Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

Gut Check

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Gut Check
King K Rool Down B SSBU.gif
King K Rool Down B 2 SSBU.gif

King K. Rool using Gut Check in Ultimate.
User King K. Rool
Universe Donkey Kong

Gut Check (ボディカウンター, Body Counter) is King K. Rool's down special move.

Overview[edit]

Gut Check is a move where K. Rool puffs out his stomach whilst a green visual effect is displayed on the armor, and will reflect any damage onto the opponents. It works like a counterattack and can also reflect projectiles. Despite its appearance, the move does not interact with K. Rool's Belly Super Armor in any way; countering an attack does not deal any damage to his armor, and he can counter attacks that would normally break his armor in one hit (such as a Falcon Punch) even if the armor has already been damaged.

Gut Check has a damage multiplier of 1.5× for both counterattacks and reflected projectiles while dealing 12% minimum, making it second after Joker's Tetrakarn for the highest damage multiplier of any counterattack, thus being a rather strong counter. This allows some countered moves to send an opponent to kill percent. It also has surprisingly long periods of intangibility on the counter (frame 4-15), allowing attacks or grabs to miss K. Rool entirely, though this is of niche use due to the move's high lag.

Gut Check actually acts as a counterattack and a reflector at the same time, unlike other similar moves like Tetrakarn/Makarakarn. This means that if K. Rool counters a projectile shot at point blank, the attacker will be struck simultaneously by the counter and the reflected projectile; depending from the strength of the countered projectile, this may result in extremely high damage and a potential OHKO. This is mainly notable against short ranged projectiles such as Olimar's smash attacks. If an overstrong projectile breaks through the move's reflector, it will still trigger the counterattack.

Gut Check's counterattack/reflection can actually be reversed (although not the counter preparation itself), with the reflector still being active until the move ends. This makes it a useful tech choice in Team Battles or free-for-alls due to the counterattack's intangibility, giving him additional defense against oppressive projectiles or aggressive opponents. It is also handy as a mixup if the opponent would otherwise be stage spiked, although this is mostly a gimmick.

However, the move has several downsides. The counter hitbox is centered on K. Rool's stomach, making the rest of his body vulnerable, much like the Melee and Brawl versions of Toad. This means opponents hitting his head or feet will not trigger the counter even if they face him. Additionally, Gut Check has noticeable ending lag (34 frames); although it is quite fast compared to other counterattacks, it is one of the slowest reflectors in the game. The move is also notorious for having a laggy counterattack animation; it doesn't do well against projectiles with low cooldown, as it has enough ending lag for an opponent to punish K. Rool if they dodge the reflected projectile. It is also possible to reflect a reflected projectile, usually resulting in K. Rool being forced to take a hit while stuck in the counterattack's endlag. Gut Check can simply miss or hit with the sourspot (on the "gust of wind"), which makes it unsafe against some ranged fighters.

The move is best used as a combo breaker or on reaction, in order to prevent K. Rool from receiving a punish; due to its very fast startup it can allow K. Rool to break most strings. It is also handy as a ledge option, as jumping with it halts all aerial momentum. While this can severely hinder horizontal recovery, it can work as an effective fake out that's faster than simply climbing up; additionally, since the counter starts on frame 5 (with frame 4 intangibility), it is actually one of K. Rool's fastest ledge options. While on stage, this can also be used to punish getup attacks or opponent's ledge options.

Instructional quote[edit]

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Move List King K. Rool (SSBU) Counterattacks with his belly. Can reflect projectiles, but it doesn't protect from behind.

Origin[edit]

This move is likely inspired by several instances of Kremling resilience. K. Rool himself is seen using his big frame to attack by bouncing on his stomach in Donkey Kong Land; this also inspired his dash attack and neutral aerial. It could also draw inspiration from King K. Rool's immunity to front attacks in Donkey Kong Country, which is due to his belly being plated in armor.[1] Throughout many games in the Donkey Kong Country series, Kremlings other than K. Rool who took attacks to protected areas of their bodies (or were attacked with insufficient force) could shrug off the blow and in some cases damage their assailant. In Donkey Kong 64, Klumps are tough enemies that damaged Kongs who made contact with them by bulging out their bellies in a manner most similar to Gut Check.

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name
Japan Japanese ボディカウンター, Body Counter
UK English Gut Check
France French Contre ventral
Germany German Wampenkonter
Spain Spanish Panza real
Italy Italian Contrattacco panciuto
China Chinese (Simplified) 腹部反击
Taiwan Chinese (Traditional) 腹部反擊
South Korea Korean 보디 카운터, Body Counter
Netherlands Dutch Stuiterbuik
Russia Russian Контрпузо

Trivia[edit]

  • The Smash Blog on the Ultimate website refers to this move as “Stomach Attack” (お腹を突き出, Stomach Protruding).[2]
  • While Gut Check does not utilize Belly Super Armor, the Techniques menu claims it does.
    • Unused parameters and remnants in Gut Check's script reveal Belly Super Armor was meant to take damage from attacks during the counterattack, at some point in development. There is a damage multiplier that has been set to 0x on his parameters, thus meaning it cannot take damage. There is also an unused damage request in the Gut Check script.
  • If the Shadow Assist Trophy freezes King K. Rool while performing Gut Check, the counter / reflect hitbox will remain active and trigger if hit. In the case of a counter, King K. Rool will not attack until being unfrozen, but will remain intangible in the mean time.

References[edit]