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:''For the Special Mode, see [[Super Sudden Death]]''.
:''For the Special Mode, see [[Super Sudden Death]]''.
{{incomplete|Add video illustrating the Bob-omb side KO -> player in star KO animation wins}}
[[File:SSBU Sudden Death.jpg|thumb|A '''Sudden Death''' match in ''[[Ultimate]]'' between {{SSBU|Little Mac}} and {{SSBU|Marth}}, with flames surrounding them.]]
[[File:Sudden Death (Super Smash Bros. for Wii U).jpg|thumb|200px|Sudden Death in ''[[Super Smash Bros. for Wii U]]''.]]


'''Sudden Death''' occurs when any [[VS. mode]] match ends in a tie. When one occurs, the match will restart with only the players involved in the tie, all of whom will be given 300% [[damage]] as opposed to 0%, making them very easy to [[KO]]. If items are on, then they will not spawn during Sudden Death, with the exception of [[Super Smash Bros.|the original game]]. The [[crowd]] will be silent during a Sudden Death.
'''Sudden Death''' ({{ja|サドンデス|Sadon Desu}}, ''Sudden Death'') occurs when any [[VS. mode]] match ends in a tie. A tie happens when at least two characters or teams have the same final [[score]] at the end of a [[Time]] match, the same amount of stocks at the end of a timed [[Stock]] or [[Stamina]] match, the same amount of [[Smash Coins and Bills|coins]] at the end of a [[Coin Battle]], or the same total score at the end of a {{B|Bonus|mode}} match. In an untimed Stock or Stamina match, Sudden Death is possible if all remaining characters lose their last stock on the same frame.


If no characters are KO'd after roughly twenty seconds, [[Bob-omb]]s will begin to fall from the sky; unlike normal, these Bob-ombs immediately explode when they make contact with players or the ground, thereby speeding up the match. It is possible for a falling Bob-omb to instantly KO a player (off a side [[blast line]]) while the other player is currently being sent flying by a [[screen KO|screen]] or [[star KO]], causing the latter player to win the match.  
In matches with three or more players, Sudden Death will only occur with the players who are tied for first place.


A mode that replicates Sudden Death can be accessed via the [[Special Melee]] or [[Special Brawl]] mode "[[Super Sudden Death]]". This mode however simply sets all players' damage to 300% and lacks the falling Bob-ombs or the silent crowd (who will cheer or make noise as usual).
==Overview==
When Sudden Death occurs, the words "Sudden Death" will appear on-screen with the [[announcer]] calling it, followed by the "GO!" signal, and the match will restart with only the players involved in the tie, all of whom are given one [[stock]] and 300% [[damage]], effectively turning almost any attack with knockback into [[one-hit KO]]s. In effect, this makes it so the first player to land a hit on their opponent(s) wins Sudden Death and therefore the match. With the exception of the original ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'' and certain stages in various games, items will not spawn at this time even if they are turned on. If the battle is in [[Stamina Mode]], all players will have 1 HP instead of 300 percent.


==Conditions to occur==
From ''Melee'' to ''Smash 4'', if nobody wins after roughly 20 seconds, [[Bob-omb]]s begin to fall from the sky to speed up the match. Unlike the Bob-omb items, these immediately explode on contact with any surface or player. In ''Melee'', the Bob-ombs act a little differently than in other games - they have no animation for appearing and can explode in mid-air without touching anything. As all players have 300% damage, getting hit by a Bob-omb is essentially an instant KO; however, with precise timing, players can grab Bob-ombs in midair with [[air dodge]]s or [[tech]] on any walls. Prior to ''Smash 4'', it is possible for a falling Bob-omb to instantly KO a player by launching them toward a side [[blast line]] while the other player is currently being sent flying by a [[Screen KO]] or [[Star KO]], causing the latter player to win the match in the middle of their KO animation; in ''Smash 4'', Star and Screen KOs normally no longer occur during Sudden Death.
In [[Time]] battles, Sudden Death occurs when at least two characters have the same final score at the end of the match. In [[Coin Battle]], players with the same amount of [[coins]] will fight in a Sudden Death battle; the same applies to [[Bonus (mode)|Bonus]], where players with the same final score will square off. Sudden Death almost never occurs in a [[stock]] match (barring a timed Stock Match, where Sudden Death will occur if time runs out and multiple players have the same amount of stocks), though it is possible if all [[character]]s lose their last life on the same frame. [[Kirbycide]] and other [[Sacrificial KO]]s can easily create this situation in matches with two players remaining, and having all characters on a falling horizontal platform that hits the bottom [[blast line]] can cause it with any number of players.


==Ties in Sudden Death==
In ''Ultimate'', the camera will start at a fixed position and gradually zoom in from the center of the stage from the start of Sudden Death, with the [[blast zone]] shrinking alongside it until the camera itself is zoomed in very closely, a mechanic known as "Screen Shrink" that is similarly used by the [[Squid Sisters]]. The screen also now has flames around it from corner to corner, surrounding the center. Once the screen is zoomed in, Bob-ombs will start dropping after several seconds to eliminate players lingering for too long.
{{incomplete|''Smash 4'' information required}}
 
If all characters are [[KO]]'d at the same time in Sudden Death, a second Sudden Death will not be performed; rather, the match will end and one character will be chosen as the winner. In the original game, the winner will be the character with the highest player number, while in ''Melee'', the player with the lowest player number will win; for instance, if Player 1 and Player 2 tie in Sudden Death, then Player 1 would win in ''Melee'' while Player 2 would win in ''Smash 64''. As both players must be KO'd on the same frame and the games run at 60 frames per second, the chances of this occurring are slim, and any advantage given to lower player numbers is decidedly negligible. Tests in ''Brawl'' Sudden Death mode have shown that the player who wins the match is decided at random.
Should a tie occur within Sudden Death itself, which can only happen if all remaining characters are KO'd on the same frame, the match will end and a random player is selected to be the winner. In the first two ''Super Smash Bros.'' games, placement is based on [[port priority]]: in the original ''Super Smash Bros.'', the winner is the player with the highest port number (whose controller is closest to P4), while in ''Melee'', the winner is the player with the lowest port number (whose controller is closest to P1). As multiple players must be KO'd on the same frame for this to occur and the games run at 60 frames per second, the chances of this occurring are slim and any advantage given to certain player numbers compared to others is decidedly negligible, especially since Sudden Death is never used in competitive play. In ''Brawl'', tests have shown that the winner of the match is decided at random. In ''SSB4'', the winner is whoever dealt the most damage, with the placement of the other players following suit. The winner is decided at random if all players deal the exact same amount of damage. The same is true for ''Ultimate'', with the addition of a player that was eliminated early potentially being randomly selected as the winner in games with more than two players.
 
In ''SSB4'''s {{b|Tourney|SSB4-Wii U}} mode, Sudden Death did not occur in Regular Tourneys and could be disabled in player-made Tourneys as well. If a tie occurred when Sudden Death was disabled, victory was awarded to the player who dealt the most damage throughout the match.


==In [[competitive play]]==
==In [[competitive play]]==
In tournaments, should Sudden Death occur, it is ignored, with the winner being decided by other factors. Sudden Death is not played out in tournaments because of its numerous gameplay issues, while severely skewing [[matchup]] balance, as it provides extreme advantages and disadvantages to certain characters. One such issue is the fact that there is no time limit, causing the safest, most effective strategy to win to be via abusing [[camping]] tactics to avoid the falling Bob-ombs, most notably by [[planking]] (where the player is essentially immune to any Bob-ombs that fall). This gives an extreme advantage to those with strong planking capabilities, while greatly hindering those who are less capable at planking. Because of planking being the prominent tactic and there being no time limit, a Sudden Death between two competent players playing to win can feasibly go on forever, often with little to no actual combat between them (as [[approach]]ing the opponent is extremely risky in Sudden Death, especially if they are planking). In other cases, matches may not last any significant time; faster characters such as [[Fox]] and characters with fast projectiles that have some knockback scaling, such as [[Pit]], have a large disproportional advantage, as they can land a KOing blow quickly and relatively safely, while having some of their primary weaknesses in standard play nullified (being lighter or having subpar KO power makes little difference when one hit can decide the match). Additionally, slower and heavier characters are put at a large, disproportional disadvantage, as they both are typically less effective at planking and have some of their primary advantages under standard gameplay nullified (greater endurance and KO power cannot make up for being easier to hit and having harder to land attacks, when virtually any attack is a [[one-hit KO]] anyway). This results in some characters, such as [[Bowser]] and [[Ganondorf]], having almost no feasible chance of winning under Sudden Death conditions at a high level of play.
If a Sudden Death occurs in a tournament, it is usually ignored and the winner is decided by other factors. Using Sudden Death as a tiebreaker brings with it a number of complications:
 
#As a Sudden Death match is always untimed, while each player is disincentivized from [[approach]]ing when a single hit will very likely KO them, and with the raining Bob-ombs making it hazardous to stay on the stage for long, [[camping]] with projectiles and [[planking]] become dominant strategies. This can result in the match going on for an indefinite length of time, as each player simply [[stall]]s in a place where they are sheltered from the Bob-ombs and waits for their opponent to make a mistake, and nothing can force the match to end. ''Ultimate'' does address this by rapidly shrinking the blast zones during Sudden Death, forcing players onto the stage as eventually the entire offstage area will be swallowed by the shrinking blast zones, but this does nothing about the other two reasons.
In addition to these gameplay flaws, [[smasher]]s generally agree that Sudden Death can become an unfair way to stage a comeback. In this regard, Sudden Death can allow a player who was clearly losing before time ran out, such as by having a considerably higher [[damage]] percentage than their opponent, to try and equalize by forcing a Sudden Death; the losing player can camp until time runs out, then potentially win the match just by being able to land the first blow in Sudden Death, or by simply camping again. As such, a player that reasonably should have lost if the match had no time limit and continued as normal can win the match despite being outplayed by their opponent. An infamous example of this occurring was in the grand finals set between {{Sm|Zero}} and {{Sm|Hungrybox}} at the [[Super Smash Bros. Invitational]]; the Invitational, while having standard competitive rules for its grand finals match, used Sudden Death to resolve a stock tie. Zero, being aware of this, intentionally camped out and avoided confrontation at the end of the match when Hungrybox took a significant percent lead on their last stock. With Hungrybox playing {{SSB4|Kirby}} against Zero's much more agile {{SSB4|Zero Suit Samus}}, he was unable to land a finishing blow before time ran out despite his significant percent lead, leading to Sudden Death where Zero then won by just being able to land a quick hit despite clearly losing the match before the Sudden Death.
#Character balance is severely skewed. In an environment where almost any attack can KO, frail characters with fast attacks and projectiles have a massive advantage over characters whose main advantage is normally in greater KO power and survivability. For example, [[Sheik]] or [[Sonic]] are able to quickly strike their opponent to near-instantly win before the opponent can retaliate, whereas [[Bowser]] or [[Ganondorf]] would have major problems trying to hit their opponent before they themselves are hit, while their massive KO power and very heavy [[weight]] are rendered meaningless.
#As Sudden Death in timed Stock matches is based solely on the flat number of stocks remaining, it becomes a viable strategy for a player who is tied in stocks with their opponent but far behind in damage to intentionally stall out the clock until Sudden Death occurs, thus eliminating the damage difference and giving themselves a chance to take the game with just one [[neutral game|neutral]] win. Players generally agree this is an unfair way to stage a comeback, allowing someone who was clearly outplayed to suddenly win a match with a single weak blow. An infamous example of this occurring was in the Grand Finals set between {{Sm|ZeRo}} and {{Sm|Hungrybox}} at the {{Trn|Super Smash Bros. Invitational}}; the Invitational, while having standard competitive rules for its Grand Finals match, used Sudden Death to resolve a stock tie. ZeRo, being aware of this, intentionally spent the remainder of the match running away and avoiding confrontation when Hungrybox took a significant percent lead on their last stock. With Hungrybox playing the sluggish {{SSB4|Kirby}} against ZeRo's much more agile {{SSB4|Zero Suit Samus}}, he was unable to land a finishing blow before time ran out despite his significant percent lead, leading to Sudden Death where ZeRo then won by just being able to land a single grab, despite clearly losing the match beforehand.


As a result of being too imbalanced to be used to resolve ties, tournaments instead declare the winner through other ways in the event of Sudden Death occurring; should the usual tie occur with time running out and stock being equal between combatants, the player with the lower damage percentage wins. In the rare event of equal stock and percentage, or with both players being KO'd at the same time on their last stock, a one stock rematch with the same characters and on the same stage is held to determine the winner. If both players are KO'd at the same time due to a [[sacrificial KO]], tournaments often have a rule that declares the initiator the winner, instead of holding a one stock rematch.
Should Sudden Death occur in a tournament, the winner is declared by some other criteria depending on context. In the most common cause of the clock expiring while both players are tied in remaining stocks, the player with the lower damage percentage wins, emulating how conventional fighting games handle time outs by rewarding victory to the player with more remaining health. In the rare event of both players having equal stock and damage, or both players are KO'd simultaneously on their last stock, the winner is determined through a one-stock rematch with the same characters on the same stage. However, either is such a rare occurrence, that it sometimes never crosses the mind of [[tournament organizer]]s, which leads to panic when there is no rule in place for the rare instances these two scenarios occur. If both players are KO'd at the same time due to a sacrificial KO via a [[command grab]] such as [[Flying Slam]] and [[Flame Choke]], tournaments sometimes have a rule that declares the initiator the winner, instead of holding a one-stock rematch. While this rule was popular in the ''Brawl'' era, it rarely sees usage since the release of ''Smash 4'', and it never sees usage in ''Ultimate'', where all sacrificial KO moves are intentionally designed to KO the initiator first.


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery>
<gallery>
Image:SuperSmashBros SuddenDeath.png|The Sudden Death screen in ''Smash 64''.
SuperSmashBros SuddenDeath.png|Sudden Death screen in ''Super Smash Bros.''
image:Melee-SuddenDeath.png|The Sudden Death screen in ''Melee''.
Melee-SuddenDeath.png|Sudden Death screen in ''Melee''.
File:Sudden death.PNG|The Sudden Death screen in ''Brawl''.
Sudden Death (SSBB).PNG|Sudden Death screen in ''Brawl''.
Sudden Death (Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS).jpg|Sudden Death screen in ''Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS''.
Sudden Death (Super Smash Bros. for Wii U).jpg|Sudden Death screen in ''Super Smash Bros. for Wii U''.
Sudden Death (Super Smash Bros. Ultimate).jpg|Sudden Death screen in ''Super Smash Bros. Ultimate''.
</gallery>
</gallery>
==Trivia==
*The [[crowd]] is silent during Sudden Death in all games (with the exception of ''SSB4'').
*Players can trigger Sudden Death in untimed stock matches by using [[sacrificial KO]]s with two players remaining (though in ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate'', attackers are KO'd first for most sacrificial KOs), or by having players stand on a falling horizontal platform that surpasses the lower [[blast line]]. In ''Smash 64'', the player who has the highest controller port (closest to port 4) always wins, without matches even going to Sudden Death.
*Oddly, ties will not result in Sudden Death in ''Melee'' if the game is run in {{SSBM|debug mode}}. The game simply returns to the debug menu after the match.
*In the original ''Super Smash Bros.'', if a player uses hacks to play as {{SSB|Master Hand}} and Sudden Death occurs, he will start with 0 HP instead of 300 HP and won't be able to attack.
*The Bob-ombs that appear in Sudden Death will always appear over the stage from random points below the ceiling. Thus, if a character can suspend themselves above the upper [[blast line]] (for example, by using a {{b|ladder|technique}}) or certain{{fact}} platforms, then they can avoid the Bob-ombs indefinitely.
** In ''Smash 4'', {{SSB4|King Dedede}} and {{SSB4|Kirby}} can also survive the Bob-ombs indefinitely regardless of their damage percent, by using their custom moves [[Armored Jet Hammer]] and [[Giant Hammer]], as both provide indefinite [[Armor|Super Armor]]. This doesn't work in other Smash games.
*In {{for3ds}}, in a [[time]]d match with no score display, the player can actually determine if the match will go into Sudden Death or not. If it is, the damage meters for the fighters going in Sudden Death stay on the bottom screen; if not, they fade away. In addition, if a match is going to go into Sudden Death, the stereoscopic 3D will stay at full strength during the "TIME!" signal. If the match isn't going to Sudden Death, the 3D effect will dissipate, the background and foreground merging into a flat image before the screen breaks into the results section.
**A similar thing can be done for the Wii U version: if going into Sudden Death, the match will still keep going at normal speed during the "TIME!" signal.
*In [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2doHqnACae0 early builds] of ''Super Smash Bros. 4'', Star KOs and Screen KOs still occurred during Sudden Death.
*In {{forwiiu}} and ''Ultimate'', if Sudden Death occurs in the [[Boxing Ring]], then the scrolling LED panel and jumbotron will say "SUDDEN DEATH".
*Rarely, a Bob-omb will not explode upon hitting a platform. This seems to happen when the bomb spawns a very short distance above the platform. The Bob-omb will sit there as usual, but then as soon as it gets up it will explode. However, this is not the case in ''Brawl''.
*''Melee'' and the Spanish and German versions of ''Ultimate'' are the only games where the "Sudden Death" text is not displayed in all capital letters.
**Similarly, the original ''Super Smash Bros.'' is the only game where the letters are not displayed in the flaming red letters; instead, the letters are a metallic gray with an exclamation point.
*In ''Ultimate'', some songs (such as "{{SSBUMusicLink|Other|MEGALOVANIA}}") will skip part of the intro if they are not upbeat. This is likely a stylistic choice to keep the music intense during Sudden Death. Additionally, the same thing occurs after a [[Stage Morph]].
*In ''Smash 4'', when three or more players are part a Sudden Death match, all players besides the one who survives will be treated as staying tied for 2nd place, even if some players got eliminated from that Sudden Death match before other non-surviving players did. In all other titles, the ties for 2nd-3rd+ places will be broken if 3+ players who were part of that Sudden Death are KO'd in different seconds.
**Additionally, in ''Smash 4'', if Player 1 is KO'd early in Sudden Death, while several other players are KO'd simultaneously at the end of that Sudden Death match (leaving no survivors), Player 1 will be treated inaccurately as the winner of that match, more often than not.


[[Category:Multiplayer modes]]
[[Category:Multiplayer modes]]
{{AllGames|Modes}}
{{AllGames|Modes}}

Latest revision as of 06:26, November 12, 2024

For the Special Mode, see Super Sudden Death.
A Sudden Death match in Ultimate between Little Mac and Marth, with flames surrounding them.

Sudden Death (サドンデス, Sudden Death) occurs when any VS. mode match ends in a tie. A tie happens when at least two characters or teams have the same final score at the end of a Time match, the same amount of stocks at the end of a timed Stock or Stamina match, the same amount of coins at the end of a Coin Battle, or the same total score at the end of a Bonus match. In an untimed Stock or Stamina match, Sudden Death is possible if all remaining characters lose their last stock on the same frame.

In matches with three or more players, Sudden Death will only occur with the players who are tied for first place.

Overview[edit]

When Sudden Death occurs, the words "Sudden Death" will appear on-screen with the announcer calling it, followed by the "GO!" signal, and the match will restart with only the players involved in the tie, all of whom are given one stock and 300% damage, effectively turning almost any attack with knockback into one-hit KOs. In effect, this makes it so the first player to land a hit on their opponent(s) wins Sudden Death and therefore the match. With the exception of the original Super Smash Bros. and certain stages in various games, items will not spawn at this time even if they are turned on. If the battle is in Stamina Mode, all players will have 1 HP instead of 300 percent.

From Melee to Smash 4, if nobody wins after roughly 20 seconds, Bob-ombs begin to fall from the sky to speed up the match. Unlike the Bob-omb items, these immediately explode on contact with any surface or player. In Melee, the Bob-ombs act a little differently than in other games - they have no animation for appearing and can explode in mid-air without touching anything. As all players have 300% damage, getting hit by a Bob-omb is essentially an instant KO; however, with precise timing, players can grab Bob-ombs in midair with air dodges or tech on any walls. Prior to Smash 4, it is possible for a falling Bob-omb to instantly KO a player by launching them toward a side blast line while the other player is currently being sent flying by a Screen KO or Star KO, causing the latter player to win the match in the middle of their KO animation; in Smash 4, Star and Screen KOs normally no longer occur during Sudden Death.

In Ultimate, the camera will start at a fixed position and gradually zoom in from the center of the stage from the start of Sudden Death, with the blast zone shrinking alongside it until the camera itself is zoomed in very closely, a mechanic known as "Screen Shrink" that is similarly used by the Squid Sisters. The screen also now has flames around it from corner to corner, surrounding the center. Once the screen is zoomed in, Bob-ombs will start dropping after several seconds to eliminate players lingering for too long.

Should a tie occur within Sudden Death itself, which can only happen if all remaining characters are KO'd on the same frame, the match will end and a random player is selected to be the winner. In the first two Super Smash Bros. games, placement is based on port priority: in the original Super Smash Bros., the winner is the player with the highest port number (whose controller is closest to P4), while in Melee, the winner is the player with the lowest port number (whose controller is closest to P1). As multiple players must be KO'd on the same frame for this to occur and the games run at 60 frames per second, the chances of this occurring are slim and any advantage given to certain player numbers compared to others is decidedly negligible, especially since Sudden Death is never used in competitive play. In Brawl, tests have shown that the winner of the match is decided at random. In SSB4, the winner is whoever dealt the most damage, with the placement of the other players following suit. The winner is decided at random if all players deal the exact same amount of damage. The same is true for Ultimate, with the addition of a player that was eliminated early potentially being randomly selected as the winner in games with more than two players.

In SSB4's Tourney mode, Sudden Death did not occur in Regular Tourneys and could be disabled in player-made Tourneys as well. If a tie occurred when Sudden Death was disabled, victory was awarded to the player who dealt the most damage throughout the match.

In competitive play[edit]

If a Sudden Death occurs in a tournament, it is usually ignored and the winner is decided by other factors. Using Sudden Death as a tiebreaker brings with it a number of complications:

  1. As a Sudden Death match is always untimed, while each player is disincentivized from approaching when a single hit will very likely KO them, and with the raining Bob-ombs making it hazardous to stay on the stage for long, camping with projectiles and planking become dominant strategies. This can result in the match going on for an indefinite length of time, as each player simply stalls in a place where they are sheltered from the Bob-ombs and waits for their opponent to make a mistake, and nothing can force the match to end. Ultimate does address this by rapidly shrinking the blast zones during Sudden Death, forcing players onto the stage as eventually the entire offstage area will be swallowed by the shrinking blast zones, but this does nothing about the other two reasons.
  2. Character balance is severely skewed. In an environment where almost any attack can KO, frail characters with fast attacks and projectiles have a massive advantage over characters whose main advantage is normally in greater KO power and survivability. For example, Sheik or Sonic are able to quickly strike their opponent to near-instantly win before the opponent can retaliate, whereas Bowser or Ganondorf would have major problems trying to hit their opponent before they themselves are hit, while their massive KO power and very heavy weight are rendered meaningless.
  3. As Sudden Death in timed Stock matches is based solely on the flat number of stocks remaining, it becomes a viable strategy for a player who is tied in stocks with their opponent but far behind in damage to intentionally stall out the clock until Sudden Death occurs, thus eliminating the damage difference and giving themselves a chance to take the game with just one neutral win. Players generally agree this is an unfair way to stage a comeback, allowing someone who was clearly outplayed to suddenly win a match with a single weak blow. An infamous example of this occurring was in the Grand Finals set between ZeRo and Hungrybox at the Super Smash Bros. Invitational; the Invitational, while having standard competitive rules for its Grand Finals match, used Sudden Death to resolve a stock tie. ZeRo, being aware of this, intentionally spent the remainder of the match running away and avoiding confrontation when Hungrybox took a significant percent lead on their last stock. With Hungrybox playing the sluggish Kirby against ZeRo's much more agile Zero Suit Samus, he was unable to land a finishing blow before time ran out despite his significant percent lead, leading to Sudden Death where ZeRo then won by just being able to land a single grab, despite clearly losing the match beforehand.

Should Sudden Death occur in a tournament, the winner is declared by some other criteria depending on context. In the most common cause of the clock expiring while both players are tied in remaining stocks, the player with the lower damage percentage wins, emulating how conventional fighting games handle time outs by rewarding victory to the player with more remaining health. In the rare event of both players having equal stock and damage, or both players are KO'd simultaneously on their last stock, the winner is determined through a one-stock rematch with the same characters on the same stage. However, either is such a rare occurrence, that it sometimes never crosses the mind of tournament organizers, which leads to panic when there is no rule in place for the rare instances these two scenarios occur. If both players are KO'd at the same time due to a sacrificial KO via a command grab such as Flying Slam and Flame Choke, tournaments sometimes have a rule that declares the initiator the winner, instead of holding a one-stock rematch. While this rule was popular in the Brawl era, it rarely sees usage since the release of Smash 4, and it never sees usage in Ultimate, where all sacrificial KO moves are intentionally designed to KO the initiator first.

Gallery[edit]

Trivia[edit]

  • The crowd is silent during Sudden Death in all games (with the exception of SSB4).
  • Players can trigger Sudden Death in untimed stock matches by using sacrificial KOs with two players remaining (though in Smash 4 and Ultimate, attackers are KO'd first for most sacrificial KOs), or by having players stand on a falling horizontal platform that surpasses the lower blast line. In Smash 64, the player who has the highest controller port (closest to port 4) always wins, without matches even going to Sudden Death.
  • Oddly, ties will not result in Sudden Death in Melee if the game is run in debug mode. The game simply returns to the debug menu after the match.
  • In the original Super Smash Bros., if a player uses hacks to play as Master Hand and Sudden Death occurs, he will start with 0 HP instead of 300 HP and won't be able to attack.
  • The Bob-ombs that appear in Sudden Death will always appear over the stage from random points below the ceiling. Thus, if a character can suspend themselves above the upper blast line (for example, by using a ladder) or certain[citation needed] platforms, then they can avoid the Bob-ombs indefinitely.
  • In Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, in a timed match with no score display, the player can actually determine if the match will go into Sudden Death or not. If it is, the damage meters for the fighters going in Sudden Death stay on the bottom screen; if not, they fade away. In addition, if a match is going to go into Sudden Death, the stereoscopic 3D will stay at full strength during the "TIME!" signal. If the match isn't going to Sudden Death, the 3D effect will dissipate, the background and foreground merging into a flat image before the screen breaks into the results section.
    • A similar thing can be done for the Wii U version: if going into Sudden Death, the match will still keep going at normal speed during the "TIME!" signal.
  • In early builds of Super Smash Bros. 4, Star KOs and Screen KOs still occurred during Sudden Death.
  • In Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and Ultimate, if Sudden Death occurs in the Boxing Ring, then the scrolling LED panel and jumbotron will say "SUDDEN DEATH".
  • Rarely, a Bob-omb will not explode upon hitting a platform. This seems to happen when the bomb spawns a very short distance above the platform. The Bob-omb will sit there as usual, but then as soon as it gets up it will explode. However, this is not the case in Brawl.
  • Melee and the Spanish and German versions of Ultimate are the only games where the "Sudden Death" text is not displayed in all capital letters.
    • Similarly, the original Super Smash Bros. is the only game where the letters are not displayed in the flaming red letters; instead, the letters are a metallic gray with an exclamation point.
  • In Ultimate, some songs (such as "MEGALOVANIA") will skip part of the intro if they are not upbeat. This is likely a stylistic choice to keep the music intense during Sudden Death. Additionally, the same thing occurs after a Stage Morph.
  • In Smash 4, when three or more players are part a Sudden Death match, all players besides the one who survives will be treated as staying tied for 2nd place, even if some players got eliminated from that Sudden Death match before other non-surviving players did. In all other titles, the ties for 2nd-3rd+ places will be broken if 3+ players who were part of that Sudden Death are KO'd in different seconds.
    • Additionally, in Smash 4, if Player 1 is KO'd early in Sudden Death, while several other players are KO'd simultaneously at the end of that Sudden Death match (leaving no survivors), Player 1 will be treated inaccurately as the winner of that match, more often than not.