuya}} have pronounced hitlag multipliers throughout a major part of their movesets, referencing the hitlag mechanics of their respective games. Ryu and Ken inflict above-average hitlag, with a multiplier of 1.5× for most attacks (1.8× for {{SSB4|Ryu}} in ''Smash 4''), while Kazuya's is below-average, with multipliers from 0.2× to 0.6× for most attacks. Notably, {{SSBU|Terry}} does not have such a distinction. | As characters originating from other fighting game series, {{SSBU|Ryu}}, {{SSBU|Ken}}, and {{SSBU|Kazuya}} have pronounced hitlag multipliers throughout a major part of their movesets, referencing the hitlag mechanics of their respective games. Ryu and Ken inflict above-average hitlag, with a multiplier of 1.5× for most attacks (1.8× for {{SSB4|Ryu}} in ''Smash 4''), while Kazuya's is below-average, with multipliers from 0.2× to 0.6× for most attacks. Notably, {{SSBU|Terry}} does not have such a distinction. | ||
===Notes=== | |||
<references group="note"/> | |||
==External links== | ==External links== |