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In ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', interruptibility is not very common, only being used at the ends of some [[taunt]]s and non-final [[neutral attack]]s. ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' expanded interruptibility's applications to many attacks, and ''Brawl'' continued the idea as a common mechanic. | In ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', interruptibility is not very common, only being used at the ends of some [[taunt]]s and non-final [[neutral attack]]s. ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' expanded interruptibility's applications to many attacks, and ''Brawl'' continued the idea as a common mechanic. | ||
It is possible for actions to be interruptible with only certain kinds of actions, such as the case with [[jump cancel]]ling. | It is possible for actions to be interruptible with only certain kinds of actions, such as the case with [[jump cancel]]ling. In ''Melee'', aerials cannot be cancelled with air dodges, while they can be in ''Brawl'' onwards. Shielding cannot interrupt any grounded move in all games, unless a [[pivot]] is inputted beforehand. | ||
In ''Smash 64'' and ''Melee'', interrupting a delayed [[double jump]] results in [[double jump cancel]]ling. ''Brawl'' disables this by only interrupting the animation of the double jump, not the execution. | In ''Smash 64'' and ''Melee'', interrupting a delayed [[double jump]] results in [[double jump cancel]]ling. ''Brawl'' disables this by only interrupting the animation of the double jump, not the execution. | ||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*An older name for the concept of interruptibility is "interruptible as soon as frames", or "'''IASA frames'''", under the premise of describing them with "the attack can be interrupted as soon as frame X". As technical research into ''Brawl'' progressed, the term began falling out of favour due to its wordiness and the implication that it is a property of the frames, when in fact it is a property of the move as a whole. | *An older name for the concept of interruptibility is "interruptible as soon as frames", or "'''IASA frames'''", under the premise of describing them with "the attack can be interrupted as soon as frame X". As technical research into ''Brawl'' progressed, the term began falling out of favour due to its wordiness and the implication that it is a property of the frames, when in fact it is a property of the move as a whole. It also became less popular because all other fighting games do in fact feature interruptibility, albeit less pronounced and used for the sole purpose of making attack animations less choppy if performed by themselves. | ||
*{{SSB4|Shulk}} is the only character who can interrupt all aerials with another input during their ending frames, which allows him to act out of his ending-lag heavy aerials. | *{{SSB4|Shulk}} is the only character who can interrupt all aerials with another input during their ending frames, which allows him to act out of his ending-lag heavy aerials. | ||
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