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{{ArticleIcons|ssbm=y}}
{{ArticleIcons|ssbm=y}}
{{Infobox Stage
{{Infobox Stage
|location     = [[Kanto|Kanto Skies]]
|subtitle     =
|name        = Poké Floats
|name        = [[Kanto|Kanto Skies]]: Poké Floats
|image        = [[Image:PokeFloats.jpg|250px|Poké Floats]]
|image        = [[File:PokeFloats.jpg|250px|Poké Floats]]
|caption      = [[Image:PokemonSymbol(preBrawl).png|50px]]
|caption      = [[File:PokemonSymbol(preBrawl).svg|50px|class=invert-dark]]<br>Poké Floats in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''.
|universe    = ''[[Pokémon (universe)|Pokémon]]''
|universe    = {{uv|Pokémon}}
|games        = ''[[Melee]]''
|games        = ''[[Melee]]''
|hometo      = {{SSBM|Jigglypuff}}
|availability = [[Unlockable stage|Unlockable]]
|availability = [[Unlockable stage|Unlockable]]
|meleesingles = [[Banned stage|Banned]]
|meleesingles = [[Banned stage|Banned]]
|meleedoubles = [[Banned stage|Banned]]
|meleedoubles = [[Banned stage|Banned]]
|unlockcriteria = Play 200 VS. matches.
|unlockcriteria = Play 200 VS. matches.
|music = ''{{MeleeMusic|Poké Floats}}''
|meleemusic = ''{{MeleeMusic|Poké Floats}}''
|interwiki    = bulbapedia
|interwiki    = bulbapedia
|interwikiname= Bulbapedia
|interwikiname= Bulbapedia
|interwikipage= Poké Floats
|interwikipage= Poké Floats
}}
}}
'''Poké Floats''' ({{ja|ポケモン亜空間|Pokemon Akūkan}}, ''Pokémon Subspace'') is a stage in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]''. In [[All-Star]] mode, {{SSBM|Jigglypuff}} and its teammates are fought here.


'''Poké Floats''' is a stage in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' that can be unlocked by playing 200 or more battles in VS mode. In [[All-Star]] mode, {{SSBM|Jigglypuff}} and its teammates are fought here.
The [[Sudowoodo]] [[trophy]] is unlocked alongside this stage.


==Origin==
==Stage overview==
[[File:OnixPS.png|thumb|150px|Onix, as seen in ''[[Bulbapedia:Pokémon Stadium (English)|Pokémon Stadium]]''. This is an example of how Poké Floats took its design of the "floats" from the character models in ''Pokémon Stadium''.]]
Contrary to popular belief, Poké Floats is not an auto-scrolling stage but rather the camera stays in place as the floats move across the screen. The match takes place on top of giant floating models of Pokémon (hence the name) above the skies of the Kanto region, which are in a constant cycle and whose movement, while deterministic, keeps getting more complex until the cycle is reset. Staying on a float too long can cause the player to lose a [[stock]], as the floats can cross [[blast line]]s as they leave the battlefield.
While this stage does not directly come from a ''Pokémon'' game, the character models of the first generation Pokémon come from the models in the game ''[[Bulbapedia:Pokémon Stadium (English)|Pokémon Stadium]]''. The models for the second generation Pokémon come from ''[[Bulbapedia:Pokémon Stadium 2|Pokémon Stadium 2]]''. The concept of "Poke Floats" was reused in the WiFi chat rooms in  ''[[Bulbapedia:Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver Versions|Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver Versions]]''. Kanto Skies comes from the [[Bulbapedia:Kanto|Kanto]] region, which was explorable in the first games.
 
The floats, in order of appearance, are:
 
{| class="wikitable"
! Pokémon !! Picture !! Behavior
|-
| [[Squirtle]] || [[File:Poke Floats Squirtle.png|150px]]
| The starting float. Starting from the middle of the screen, it slowly floats downwards until it disappears.
 
Its head and arms act as solid platforms.
|-
| [[Onix]] || [[File:Poke Floats Onix.png|150px]]  
| Appears when only Squirtle's head is still visible. Enters from the right, then starts slowly floating down along Squirtle.
 
Its whole body is a bumpy hard platform.
|-
| {{pkmn|Psyduck}} || [[File:Poke Floats Psyduck.png|150px]]
| Its head rises upwards from the bottom left corner, pushing Onix upwards and tilting it diagonally. Afterwards, its whole body floats upwards until it disappears. Can cause Star KOs or Screen KOs if stayed on for too long.
 
Its head and bill act as solid platforms.
|-
| [[Chikorita]] || [[File:Poke Floats Chikorita.png|150px]]
| Enters from the left near the middle of the screen, then moves to the bottom-right quadrant (at which point Psyduck starts rising), hangs on the right side of the screen for a while, then drifts away.
 
Its body (head included) is a hard platform, while its leaf is soft.
|-
| [[Weezing]] || [[File:Poke Floats Weezing.png|150px]]
| Rises from the bottom of the screen, then gets progressively smaller (as if it were floating away into the background) until it crosses the upper blast line. Unlike Sudowoodo and Psyduck, the fighters that are still on it when it passes the blast line will be dropped off, rather than Star/Screen KO'd.
 
Its heads form a single hard platform.
|-
| {{pkmn|Slowpoke}} || [[File:Poke Floats Slowpoke.png|150px]]  
| Enters from the left side of the screen, slowly uncurls its tail, then disappears on the right.
 
Its whole body is solid; its tail act as a wall and ceiling while curled. Caution should be taken, as being on its tail when it's uncurling will cause the player to fall and put them into a position where it will be difficult to recover.
|-
| [[Porygon]] || [[File:Poke Floats Porygon.png|150px]]
| Three Porygon traverse the middle of the screen, right-to-left.
 
Their bodies are completely solid.
|-
| {{pkmn|Wooper}} || [[File:Poke Floats Wooper.png|150px]]
| Quickly rises from the bottom-left corner to the middle of the screen, then moves to the right part of the screen. After Venusaur appears it moves to the left, then it floats above Venusaur and Seel until it disappears on the top-right corner of the screen.
 
Its head is solid, while its gills act as soft platforms.
|-
| {{pkmn|Sudowoodo}} || [[File:Poke Floats Sudowoodo.png|150px]]
| Slowly rises along the left side of the screen. Its right arm, despite being part of its model, never appears onscreen.
 
Its head, head structure and leg act as hard platforms, while its arm and foot act as soft ones. Like Psyduck, can cause Star or Screen KOs if stayed on.
|-
| [[Snorlax]] || [[File:Poke Floats Snorlax.png|150px]]
| Rises from the bottom of the screen, remaining almost stationary until it gets pushed down by Venusaur's passage.
 
Its head and body form a single solid platform.
|-
| [[Venusaur]] || [[File:Poke Floats Venusaur.png|150px]]
| Its head peeks from the right side of the screen; afterwards its whole body comes into view and traverses the screen right-to-left.
 
Its body and stem are solid, while its leaves and petals act as soft platforms.
|-
| {{pkmn|Seel}} || [[File:Poke Floats Seel.png|150px]]
| Traverses the screen right-to-left while slowly bobbing, directly following Venusaur.
 
Its head, body and tail form a single solid platform.
|-
| [[Wobbuffet]] || [[File:Poke Floats Wobbuffet.png|150px]]
| Quickly peeks and retreats on the bottom-right, then reappears, floats completely into view and disappears again on the right.
 
Its whole body is a single hard platform.
|-
| [[Unown]] || [[File:Poke Floats Unown.png|150px]]
| Shortly after Wobbuffet's appearance a line of several Unown starts slowly traversing the middle of the screen, from left to right. Shortly after Chansey appears, a second line traveling in the opposite direction starts moving above the first. They disappear completely at the end of the cycle.
 
Their bodies all act as soft platforms.
|-
| [[Goldeen]] || [[File:Poke Floats Goldeen.png|150px]]
| Quickly jumps up from the bottom-left, then rises down almost offscreen. After two more quick jumps it disappears back down.
 
Its tail and body form a single soft platform.
|-
| {{pkmn|Lickitung}} || [[File:Poke Floats Lickitung.png|150px]]
| Appears from the left with its tongue outstretched, then floats to the right, retracts its tongue, and disappears on the right while extending its tongue again.
 
Its body and tongue form a single hard platform.
|-
| [[Chansey]] || [[File:Poke Floats Chansey.png|150px]]
| Peeks up from the bottom-left part of the screen, then from the bottom-right, then from the bottom-left and finally from the bottom-right before disappearing.
 
Its head acts as a hard platform.
|-
| {{pkmn|Geodude}} || [[File:Poke Floats Geodude.png|150px]]
| Appears from the left side of the screen, hangs around the middle of the screen for a while and finally disappears on the right.


The track that plays on this stage is a medley of the different themes that play when battling against other Pokémon Trainers, Gym Leaders, and wild Pokémon in ''[[Bulbapedia:Pokémon Red and Blue|Pokémon Red and Blue]]'', as can be seen in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGghXIyg_1k this video.]
Its body and arms act as a single hard platform.
|}


==Description==
After Geodude disappears, the last few Unown clear the screen. Finally, after the last Unown, the cycle restarts (looping back to Squirtle). Squirtle quickly appears from the bottom and the process repeats all over again. A full cycle takes about three and a half minutes.
Poké Floats is a stage similar to [[Rainbow Cruise]], since both are naturally fixed-camera and scroll. Unlike in Rainbow Cruise, however, the background remains static. The fighting is on top of giant Pokémon floats (hence the name) which are in a constant cycle. Staying on a certain float too long will cause the player to lose a [[stock]] because the float goes behind the [[blast line]]s. A caution is that the floats tend to become harder to predict as the loop goes on, until it resets back to the first one.


The Sudowoodo [[Trophy]] is unlocked upon unlocking this stage.
The camera will remain in a fixed position for the whole game and will not zoom in or out.


===List of floats in order of appearance===
==Origin==
*[[Squirtle]] (starting platform)
[[File:Onix Pokemon Stadium screenshot.jpg|left|thumb|Onix, as seen in ''{{iw|Bulbapedia|Pokémon Stadium|Japanese}}''. This is an example of how Poké Floats took its design of the "floats" from the character models in ''Pokémon Stadium''.]]
*[[Onix]]
This stage is not directly based on any ''Pokémon'' game, though its "Kanto Skies" designation refers to the {{iw|Bulbapedia|Kanto}} region in which the original Game Boy ''Pokémon'' games, and their remakes, are set. It is rather a collection of Pokémon models taken from the ''{{iw|bulbapedia|Pokémon Stadium}}'' series of games.
*[[bulbapedia:Psyduck|Psyduck]]
*[[Chikorita]]
*[[Weezing]]
*[[bulbapedia:Slowpoke|Slowpoke]]
*[[bulbapedia:Porygon|Porygon]]
*[[bulbapedia:Wooper|Wooper]]
*[[Sudowoodo]]
*[[Snorlax]]
*[[Venusaur]]
*[[bulbapedia:Seel|Seel]]
*[[Wobbuffet]]
*A large quantity of [[Unown]], interspersed with the other floats until the level loops again
*[[Goldeen]]
*[[bulbapedia:Lickitung|Lickitung]]
*[[Chansey]]
*[[bulbapedia:Geodude|Geodude]]


After Geodude, the last few Unown clear the screen just before resetting back to Squirtle, and the process starts again.
Interestingly, the Japanese name of the stage, "Pokémon Subspace", does not directly refer to the Pokémon as floats, and the models do not appear to be balloons. The concept of "Poké Floats", added during localization, was later used in other ''Pokémon'' media: examples include the {{s|bulbapedia|Wi-Fi Plaza}} in ''{{s|bulbapedia|Pokémon Platinum}}'' and ''{{s|bulbapedia|Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver}}'', and the climax of the ''{{s|bulbapedia|Pokémon Detective Pikachu}}'' movie, which features a battle between Pikachu and Mewtwo on Pokémon balloons.
{{clrl}}


==Tournament legality==
==Tournament legality==
Poké Floats was originally deemed legal as a [[counterpick]]; it did not move fast enough to cause an overreliance on movement, and the obstacles were rather easy to predict, though some characters could have trouble recovering or going from float to float. Ultimately, the stage was banned from tournament play, due to the possibility of stage spikes, and some of the floats being too unpredictable in their nature, as seen in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wGhFOtIx14 this clip].
Poké Floats was originally deemed legal as a [[counterpick]], on the basis that its movement was entirely deterministic and not fast enough to cause an overreliance on mobility, though some characters could have trouble recovering or going from float to float. Eventually, however, the stage was banned from tournament play due to the possibility of [[stage spike]]s, and recovery being made difficult by the odd movements and collision detection of some floats, as seen in [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4wGhFOtIx14 this clip]. It was also deemed as giving a major advantage to {{SSBM|Fox}} because of how easy it was to time out opponents by [[stalling]] and the small vertical [[blast zone]]s, which Fox's KO moves are oriented around.
 
==All-floats glitch==
This glitch can be performed only in version 1.0 of ''[[Melee]]'', as a subset of the [[Name Entry Glitch]]. If a [[0-Second Melee]] is started on this stage, [http://i.gyazo.com/231c04bad4bb1d2119f5f8051e19713b.gif all floats appear on the screen at the same time] before the match ends (image courtesy of {{Sm|Andrewajt62}}), occasionally freezing the game. This glitch was discovered by {{Sm|Simna ibn Sind}} at the end of 2013.
 
==Names in other languages==
{{langtable
|ja={{ja|ポケモン亜空間|Pokemon Akūkan}}
|jaM=Pokémon Subspace
|fr=Poké Flotte
|frM=Poké Fleet
|de=Poké-Flug
|deM=Poké Flight
|es=Poké Globos
|esM=Poké Balloons}}
 
==Trivia==
[[File:Poké Floats camera box.png|thumb|200px|The stage with its camera unlocked and blue boxes representing the camera boxes. Venusaur's is partially outside of the camera's boundaries.]]
*This is the only non-[[Past Stages|Past stage]] in ''Melee'' that does not appear in {{SSBM|Classic Mode}}. However, the music will appear when fighting {{SSBM|Mewtwo}}; as well as {{SSBM|Mewtwo}}'s [[Credits]] theme song.
*Despite its [[unlockable]] status, the song from this stage plays in {{SSBM|Pikachu}}'s section in the [[Special Movie]], as well as being one of Pikachu's [[Credits]] themes.
*9 of the stage's platform Pokémon have appeared as [[Poké Ball]] Pokémon.
**Onix is the only one of the 9 to not be a Poké Ball Pokémon in ''Melee'', though it is a Poké Ball Pokémon in ''Super Smash Bros.''
*Slowpoke, Seel, and Porygon are the only Pokémon that don't appear in ''Melee''{{'}}s opening cinematic.
*[[Squirtle]] is the only Pokémon on this stage to become a playable character in later ''Smash'' installments.
*Poké Floats, along with {{SSBM|Mushroom Kingdom}}, {{SSBM|Mute City}}, and [[Icicle Mountain]], are the only stages from ''Melee'' not to return as a playable stage in later ''Smash'' installments. This applies to [[Flat Zone]] as well, though that stage is incorporated in [[Flat Zone X]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Wii U]]'' and ''[[Ultimate]]''.
**Poké Floats is the only {{uv|Pokémon}} stage from the entire series not to reappear in ''[[Ultimate]]''.
*Each float has its own camera box, an area around fighters and certain objects which the camera tries to keep in frame without leaving its boundaries. However, due to the stage's camera usually being fixed in place, these camera boxes are useless unless the camera is unlocked using the game's [[Debug menu (SSBM)|debug features]].


{{SSBMStages}}
{{SSBMStages}}
{{Pokémon universe}}
{{Pokémon universe}}
[[Category:Stages]]
[[Category:Stages]]
[[Category:Stages (SSBM)]]
[[es:Cielo de Kanto: Poké Globos]]
[[Category:Pokémon universe]]

Latest revision as of 15:05, September 30, 2024

Kanto Skies: Poké Floats
Poké Floats
PokemonSymbol(preBrawl).svg
Poké Floats in Super Smash Bros. Melee.
Universe Pokémon
Appears in Melee
Availability Unlockable
Unlock criteria Play 200 VS. matches.
Music
Bolded tracks must be unlocked
Melee Poké Floats
Tournament legality
Melee Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Article on Bulbapedia Poké Floats

Poké Floats (ポケモン亜空間, Pokémon Subspace) is a stage in Super Smash Bros. Melee. In All-Star mode, Jigglypuff and its teammates are fought here.

The Sudowoodo trophy is unlocked alongside this stage.

Stage overview[edit]

Contrary to popular belief, Poké Floats is not an auto-scrolling stage but rather the camera stays in place as the floats move across the screen. The match takes place on top of giant floating models of Pokémon (hence the name) above the skies of the Kanto region, which are in a constant cycle and whose movement, while deterministic, keeps getting more complex until the cycle is reset. Staying on a float too long can cause the player to lose a stock, as the floats can cross blast lines as they leave the battlefield.

The floats, in order of appearance, are:

Pokémon Picture Behavior
Squirtle Poke Floats Squirtle.png The starting float. Starting from the middle of the screen, it slowly floats downwards until it disappears.

Its head and arms act as solid platforms.

Onix Poke Floats Onix.png Appears when only Squirtle's head is still visible. Enters from the right, then starts slowly floating down along Squirtle.

Its whole body is a bumpy hard platform.

Psyduck Poke Floats Psyduck.png Its head rises upwards from the bottom left corner, pushing Onix upwards and tilting it diagonally. Afterwards, its whole body floats upwards until it disappears. Can cause Star KOs or Screen KOs if stayed on for too long.

Its head and bill act as solid platforms.

Chikorita Poke Floats Chikorita.png Enters from the left near the middle of the screen, then moves to the bottom-right quadrant (at which point Psyduck starts rising), hangs on the right side of the screen for a while, then drifts away.

Its body (head included) is a hard platform, while its leaf is soft.

Weezing Poke Floats Weezing.png Rises from the bottom of the screen, then gets progressively smaller (as if it were floating away into the background) until it crosses the upper blast line. Unlike Sudowoodo and Psyduck, the fighters that are still on it when it passes the blast line will be dropped off, rather than Star/Screen KO'd.

Its heads form a single hard platform.

Slowpoke Poke Floats Slowpoke.png Enters from the left side of the screen, slowly uncurls its tail, then disappears on the right.

Its whole body is solid; its tail act as a wall and ceiling while curled. Caution should be taken, as being on its tail when it's uncurling will cause the player to fall and put them into a position where it will be difficult to recover.

Porygon Poke Floats Porygon.png Three Porygon traverse the middle of the screen, right-to-left.

Their bodies are completely solid.

Wooper Poke Floats Wooper.png Quickly rises from the bottom-left corner to the middle of the screen, then moves to the right part of the screen. After Venusaur appears it moves to the left, then it floats above Venusaur and Seel until it disappears on the top-right corner of the screen.

Its head is solid, while its gills act as soft platforms.

Sudowoodo Poke Floats Sudowoodo.png Slowly rises along the left side of the screen. Its right arm, despite being part of its model, never appears onscreen.

Its head, head structure and leg act as hard platforms, while its arm and foot act as soft ones. Like Psyduck, can cause Star or Screen KOs if stayed on.

Snorlax Poke Floats Snorlax.png Rises from the bottom of the screen, remaining almost stationary until it gets pushed down by Venusaur's passage.

Its head and body form a single solid platform.

Venusaur Poke Floats Venusaur.png Its head peeks from the right side of the screen; afterwards its whole body comes into view and traverses the screen right-to-left.

Its body and stem are solid, while its leaves and petals act as soft platforms.

Seel Poke Floats Seel.png Traverses the screen right-to-left while slowly bobbing, directly following Venusaur.

Its head, body and tail form a single solid platform.

Wobbuffet Poke Floats Wobbuffet.png Quickly peeks and retreats on the bottom-right, then reappears, floats completely into view and disappears again on the right.

Its whole body is a single hard platform.

Unown Poke Floats Unown.png Shortly after Wobbuffet's appearance a line of several Unown starts slowly traversing the middle of the screen, from left to right. Shortly after Chansey appears, a second line traveling in the opposite direction starts moving above the first. They disappear completely at the end of the cycle.

Their bodies all act as soft platforms.

Goldeen Poke Floats Goldeen.png Quickly jumps up from the bottom-left, then rises down almost offscreen. After two more quick jumps it disappears back down.

Its tail and body form a single soft platform.

Lickitung Poke Floats Lickitung.png Appears from the left with its tongue outstretched, then floats to the right, retracts its tongue, and disappears on the right while extending its tongue again.

Its body and tongue form a single hard platform.

Chansey Poke Floats Chansey.png Peeks up from the bottom-left part of the screen, then from the bottom-right, then from the bottom-left and finally from the bottom-right before disappearing.

Its head acts as a hard platform.

Geodude Poke Floats Geodude.png Appears from the left side of the screen, hangs around the middle of the screen for a while and finally disappears on the right.

Its body and arms act as a single hard platform.

After Geodude disappears, the last few Unown clear the screen. Finally, after the last Unown, the cycle restarts (looping back to Squirtle). Squirtle quickly appears from the bottom and the process repeats all over again. A full cycle takes about three and a half minutes.

The camera will remain in a fixed position for the whole game and will not zoom in or out.

Origin[edit]

Onix, as seen in Pokémon Stadium. This is an example of how Poké Floats took its design of the "floats" from the character models in Pokémon Stadium.

This stage is not directly based on any Pokémon game, though its "Kanto Skies" designation refers to the Kanto region in which the original Game Boy Pokémon games, and their remakes, are set. It is rather a collection of Pokémon models taken from the Pokémon Stadium series of games.

Interestingly, the Japanese name of the stage, "Pokémon Subspace", does not directly refer to the Pokémon as floats, and the models do not appear to be balloons. The concept of "Poké Floats", added during localization, was later used in other Pokémon media: examples include the Wi-Fi Plaza in Pokémon Platinum and Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, and the climax of the Pokémon Detective Pikachu movie, which features a battle between Pikachu and Mewtwo on Pokémon balloons.

Tournament legality[edit]

Poké Floats was originally deemed legal as a counterpick, on the basis that its movement was entirely deterministic and not fast enough to cause an overreliance on mobility, though some characters could have trouble recovering or going from float to float. Eventually, however, the stage was banned from tournament play due to the possibility of stage spikes, and recovery being made difficult by the odd movements and collision detection of some floats, as seen in this clip. It was also deemed as giving a major advantage to Fox because of how easy it was to time out opponents by stalling and the small vertical blast zones, which Fox's KO moves are oriented around.

All-floats glitch[edit]

This glitch can be performed only in version 1.0 of Melee, as a subset of the Name Entry Glitch. If a 0-Second Melee is started on this stage, all floats appear on the screen at the same time before the match ends (image courtesy of Andrewajt62), occasionally freezing the game. This glitch was discovered by Simna ibn Sind at the end of 2013.

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japan Japanese ポケモン亜空間 Pokémon Subspace
France French Poké Flotte Poké Fleet
Germany German Poké-Flug Poké Flight
Spain Spanish Poké Globos Poké Balloons

Trivia[edit]

The stage with its camera unlocked and blue boxes representing the camera boxes. Venusaur's is partially outside of the camera's boundaries.
  • This is the only non-Past stage in Melee that does not appear in Classic Mode. However, the music will appear when fighting Mewtwo; as well as Mewtwo's Credits theme song.
  • Despite its unlockable status, the song from this stage plays in Pikachu's section in the Special Movie, as well as being one of Pikachu's Credits themes.
  • 9 of the stage's platform Pokémon have appeared as Poké Ball Pokémon.
    • Onix is the only one of the 9 to not be a Poké Ball Pokémon in Melee, though it is a Poké Ball Pokémon in Super Smash Bros.
  • Slowpoke, Seel, and Porygon are the only Pokémon that don't appear in Melee's opening cinematic.
  • Squirtle is the only Pokémon on this stage to become a playable character in later Smash installments.
  • Poké Floats, along with Mushroom Kingdom, Mute City, and Icicle Mountain, are the only stages from Melee not to return as a playable stage in later Smash installments. This applies to Flat Zone as well, though that stage is incorporated in Flat Zone X in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and Ultimate.
    • Poké Floats is the only Pokémon stage from the entire series not to reappear in Ultimate.
  • Each float has its own camera box, an area around fighters and certain objects which the camera tries to keep in frame without leaving its boundaries. However, due to the stage's camera usually being fixed in place, these camera boxes are useless unless the camera is unlocked using the game's debug features.