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Flat Zone 2: Difference between revisions

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m (I forgot what level. if i'm not mistaken it's normal and easy. i'll check again later on)
 
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{{ArticleIcons|ssbb=y}}
{{ArticleIcons|brawl=y|ssb4-3=y}}
:''Not to be confused with [[Flat Zone]] or [[Flat Zone X]].''
{{Infobox Stage
{{Infobox Stage
|location    = ''Game & Watch''
|subtitle = ''Game & Watch''
|name         = Flat Zone 2
|name = Flat Zone 2
|image       = [[Image:Flat_Zone_2.PNG|250px|Flat Zone 2]]
|image = {{tabber|title1=3DS|content1=[[File:SSB4 Flat Zone 2.jpg|250px]]|title2=Brawl|content2=[[File:Flat_Zone_2.PNG|250px]]}}
|caption     = [[Image:Game&WatchSymbol.png|50px]]
|caption = [[File:Game&WatchSymbol.svg|50px|class=invert-dark]]<br>Flat Zone 2 as it appears in ''Smash''.
|universe     = ''[[Game and Watch (universe)|Game & Watch]]''
|universe = {{uv|Game & Watch}}
|games        = ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl|SSBB]]''
|games = ''[[Brawl]]''<br>''[[SSB4]]'' ([[SSB3DS|3DS]])
|hometo      = [[Mr. Game & Watch (SSBB)|Mr. Game & Watch]]
|availability = [[Unlockable stage|Unlockable]] (''Brawl'' and ''SSB4'')
|availability = [[Unlockable stage|Unlockable]]
|unlockcriteria = Unlock {{SSBB|Mr. Game & Watch}}. (''Brawl'')<br>Unlock {{SSB4|Mr. Game & Watch}} and complete the first page of Challenges. (''SSB4'')
|cratetype    = Presents
|cratetype = Presents
|brawlsingles = Banned
|maxplayers = 4
|brawldoubles = Banned
|brawlmusic = ''{{SSBBMusicLink|Nintendo|Flat Zone 2}}'' (100%)<br>'''''{{SSBBMusicLink|Nintendo|Chill (Dr. Mario)}}''''' (25%)<br>''{{SSBBMusicLink|Super Smash Bros.|Flat Zone (Melee)}}'' (15%)
|for3dsmusic = Main: ''{{SSB4MusicLink|Game & Watch|Flat Zone 2}}''<br>Alternate: ''{{SSB4MusicLink|Game & Watch|Flat Zone}}''
|brawlsingles = [[Banned]]
|brawldoubles = [[Banned]]
|ssb4singles = Banned
|ssb4doubles = Banned
}}
}}
'''Flat Zone 2''' ({{ja|フラットゾーン2|Furatto Zōn 2}}, ''Flat Zone 2'') is a stage in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' and {{for3ds}}. It is the second [[Game & Watch]] stage in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, the first being [[Flat Zone]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''.


'''Flat Zone 2''' is a stage in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]''. It is the second [[Game & Watch]] stage in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, the first being [[Superflat World: Flat Zone|Flat Zone]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''. Likewise, it is set on a standard Widescreen Game & Watch titled "Super Smash Bros." Unlike Flat Zone, however, this stage shifts between different Game and Watch scenarios, making it somewhat livelier than the original Flat Zone.  
A stage named [[Flat Zone X]] appears in {{forwiiu}} and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate]]'', which consists of Flat Zone 2 with the addition of a transformation based on [[Flat Zone]].


This stage is unlocked by unlocking [[Mr. Game & Watch (SSBB)|Mr. Game & Watch]], exactly like Flat Zone in ''Melee''.
Mr. Game & Watch is fought here when being unlocked.


Like its predecessor, Flat Zone 2 is banned in competitive play, due to the variety of damaging hazards (such as the falling food items in the Chef scenario), the small size of the stage, the [[camera]]'s refusal to zoom in at any point, the constantly changing stage setup, and the removal of the lower [[blast line]] (which makes techniques that require it, such as [[meteor smash]]es and [[edge-hogging]], virtually useless). Furthermore, the walk-off edges allow characters to [[throw]] or [[inhale|spit]] others off the side blast lines.
==Stage layout==
Like its predecessor, Flat Zone, it is set on a standard Widescreen Game & Watch titled "Super Smash Bros." Unlike Flat Zone, however, this stage shifts between different Game & Watch scenarios, with every change being signaled by the appearance of a specific element.
 
[[File:SSB4 Flat Zone 2.jpg|thumb|left|The ''Fire'' version in ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS.'']]
''[[Fire]]'' (1981 version): This scenario is the main area of the stage - the match always begins here and the other games have to revert back to Fire before the stage can change again. People jump out of a burning building as firemen with a trampoline attempt to catch them. The levels of the building can be stood on, and the trampoline that the firemen use can be bounced off of like a {{b|spring|stage element}}. When the firefighters aren't present, the randomly moving platforms from Manhole appear, similar to those in ''Melee''{{'}}s [[Flat Zone]]. The treasure diver from [[Octopus]] sometimes appears, collecting items lying on the ground.
 
The upcoming shift to Fire is signaled by a fireman who appears in the top right of the screen, ringing a bell.
{{clrl}}
[[File:Oil Panic.jpg|thumb|left|The ''Oil Panic'' version in ''Brawl.'']]
''[[Oil Panic]]'''s bottom screen (1982): A multi-tiered gas station building can be stood on. Customers standing below attack if attacked by players; the man will attack immediately when he receives damage, while the woman will delay for almost a second after being damaged before attacking.
 
The upcoming shift to Oil Panic is signaled by a policeman who appears in the top right of the screen, ringing a bell.
{{clrl}}
[[File:Flat Zone 2 Zoo.jpg|thumb|left|The ''Lion'' version in ''Brawl.'']]
''[[Lion]]'' (1981): The center of the stage is a cage on three levels with a semisoft top. Two Lion Tamers holding chairs flank either side, moving up and down. Being hit by a chair deals high damage and horizontal knockback, often resulting in being knocked into the Lion Tamer at the other side of the cage with the same effect, or even beyond the side blast lines.
 
The upcoming shift to Lion is signaled by a panther who appears in the top left corner of the screen, ringing a bell.
{{clrl}}
[[File:Flat Zone 2 Chef.jpg|thumb|left|The ''Chef'' version in ''Brawl.'']]
''[[Chef]]'' (1981): Two sets of platforms hover in midair, and a chef throws damaging food around with his pan. If the chef is hit with a strong enough attack, he will fly off screen and the game will return to Fire.
 
The upcoming shift to Chef is signalled by a kettle which appears in the left side of the screen, with steam in shape of a bell coming out of it.
{{clrl}}
 
===Ω form===
The Ω form features a brick platform above the normal ground, and blast lines are moved further back. The stage is set in the ''Oil Panic'' section and does not transition. It is visually identical to the Ω form of Flat Zone X in {{forwiiu}}.
<gallery widths="200px">
File:Flat Zone 2 Omega.jpg|[[Final Destination (SSB4)|Ω form]] in ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS''.
</gallery>
 
==Origin==
[[File:Game & Watch Fire.jpg|thumb|left|The ''Game & Watch'' game ''Fire'' (widescreen version)]]
From 1980 to 1991, [[Nintendo]] produced handheld electronic games called ''Game & Watch'', and there would be one game for each model of a ''Game & Watch''. ''Game & Watch'' games use an LCD screen, the same type as an ordinary calculator, which means characters and other moving objects can only move to pre-determined locations on the screen and everything appears flat. Whenever objects move, a beeping sound can be heard. In this stage, the fighters and stage elements on the screen are all flat, and beeping sounds are heard when walking on the stage.


==Game Origins==
The default stage layout, including the ''Game & Watch'' outer casing, is based on the widescreen 1981 re-release of ''Fire'', which originally came out in 1980 as part of the Silver ''Game & Watch'' series. In ''Fire'', two firemen holding a stretcher try to bounce people jumping out of a burning skyscraper to a nearby ambulance. ''Fire'' was also the only ''Game & Watch'' device from the "Widescreen" series to have a blue outline.
[[File:Game_&_Watch_Fire.png|thumb|left|200px|The ''Game & Watch'' game ''Fire''.]]
*[[Fire]] (1981 version): People jump out of a burning building as firemen with a trampoline attempt to catch them. The levels of the building can be stood on, and the trampoline that the firemen use can be bounced off of like a [[spring]]. When the firefighters aren't present, the randomly moving platforms from Manhole appear, similar to those in ''[[SSBM]]'s'' Flat Zone. The treasure diver from [[Octopus]] sometimes appears, collecting items lying on the ground. This scenario is the main area of the stage - the match always begins here and the other games have to revert back to Fire before the stage can change again.
*[[Oil Panic]]'s bottom screen (1982): A multi-tiered gas station building can be stood on. Customers standing below attack if touched by players.
*[[Lion]] (1981): The center of the stage is a three leveled cage. Two Lion Tamers holding chairs flank either side, moving up and down. If you get hit by a chair, you'll take massive damage and knockback, often right into the Lion Tamer at the other side of the cage and taking even more damage due to the direction of where the characters are knocked at.
*[[Chef]] (1981): Two sets of platforms hover in midair, while falling food items can damage players. If the chef is hit with a strong enough attack, he will fly off screen and the game will return to Fire.


Different alarm elements signify that the stage is about to change.
The other stage transformations are based off of the ''Game & Watch'' games ''Lion'', ''Oil Panic'', and ''Chef''. ''Lion'' involves two lion tamers trying to keep multiple circus lions in their cage with chairs; ''Oil Panic'' involves a gas station employee trying to dump oil into his boss's oil drum below, so it can be taken to people who needed their cars filled; and ''Chef'' involves a chef trying to keep several pieces of food in the air. All of these games are faithfully represented in Flat Zone 2, though in the case of ''Oil Panic'' (which had a dual screen à la the Nintendo DS and [[Nintendo 3DS|3DS]]), only the bottom screen appears.
<gallery>
Oilpanicorigin.jpg|''Oil Panic''.
Cheforigin.jpg|''Chef''.
Game watch lion.jpg|''Lion''.
</gallery>
{{clrl}}


*Fire: A fireman appears in the top right ringing a bell.
==Tournament legality==
*Oil Panic: A policeman appears in the top right ringing a bell.
Like its predecessor, Flat Zone 2 is banned in competitive play, due to the variety of damaging hazards (such as the falling food items in the Chef scenario), the small size of the stage, the [[camera]]'s refusal to zoom in at any point, the constantly changing stage setup, and the removal of the lower [[blast line]] (which makes techniques that require it, such as [[meteor smash]]es and [[edge-hogging]], virtually useless). Furthermore, the walk-off edges allow characters to [[throw]] or [[inhale|spit]] others off the side blast lines.
*Lion: A panther in the top left corner rings a bell.
*Chef: A kettle appears to the left boiling to steaming point. The steam is in the shape of a bell.
==Songs in [[My Music]]==
*''Flat Zone 2''
*'''''Chill (Dr. Mario)'''''
*''Flat Zone (Melee)''


'''Song in bold must be unlocked'''
==Names in other languages==
{{langtable
|ja={{ja|フラットゾーン2|Furatto Zōn 2}}, ''Flat Zone 2''
|en=Flat Zone 2
|fr=Espace 2D 2
|frM=2D Space 2
|es=Zona extraplana 2
|esM=Extraflat Zone 2
|de=2D-Welt 2
|deM=2D World 2
|it=La zona bidimensionale 2
|itM=2-Dimensional Zone 2
|nl=2D-Zone 2
|ru={{rollover|Плоская зона 2|Ploskaya zona 2?}}
|ruM=Flat Zone 2
|ko={{rollover|플랫 존2|Peullaet Jon 2|?}}, ''Flat Zone 2''
|zh={{rollover|平面世界2|Píngmiàn Shìjiè 2|?}}
|zhM=Flat World 2
}}


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*Although having no significant effect to gameplay whatsoever, it is worth noting that on this stage, all characters are two-dimensional (or rather, their three-dimensional models are flattened). Strangely enough, certain effects are still three-dimensional. [[Hanenbow]] is similarly 2-D.
[[File:Mr. Game & Watch Congratulations Screen All-Star Brawl.png|thumb|right|250px|Flat Zone 2 as it appears on the All Star congratulations screen, with the text on the top reading "Smash Brothers".]]
*Flat Zone 2 and [[Mario Bros. (stage)|Mario Bros.]] are the only "fixed camera" stages in the game.
*On this stage all characters are two-dimensional (or rather, their three-dimensional models are flattened). Strangely enough, certain effects are still three-dimensional.
*Flat Zone, Flat Zone 2 and [[PictoChat]] are the only stages in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series to be based on an actual system.
**The Super Mario Maker and [[Hanenbow]] stages also have this trait.
*Whenever a player gets [[Star KO|Star KO'd]] or [[Screen KO|Screen KO'd]], both the character and the effects fly off separately. This can be best seen from {{SSBB|Olimar}}'s beacon, the flame on {{SSBB|Charizard}}'s tail, and when the player is [[frozen]]. This also happens in [[Hanenbow]].
**A similar effect appears when characters are Screen KO'd on this stage in {{for3ds}}, the Screen KO'd character's shadow appears under them as they fall to the bottom of the screen. This allows for the player to see the Screen KO animation in it's entirety, though this can't be replicated in {{forwiiu}}'s Flat Zone X due to the stage disabling Screen KOs for unknown reasons.
*This stage, [[Mushroomy Kingdom]], [[Rumble Falls]], and [[Mario Bros.]] are the only "fixed camera" stages in ''Super Smash Bros. Brawl''.
*The firefighters with the stretcher are actually playing the game Fire with the G&W people in the background. However, three misses will not give a game over in this case.
*The firefighters with the stretcher are actually playing the game Fire with the G&W people in the background. However, three misses will not give a game over in this case.
*Lion is generally considered to be the odd one out. It is the only Game & Watch game that is not part of Mr. Game & Watch's [[special move]]s instead being part of one of his tilt attacks. As well as that, it is the only game that did not use the "Left - Right" button configuration that is on the Flat Zone 2 system.
*''Lion'' is generally considered to be the odd one out. It is the only Game & Watch game that is not part of Mr. Game & Watch's [[special move]]s, instead being part of one of his tilt attacks. As well as that, it is the only game that did not use the "Left - Right" button configuration that is on the Flat Zone 2 system.
*In English, the top of the Game and Watch says, "Super Smash Bros." In the Japanese version, it says "Smash Brothers." This is because in Japan, the series is called "Great Fray Smash Brothers" rather than "Super Smash Bros."
*In English, the top of the Game & Watch says, "Super Smash Bros." In the Japanese version, it says "Smash Brothers." This is because in Japan, the series is called "Great Fray Smash Brothers" rather than "Super Smash Bros." This is also noticeable in {{SSBB|Mr. Game & Watch}}'s [[All-Star Mode]] [[congratulations screen]] in ''Brawl'', and on the stage select icon in ''for Nintendo 3DS''.
*In [[All Star]] mode, when batting Mr Game and Watch, a player can simply run to the left side on the building part and crouch. The CPU Game and watch will go to the second floor of the building, going left and right for a while and suddenly SD.
*In [[All Star]] mode, when battling Mr. Game & Watch, a player can simply run to the left side on the building part and crouch. The CPU Mr. Game & Watch will go to the second floor of the building, go left and right for a while, and suddenly [[self-destruct]].
*This stage can be seen prior to its unlocking in a clip of {{SSBB|Diddy Kong}}'s Congratulations video in ''Brawl''.
*''Lion'' and ''Oil Panic'' were never a part of the Widescreen series of ''Game & Watch'' games, despite their appearance on the stage. In fact, ''Oil Panic'' was a part of the Dual-Screen series, so there is an entire screen missing from the stage.
*Unlike the original Widescreen devices, the device that surrounds ''Flat Zone 2'' doesn't say "Nintendo" beneath the ''Game & Watch'' logo on the left.
*In ''for Nintendo 3DS'', the [[List of challenges (SSB4-3DS)|challenge]] that unlocks Flat Zone 2 is the only challenge that unlocks a stage not to be in the first panel, which requires all the challenges on the first panel to be completed before it can be accessed; this makes Flat Zone 2 always the last stage to be unlocked in the game.
*This is the only [[unlockable stage]] in ''Brawl'' to not appear in ''[[Ultimate]]''.
**Additionally, it is the only stage that has ever appeared as a [[Past Stage]] to not appear in ''Ultimate''.
***However, it does still technically return, as [[Flat Zone X]], a combination of this stage and [[Flat Zone]], returns from ''for Wii U''. This would also make Flat Zone 2 the only non-DLC Past Stage to appear in both versions of ''Smash 4.''
 
==See also==
*[[Flat Zone]]
*[[Flat Zone X]]


==External links==
==External links==
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{{SSBBStages}}
{{SSBBStages}}
{{SSB4Stages}}
{{Game & Watch universe}}
{{Game & Watch universe}}
[[Category:Stages]]
[[Category:Stages]]
[[Category:Stages (SSBB)]]
[[Category:Stages (SSB4-3DS)]]
[[Category:Game & Watch universe]]
[[Category:Past stages]]
[[Category:Two-dimensional stages]]
[[es:Zona extraplana 2]]

Latest revision as of 13:32, June 23, 2024

Not to be confused with Flat Zone or Flat Zone X.
Game & Watch
Flat Zone 2
SSB4 Flat Zone 2.jpg
Flat Zone 2.PNG

Game&WatchSymbol.svg
Flat Zone 2 as it appears in Smash.
Universe Game & Watch
Appears in Brawl
SSB4 (3DS)
Availability Unlockable (Brawl and SSB4)
Unlock criteria Unlock Mr. Game & Watch. (Brawl)
Unlock Mr. Game & Watch and complete the first page of Challenges. (SSB4)
Crate type Presents
Maximum players 4
Music
Bolded tracks must be unlocked
Brawl Flat Zone 2 (100%)
Chill (Dr. Mario) (25%)
Flat Zone (Melee) (15%)
for 3DS Main: Flat Zone 2
Alternate: Flat Zone
Tournament legality
Brawl Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Smash 4 Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned

Flat Zone 2 (フラットゾーン2, Flat Zone 2) is a stage in Super Smash Bros. Brawl and Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS. It is the second Game & Watch stage in the Super Smash Bros. series, the first being Flat Zone in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

A stage named Flat Zone X appears in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, which consists of Flat Zone 2 with the addition of a transformation based on Flat Zone.

Mr. Game & Watch is fought here when being unlocked.

Stage layout[edit]

Like its predecessor, Flat Zone, it is set on a standard Widescreen Game & Watch titled "Super Smash Bros." Unlike Flat Zone, however, this stage shifts between different Game & Watch scenarios, with every change being signaled by the appearance of a specific element.

The Fire version in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS.

Fire (1981 version): This scenario is the main area of the stage - the match always begins here and the other games have to revert back to Fire before the stage can change again. People jump out of a burning building as firemen with a trampoline attempt to catch them. The levels of the building can be stood on, and the trampoline that the firemen use can be bounced off of like a spring. When the firefighters aren't present, the randomly moving platforms from Manhole appear, similar to those in Melee's Flat Zone. The treasure diver from Octopus sometimes appears, collecting items lying on the ground.

The upcoming shift to Fire is signaled by a fireman who appears in the top right of the screen, ringing a bell.

The Oil Panic version in Brawl.

Oil Panic's bottom screen (1982): A multi-tiered gas station building can be stood on. Customers standing below attack if attacked by players; the man will attack immediately when he receives damage, while the woman will delay for almost a second after being damaged before attacking.

The upcoming shift to Oil Panic is signaled by a policeman who appears in the top right of the screen, ringing a bell.

The Lion version in Brawl.

Lion (1981): The center of the stage is a cage on three levels with a semisoft top. Two Lion Tamers holding chairs flank either side, moving up and down. Being hit by a chair deals high damage and horizontal knockback, often resulting in being knocked into the Lion Tamer at the other side of the cage with the same effect, or even beyond the side blast lines.

The upcoming shift to Lion is signaled by a panther who appears in the top left corner of the screen, ringing a bell.

The Chef version in Brawl.

Chef (1981): Two sets of platforms hover in midair, and a chef throws damaging food around with his pan. If the chef is hit with a strong enough attack, he will fly off screen and the game will return to Fire.

The upcoming shift to Chef is signalled by a kettle which appears in the left side of the screen, with steam in shape of a bell coming out of it.

Ω form[edit]

The Ω form features a brick platform above the normal ground, and blast lines are moved further back. The stage is set in the Oil Panic section and does not transition. It is visually identical to the Ω form of Flat Zone X in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.

Origin[edit]

The Game & Watch game Fire (widescreen version)

From 1980 to 1991, Nintendo produced handheld electronic games called Game & Watch, and there would be one game for each model of a Game & Watch. Game & Watch games use an LCD screen, the same type as an ordinary calculator, which means characters and other moving objects can only move to pre-determined locations on the screen and everything appears flat. Whenever objects move, a beeping sound can be heard. In this stage, the fighters and stage elements on the screen are all flat, and beeping sounds are heard when walking on the stage.

The default stage layout, including the Game & Watch outer casing, is based on the widescreen 1981 re-release of Fire, which originally came out in 1980 as part of the Silver Game & Watch series. In Fire, two firemen holding a stretcher try to bounce people jumping out of a burning skyscraper to a nearby ambulance. Fire was also the only Game & Watch device from the "Widescreen" series to have a blue outline.

The other stage transformations are based off of the Game & Watch games Lion, Oil Panic, and Chef. Lion involves two lion tamers trying to keep multiple circus lions in their cage with chairs; Oil Panic involves a gas station employee trying to dump oil into his boss's oil drum below, so it can be taken to people who needed their cars filled; and Chef involves a chef trying to keep several pieces of food in the air. All of these games are faithfully represented in Flat Zone 2, though in the case of Oil Panic (which had a dual screen à la the Nintendo DS and 3DS), only the bottom screen appears.

Tournament legality[edit]

Like its predecessor, Flat Zone 2 is banned in competitive play, due to the variety of damaging hazards (such as the falling food items in the Chef scenario), the small size of the stage, the camera's refusal to zoom in at any point, the constantly changing stage setup, and the removal of the lower blast line (which makes techniques that require it, such as meteor smashes and edge-hogging, virtually useless). Furthermore, the walk-off edges allow characters to throw or spit others off the side blast lines.

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japan Japanese フラットゾーン2, Flat Zone 2
UK English Flat Zone 2
France French Espace 2D 2 2D Space 2
Germany German 2D-Welt 2 2D World 2
Spain Spanish Zona extraplana 2 Extraflat Zone 2
Italy Italian La zona bidimensionale 2 2-Dimensional Zone 2
China Chinese 平面世界2 Flat World 2
South Korea Korean 플랫 존2, Flat Zone 2
Netherlands Dutch 2D-Zone 2
Russia Russian Плоская зона 2 Flat Zone 2

Trivia[edit]

Flat Zone 2 as it appears on the All Star congratulations screen, with the text on the top reading "Smash Brothers".
  • On this stage all characters are two-dimensional (or rather, their three-dimensional models are flattened). Strangely enough, certain effects are still three-dimensional.
    • The Super Mario Maker and Hanenbow stages also have this trait.
  • Whenever a player gets Star KO'd or Screen KO'd, both the character and the effects fly off separately. This can be best seen from Olimar's beacon, the flame on Charizard's tail, and when the player is frozen. This also happens in Hanenbow.
    • A similar effect appears when characters are Screen KO'd on this stage in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, the Screen KO'd character's shadow appears under them as they fall to the bottom of the screen. This allows for the player to see the Screen KO animation in it's entirety, though this can't be replicated in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U's Flat Zone X due to the stage disabling Screen KOs for unknown reasons.
  • This stage, Mushroomy Kingdom, Rumble Falls, and Mario Bros. are the only "fixed camera" stages in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
  • The firefighters with the stretcher are actually playing the game Fire with the G&W people in the background. However, three misses will not give a game over in this case.
  • Lion is generally considered to be the odd one out. It is the only Game & Watch game that is not part of Mr. Game & Watch's special moves, instead being part of one of his tilt attacks. As well as that, it is the only game that did not use the "Left - Right" button configuration that is on the Flat Zone 2 system.
  • In English, the top of the Game & Watch says, "Super Smash Bros." In the Japanese version, it says "Smash Brothers." This is because in Japan, the series is called "Great Fray Smash Brothers" rather than "Super Smash Bros." This is also noticeable in Mr. Game & Watch's All-Star Mode congratulations screen in Brawl, and on the stage select icon in for Nintendo 3DS.
  • In All Star mode, when battling Mr. Game & Watch, a player can simply run to the left side on the building part and crouch. The CPU Mr. Game & Watch will go to the second floor of the building, go left and right for a while, and suddenly self-destruct.
  • This stage can be seen prior to its unlocking in a clip of Diddy Kong's Congratulations video in Brawl.
  • Lion and Oil Panic were never a part of the Widescreen series of Game & Watch games, despite their appearance on the stage. In fact, Oil Panic was a part of the Dual-Screen series, so there is an entire screen missing from the stage.
  • Unlike the original Widescreen devices, the device that surrounds Flat Zone 2 doesn't say "Nintendo" beneath the Game & Watch logo on the left.
  • In for Nintendo 3DS, the challenge that unlocks Flat Zone 2 is the only challenge that unlocks a stage not to be in the first panel, which requires all the challenges on the first panel to be completed before it can be accessed; this makes Flat Zone 2 always the last stage to be unlocked in the game.
  • This is the only unlockable stage in Brawl to not appear in Ultimate.
    • Additionally, it is the only stage that has ever appeared as a Past Stage to not appear in Ultimate.
      • However, it does still technically return, as Flat Zone X, a combination of this stage and Flat Zone, returns from for Wii U. This would also make Flat Zone 2 the only non-DLC Past Stage to appear in both versions of Smash 4.

See also[edit]

External links[edit]