Pac-Man (universe): Difference between revisions
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|title = Pac-Man (universe) | |title = Pac-Man (universe) | ||
|image = [[File:Pac-Man title.png|300px]] | |image = [[File:Pac-Man title.png|300px]] | ||
|caption = [[File:PacManSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert]] | |caption = [[File:PacManSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert-dark]] | ||
|developer = [[Bandai Namco]] | |developer = [[Bandai Namco]]<br>General Computer Corporation<br>Various | ||
|publisher = Bandai Namco | |publisher = Bandai Namco<br>Midway Games<br>Atari<br>Various | ||
|distributor = | |distributor = | ||
|designer = Tōru Iwatani | |designer = Tōru Iwatani | ||
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|originconsole = Arcade | |originconsole = Arcade | ||
|firstinstallment = ''{{s|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}'' (1980) | |firstinstallment = ''{{s|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}'' (1980) | ||
|latestinstallment = '' | |latestinstallment = ''Pac-Man SuperFast!'' (2024) | ||
|interwiki = Wikipedia | |interwiki = Wikipedia | ||
|interwikiname = Wikipedia | |interwikiname = Wikipedia | ||
|interwikipage = Pac-Man (series) | |interwikipage = Pac-Man (series) | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''''Pac-Man'' universe''' ({{ja|パックマン|Pakkuman}}, ''Pacman'', initially romanized as ''Puckman''), stylized | The '''''Pac-Man'' universe''' ({{ja|パックマン|Pakkuman}}, ''Pacman'', initially romanized as ''Puckman''), officially stylized as '''PAC-MAN''', refers to the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series' collection of characters, stages, and properties from [[Bandai Namco]]'s massively successful and long-running media franchise. A staple of popular culture, it is one of the most lucrative and influential video game franchises in history, with the [[Pac-Man (game)|original title]] being the highest-grossing coin-op arcade game of all time,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.usgamer.net/articles/top-10-biggest-grossing-arcade-games-of-all-time|title=Top 10 Highest-Grossing Arcade Games of All Time|publisher=USgamer}}</ref> popularizing the concept of a video game mascot — the titular [[Pac-Man]] — and spawning a wave of sequels and spin-offs, as well as animated series, songs, and merchandise, becoming a mascot for Bandai Namco. It was first represented in ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]'', and returned in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'', both developed by Bandai Namco. | ||
==Franchise description== | ==Franchise description== | ||
Masaya Nakamura's company, Nakamura Amusement-machine Manufacturing Company (or [[Bandai Namco|NAMCO]]), founded an American subsidiary in 1978 to license its video arcade machines to companies in the United States. The same year, Namco released its first internally designed video arcade game, ''Gee Bee''. Following this, Namco developed and released the highly popular fixed shooter game ''Galaxian'' in 1979 to compete with Taito Corporation's successful earlier game, ''Space Invaders''. ''Galaxian'' revolutionized the arcade industry as the first game to use RGB-color graphics, and it and its 1981 sequel ''Galaga'' became fixtures in what was subsequently remembered as the "Golden Age of arcade video games" — the peak era of arcade video game popularity and technological innovation. | |||
However, Namco's project in between, 1980's ''Pac-Man'', would arguably become even more definitive of both the era and Namco's legacy. A young Namco employee named Toru Iwatani designed the game with the intention to appeal to a wider audience beyond young boys and teenagers — demographics that were typical of the time because of the prevalence of space shooter-themed arcade machines. He therefore fashioned a game out of maze-like elements and a colorful aesthetic with cute character designs, including a player character he originally named "Puckman" after the Japanese phrase ぱくぱく ("paku paku"), an onomatopoeia used to represent the sound of eating. | However, Namco's project in between, 1980's ''Pac-Man'', would arguably become even more definitive of both the era and Namco's legacy. A young Namco employee named Toru Iwatani designed the game with the intention to appeal to a wider audience beyond young boys and teenagers — demographics that were typical of the time because of the prevalence of space shooter-themed arcade machines. He therefore fashioned a game out of maze-like elements and a colorful aesthetic with cute character designs, including a player character he originally named "Puckman" after the Japanese phrase ぱくぱく ("paku paku"), an onomatopoeia used to represent the sound of eating. In North America, the game was licensed by Midway Games (now NetherRealm Studios, a subsidiary of Warner Bros.); Midway renamed the character and the game itself ''Pac-Man'' for the North American release, as it was realized the original name could be vandalized to say "Fuck-Man" by changing the P into an F. | ||
The original ''Pac-Man'' is set in a static, neon-colored maze, where the wedge-shaped [[Pac-Man]] must traverse every corridor and lane at least once in order to eat every one of 244 dots distributed across the screen. Pac-Man is at constant risk from four differently-colored "[[ghosts]]" that roam the maze with the intention to collide into him, which will cost him a life. Each of the four ghosts has a unique way of targeting Pac-Man, giving them character beyond being simple enemies. Four of the dots in the maze are large, blinking [[Power Pellet]]s. When Pac-Man eats one of these, the ghosts temporarily turn blue and vulnerable, and will be briefly taken out of the game when Pac-Man collides with them in this state. | The original ''Pac-Man'' is set in a static, neon-colored maze, where the wedge-shaped [[Pac-Man]] must traverse every corridor and lane at least once in order to eat every one of 244 dots distributed across the screen. Pac-Man is at constant risk from four differently-colored "[[ghosts]]" that roam the maze with the intention to collide into him, which will cost him a life. Each of the four ghosts has a unique way of targeting Pac-Man, giving them character beyond being simple enemies. Four of the dots in the maze are large, blinking [[Power Pellet]]s. When Pac-Man eats one of these, the ghosts temporarily turn blue and vulnerable, and will be briefly taken out of the game when Pac-Man collides with them in this state. | ||
The point score — the ultimate objective of the game, like with many arcade games — increases with each dot that is eaten. The score can be further increased by eating the ghosts (with higher rewards for eating multiple ghosts in a row) or the [[Bonus Fruit | The point score — the ultimate objective of the game, like with many arcade games — increases with each dot that is eaten. The score can be further increased by eating the ghosts (with higher rewards for eating multiple ghosts in a row) or the [[Bonus Fruit]]s that appear at certain thresholds twice in each round. When a maze is cleared, the board will be reset, and the next round will begin. As the rounds continue, the ghosts become faster and more aggressive, the Power Pellet's duration becomes shorter, and higher-valued fruits appear. After round 20, the game reaches its maximum difficulty, and essentially continues endlessly until the player runs out of lives, or reaches level 256, the bugged "kill screen" which cannot be cleared. When all levels are cleared perfectly, the maximum possible score is 3,333,360 points. | ||
Despite its initially lukewarm reception in Japan, it is difficult to overstate the immense impact that the North American release of the game ''Pac-Man'' had. It quickly became far more popular than anything seen in the game industry up to that point, grossing over $1 billion in quarters within a decade, and towards the end of the 20th century, the game's total gross in quarters had been estimated at more than 10 billion quarters ($2.5 billion), making it the highest-grossing video game of all time. It established the maze chase game genre, and is also credited for laying the foundations for the stealth genre due to its emphasis on avoiding enemies rather than fighting them; ''Pac-Man'' is often cited as an inspiration for the original {{uv|Metal Gear}}. | Despite its initially lukewarm reception in Japan, it is difficult to overstate the immense impact that the North American release of the game ''Pac-Man'' had. It quickly became far more popular than anything seen in the game industry up to that point, grossing over $1 billion in quarters within a decade, and towards the end of the 20th century, the game's total gross in quarters had been estimated at more than 10 billion quarters ($2.5 billion), making it the highest-grossing video game of all time. It established the maze chase game genre, and is also credited for laying the foundations for the stealth genre due to its emphasis on avoiding enemies rather than fighting them; ''Pac-Man'' is often cited as an inspiration for the original {{uv|Metal Gear}}. | ||
It | It demonstrated the potential for character in video games; not only did the enemy ghosts have unique personalities in how they attacked, but Pac-Man himself was the first video game mascot (and is often argued to be the first distinctive video game character, at least outside of the text adventure genre). It was the first video game to feature power-ups, and is often credited as the first game to feature cutscenes, albeit not to the degree that Nintendo's own revolutionary arcade game, {{uv|Donkey Kong}}, had the following year. Finally, it is one of the earliest games to become popular with a female audience, and this wide appeal allowed it to become gaming's first licensing success. Pac-Man was determined to have the highest brand awareness of any video game character among American consumers. | ||
''Pac-Man'' became one of few games to have been consistently published for over | ''Pac-Man'' became one of few games to have been consistently published for over four decades, with many remakes and sequels released on numerous platforms. This is not to mention the influx of unauthorized ''Pac-Man'' clones that took place soon after the original release, nor of the ill-fated port of the game for the Atari 2600 (which ironically was a contributing factor to the infamous North American {{s|wikipedia|1983 video game crash}}, due to underpowered hardware and rushed development leading to poor sales and an oversaturated market). | ||
As the series progressed with continued releases that explored different genres, the iconic yellow wedge shape that ordinarily defined the title character onscreen was phased out for a design closer to his appearance on the promotional artwork printed on the arcade machines themselves — an abstract, spherical humanoid with rudimentary limbs and a massive face with a stick-like nose that varied in length between appearances. This design was first seen in-game in the 1984 title ''Pac-Land'', in part to tie in with a [[wikipedia:Pac-Man (TV series)|Hanna-Barbera animated series]] about Pac-Man that ran for two seasons in 1982 and 1983. ''Pac-Land'' is an innovative title in itself as one of the first side-scrolling platform games, and one of the first games to include {{s|wikipedia|parallax scrolling}}. It is considered a major foundation for later | One such unauthorized clone — a modification titled ''Crazy Otto'', developed by General Computer Corporation — received attention from Midway, who subsequently licensed the game as an "official" ''Pac-Man'' sequel. With some changes to the character design, ''Crazy Otto'' became ''Ms. Pac-Man'', which garnered a great deal of success of its own due to its improvements over the original title. Despite its development happening without Namco's consent, the company approved of the character and included the feminine take on ''Pac-Man'' in various ''Pac-Man'' compilations and ports. However, a series of legal and financial battles between Namco and several parties — primarily General Computer Corporation, its successors, and the company currently licensing from them, AtGames — have led to a dispute over who truly owns the character and who is owed royalties. This has resulted in a complete erasure of Ms. Pac-Man in recent years, with products featuring her being pulled from stores and different characters replacing her in re-releases. | ||
As the series progressed with continued releases that explored different genres, the iconic yellow wedge shape that ordinarily defined the title character onscreen was phased out for a design closer to his appearance on the promotional artwork printed on the arcade machines themselves — an abstract, spherical humanoid with rudimentary limbs and a massive face with a stick-like nose that varied in length between appearances. This design was first seen in-game in the 1984 title ''Pac-Land'', in part to tie in with a [[wikipedia:Pac-Man (TV series)|Hanna-Barbera animated series]] about Pac-Man that ran for two seasons in 1982 and 1983. ''Pac-Land'' is an innovative title in itself as one of the first side-scrolling platform games, and one of the first games to include {{s|wikipedia|parallax scrolling}}. It is considered a major foundation for later platformers, codified by 1985's ''[[Super Mario Bros.]]'' | |||
The steady stream of ''Pac-Man'' games was more-or-less halted for roughly six years after ''Pac-Mania'' for the arcades in 1987, before resuming on consoles with ''Pac-Attack'' in 1993. Through releases on a variety of competing platforms, including the PC, the formerly maze-based series explored genres as varied as puzzle, adventure, platformer, party, racing, and even pinball. These games often introduced a colorful cartoon world, not unlike that of {{uv|Mario}} and {{uv|Sonic}}, and a wide variety of characters outside of the original cast of the arcade game, not the least of which were Pac-Man's wife and children. It could be argued that, as recently as the early 2010s, ''Pac-Man'' as a property was easily more relevant as a forerunner to modern video games than as a starring video game franchise, due to the tendency of these experimental ''Pac-Man'' games to cater to young child demographics and garner at-times mediocre reception, but Namco nonetheless continues to honor the character as its company mascot. | The steady stream of ''Pac-Man'' games was more-or-less halted for roughly six years after ''Pac-Mania'' for the arcades in 1987, before resuming on consoles with ''Pac-Attack'' in 1993. Through releases on a variety of competing platforms, including the PC, the formerly maze-based series explored genres as varied as puzzle, adventure, platformer, party, racing, and even pinball. These games often introduced a colorful cartoon world, not unlike that of {{uv|Mario}} and {{uv|Sonic}}, and a wide variety of characters outside of the original cast of the arcade game, not the least of which were Pac-Man's wife and children. It could be argued that, as recently as the early 2010s, ''Pac-Man'' as a property was easily more relevant as a forerunner to modern video games than as a starring video game franchise, due to the tendency of these experimental ''Pac-Man'' games to cater to young child demographics and garner at-times mediocre reception, but Namco nonetheless continues to honor the character as its company mascot. | ||
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==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''== | ==In ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''== | ||
The ''Pac-Man'' franchise is introduced in ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''. Uniquely among other third-party franchises, it brings along elements from other properties of the same company. Elements from Namco's early Arcade games - ''{{s|wikipedia|Mappy}}'', ''{{s|wikipedia|Dig Dug}}'', ''{{s|wikipedia|Galaga}}'', and ''{{s|wikipedia|Galaxian}}'' - are present along with small cameos from others. See [[List of minor third-party universes#Namco series|here]] for elements pertaining to those series. | The ''Pac-Man'' franchise is introduced in ''[[Super Smash Bros. 4]]''. Uniquely among other third-party franchises, it brings along elements from other properties of the same company. Elements from Namco's early Arcade games - ''{{s|wikipedia|Mappy}}'', ''{{s|wikipedia|Dig Dug}}'', ''{{s|wikipedia|Galaga}}'', and ''{{s|wikipedia|Galaxian}}'' - are present along with small cameos from others. See [[List of minor third-party universes#Bandai Namco series|here]] for elements pertaining to those series. | ||
===Fighter=== | ===Fighter=== | ||
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====Original Tracks==== | ====Original Tracks==== | ||
Arrangements and remixes unique to ''Smash 4''. | Arrangements and remixes unique to ''Smash 4''. | ||
*'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN}}''': a medley of pieces from the original ''Pac-Man'', including "Start Music" and "Coffee Break Music". It plays on Pac-Maze and Pac-Land. It is featured on Disc 2 of ''[[A Smashing Soundtrack]]'' | *'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN}}''': a medley of pieces from the original ''Pac-Man'', including "Start Music" and "Coffee Break Music". It plays on Pac-Maze and Pac-Land. It is featured on Disc 2 of ''[[A Smashing Soundtrack]]''. | ||
*'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN (Club Mix)}}''': an electronic-influenced medley of pieces from ''Pac-Man'', including "Start Music" and "Coffee Break Music". It plays on Pac-Maze and Pac-Land. It is featured on Disc 1 of ''A Smashing Soundtrack''. | *'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN (Club Mix)}}''': an electronic-influenced medley of pieces from ''Pac-Man'', including "Start Music" and "Coffee Break Music". It plays on Pac-Maze and Pac-Land. It is featured on Disc 1 of ''A Smashing Soundtrack''. | ||
*'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN'S PARK / BLOCK TOWN}}''': an arrangement of "Pacman's Park" and "Block Town" from ''{{s|wikipedia|Pac-Mania}}''. "Pacman's Park" itself is partially an arrangement of "Coffee Break Music" from ''Pac-Man''. It plays on Pac-Land. It was used in Pac-Man's reveal trailer "Red, Blue and Yellow" and is featured on Disc 2 of ''A Smashing Soundtrack''. | *'''{{SSB4MusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN'S PARK / BLOCK TOWN}}''': an arrangement of "Pacman's Park" and "Block Town" from ''{{s|wikipedia|Pac-Mania}}''. "Pacman's Park" itself is partially an arrangement of "Coffee Break Music" from ''Pac-Man''. It plays on Pac-Land and in Smash Run. It was used in Pac-Man's reveal trailer "Red, Blue and Yellow" and is featured on Disc 2 of ''A Smashing Soundtrack''. | ||
====Victory Theme==== | ====Victory Theme==== | ||
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The ''Pac-Man'' universe returns mostly unchanged. One major change is that all Bandai Namco songs, excluding {{uv|Tekken}} songs, are now labeled as ''Pac-Man'' songs. These songs include new remixes from ''{{iw|wikipedia|Galaga}}'', ''{{iw|wikipedia|Mappy}}'', and ''{{iw|wikipedia|Dragon Spirit}}''. | The ''Pac-Man'' universe returns mostly unchanged. One major change is that all Bandai Namco songs, excluding {{uv|Tekken}} songs, are now labeled as ''Pac-Man'' songs. These songs include new remixes from ''{{iw|wikipedia|Galaga}}'', ''{{iw|wikipedia|Mappy}}'', and ''{{iw|wikipedia|Dragon Spirit}}''. | ||
===Fighter=== | ===Fighter=== | ||
*55. [[File:Pac-ManIcon(SSBU).png|50px|right|link=Pac-Man (SSBU)]]'''{{SSBU|Pac-Man}}''' ([[Unlockable character|Unlockable]]): Pac-Man returns as an unlockable fighter after being a starter in ''Smash 4''. He remains | *55. [[File:Pac-ManIcon(SSBU).png|50px|right|link=Pac-Man (SSBU)]]'''{{SSBU|Pac-Man}}''' ([[Unlockable character|Unlockable]]): Pac-Man returns as an unlockable fighter after being a starter in ''Smash 4''. He remains similar to his previous appearance, and retains his Final Smash [[Super Pac-Man]], with a different functionality. | ||
===Stage=== | ===Stage=== | ||
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===Assist Trophy=== | ===Assist Trophy=== | ||
*'''[[Ghosts]]''': Return | *'''[[Ghosts]]''': Return from ''Smash 4''. They can be KO'd this time around. | ||
===Music=== | ===Music=== | ||
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*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN}}''': A ragtime-styled remix of the game start and intermission themes from the original ''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}''. Returns from ''Smash 4''. | *{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN}}''': A ragtime-styled remix of the game start and intermission themes from the original ''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}''. Returns from ''Smash 4''. | ||
*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN (Club Mix)}}''': A more dramatic remix of the game start and intermission themes from ''Pac-Man'', featuring heavy percussion. Returns from ''Smash 4''. | *{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN (Club Mix)}}''': A more dramatic remix of the game start and intermission themes from ''Pac-Man'', featuring heavy percussion. Returns from ''Smash 4''. | ||
*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN'S PARK / BLOCK TOWN}}''': A rock and synth remix of the themes from Pac-Man's Park and Block | *{{GameIcon|SSB4}}'''{{SSBUMusicLink|Pac-Man|PAC-MAN'S PARK / BLOCK TOWN}}''': A rock and synth remix of the themes from Pac-Man's Park and Block Town from ''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Mania}}'', as well as the death theme from the same game. Returns from ''Smash 4''. Heard in Pac-Man's character trailer. | ||
====Source Tracks==== | ====Source Tracks==== | ||
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==Media with elements appearing in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series== | ==Media with elements appearing in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series== | ||
The ''Pac-Man'' universe has media represented throughout the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series with a total of | The ''Pac-Man'' universe has media represented throughout the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series with a total of 12 games and media. The latest game represented in this universe is ''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man Championship Edition}}'', released on June 6, 2007. | ||
===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}''=== | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man}}''=== | ||
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*Playable character: | *Playable character: | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} [[Pac-Man]] made his debut in this game. Pac-Man transforms into his ball form during certain moves, which is how he appeared in this game. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} [[Pac-Man]] made his debut in this game. Pac-Man transforms into his ball form during certain moves, which is how he appeared in this game. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's limbed form first appeared in Japanese arcade cabinet artwork for this game. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's limbed form first appeared in the Japanese arcade cabinet artwork for this game. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Many elements from Pac-Man's moveset debut in this game, such as the [[Ghosts]], the [[Bonus Fruit]], Pac-Dots, and [[Power Pellet]]s. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Many elements from Pac-Man's moveset debut in this game, such as the [[Ghosts]], the [[Bonus Fruit]], Pac-Dots, and [[Power Pellet]]s. | ||
*Stages: | *Stages: | ||
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*Misc: | *Misc: | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4-WIIU}} The NES port of this game appears as a [[masterpiece]] in ''Smash for Wii U''. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4-WIIU}} The NES port of this game appears as a [[masterpiece]] in ''Smash for Wii U''. | ||
===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man|Atari 2600}}'' (Atari 2600)=== | |||
*Assist Trophy: | |||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} The ghosts were first referred to as "ghosts" as opposed to "monsters" in promotional material for this conversion. | |||
===''{{iw|wikipedia|Ms. Pac-Man}}''=== | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Ms. Pac-Man}}''=== | ||
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===''{{iw|wikipedia|Super Pac-Man}}''=== | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Super Pac-Man}}''=== | ||
*Playable character: | *Playable character: | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's Final Smash of the [[Super Pac-Man|same name]] | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's Final Smash of the [[Super Pac-Man|same name]] came from this game. | ||
===''{{ | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man|TV series}}'' (TV series)=== | ||
*Stages: | *Stages: | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4-WIIU}} The game [[Pac-Land]] was created as a tie-in to the show, which appears as its own stage in ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate''. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4-WIIU}} The game [[Pac-Land]] was created as a tie-in to the show, which appears as its own stage in ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate''. | ||
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**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's down special summons a [[Fire Hydrant]] from this game. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's down special summons a [[Fire Hydrant]] from this game. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Many of Pac-Man's animations and sound effects are based on this game. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Many of Pac-Man's animations and sound effects are based on this game. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's right input victory pose came from this game. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's blue and white costumes in ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate'' are based on his in-game sprite and official artwork of the Wing Shoes, respectively. | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's blue and white costumes in ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate'' are based on his in-game sprite and official artwork of the Wing Shoes, respectively. | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSBU}} Two fairies from this game appear on Pac-Man's down taunt. | **{{gameIcon|SSBU}} Two fairies from this game appear on Pac-Man's down taunt. | ||
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===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man World 2}}''=== | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Man World 2}}''=== | ||
*Playable character: | *Playable character: | ||
**{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's up aerial is | **{{gameIcon|SSB4}} Pac-Man's up aerial is the Flip Kick, one of his moves from this game. | ||
===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Pix}}''=== | ===''{{iw|wikipedia|Pac-Pix}}''=== |