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{{cleanup|Needs to be rewritten to account for the discovery of Melee (and possibly Brawl) hitboxes having an independent property determining whether the move is interrupted on clang}}
{{disambig2|priority in relation to attacks|controller slot priority|Port priority}}
{{disambig2|priority in relation to attacks|controller slot priority|Port priority}}
[[File:Jab cancel.png|250px|right|thumb|The white "bubble" between {{SSBB|Kirby}} and {{SSBB|Pikachu}}'s attacks indicates that two hitboxes have collided.]]
[[File:Jab cancel.png|250px|thumb|The white "bubble" between {{SSBB|Kirby}} and {{SSBB|Pikachu}}'s attacks indicates that two hitboxes have collided.]]
'''Priority''' is a property of [[hitbox]]es in the ''{{b|Super Smash Bros.|series}}'' series that describes their behavior upon interacting with other hitboxes. While the priority of the hitboxes produced by normal [[ground attack]]s follows a set of rules that is dependent upon the amount of damage they deal (the ''law of high and low priority''), different rules apply to those of normal [[aerial attack]]s, and certain [[special move]]s when performed in the air. Furthermore, some hitboxes and attacks, such as shots from Fox's [[Blaster]], possess a special kind of priority called '''transcendent priority''', which ignores the rules of normal priority.
'''Priority''' is the system that governs how opposing [[attack]]s interact with each other in the ''{{b|Super Smash Bros.|series}}'' series. Most commonly, when the [[hitbox]]es of two characters' attacks collide with each other, they '''clank''', freezing both in place for a moment. If the attacks are roughly equal in strength - the difference in damage is 9% or less - then both characters '''rebound''' from the impact and pause for a moment before they can do anything else. If one attack is much stronger than the other, it wins outright, and more often than not will continue on to strike the enemy stuck rebounding. The most common exception is [[aerial attack]]s, which usually can clank with [[projectile]]s, but not with [[ground attack]]s or other aerials, and cannot rebound at all. Certain hitboxes are also marked as being "cannot clank" or "cannot rebound", affecting their ability to cancel out (and be cancelled out by) opposing moves.


Priority applies to individual hitboxes within attacks, not the attacks as a whole; for example, the rules of normal priority apply to all the hitboxes of {{SSBB|Lucario}}'s forward  smash except that of its [[Sweet spot (hitbox)|sweet spot]], which has transcendent priority. Nonetheless, in the event that a single attack hitbox is "out-prioritised", it is possible for the whole attack to be cancelled.
While the effects of priority are calculated based on individual hitboxes, the results are applied to the attacker as a whole. For example, if one hitbox clanks with an enemy attack, the entire move clanks, regardless of how many other hitboxes would not have clanked. In addition, an attack that clanks is still dangerous to bystanders until rebound begins, even if it was entirely outprioritized by the opposing attack.
 
The term "priority" is often informally used to describe a move's general ability to beat other moves, due to factors such as its damage output, hitbox position, attack speed, non-vulnerable [[hurtbox]]es, or other properties.


==Normal priority==
==Normal priority==
[[File:WindyHillSSB4.png|thumb|{{SSB4|Mario}}'s [[Fireball]] colliding with {{SSB4|Sonic}}'s [[neutral attack]] in {{forwiiu}}.]]
[[File:WindyHillSSB4.png|thumb|{{SSB4|Mario}}'s [[Fireball]] colliding with {{SSB4|Sonic}}'s [[neutral attack]] in {{forwiiu}}.]]
''Normal priority'' describes the set of rules that apply to normal attack hitboxes, that is, any attack hitbox that is not classified as ''transcendent''. As such, the majority of standard attacks, aerials, special attacks and projectiles contain hitboxes with ''normal priority''.
''Normal priority'' describes the set of rules that apply to normal attack hitboxes, that is, any attack hitbox that does not have a special property such as ''transcendent'' or ''trample''. As such, the majority of standard attacks, aerials, special attacks, and projectiles contain hitboxes with ''normal priority''.
 
===Ground attacks===
When two ground attack hitboxes overlap, they will clank. This collision is signified by a white "bubble", and in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee|Melee]]'', a distinct "ting" sound, as if swords are clanging, is also heard. If two actual swords clank, such as Link and Marth's blades, a more realistic "ting" sound is heard. If the stronger hitbox (by %) deals more than 9% (the "priority range") more than the weaker hitbox, the stronger move will continue as normal and the weaker move will end, with the character going into rebound. If both hitboxes deal within 9% of each other, both moves will end and both characters will go into rebound. (note that in the original ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', the priority range is instead 10%). This comparison happens after most damage multipliers but before the 1v1 multiplier in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate|Ultimate]]''.
 
In Melee, the weaker hitbox won't hit the opponent if it clanks. However, the stronger hit can still hit the user of the weaker hit immediately, or on the following frames. In Ultimate, however, neither player can be hit by the clanking opponent '''on the frame that the clank occurs'''. If the stronger move continues, it can hit the clanking opponent on the following frame, assuming the move still has a hitbox on that frame.
 
For example:
*In ''Brawl'', if {{SSBB|Marth}}'s un-tipped forward smash collides with {{SSBB|Ike}}'s forward smash (14% vs. 22%), both moves will end and both characters will go through rebound.
*However, if Marth's un-tipped forward smash collides with {{SSBB|Ganondorf}}'s forward smash (14% vs. 24%), Ganondorf's forward smash will continue and may hit Marth as Marth rebounds.
*If {{SSBB|Captain Falcon}}'s forward smash collides with {{SSBB|Ness}}' up tilt (19% vs. 7%), Captain Falcon's forward smash will continue and hit Ness as Ness starts to rebound.
 
===Rebound===
Depending on the relative strength of the ground moves, either one or both characters will go through rebound.
 
First, a rebounding character will suffer freeze frames equal to the hitlag of the '''stronger''' attack (by %). This is true whether the user of the stronger attack goes through rebound or not. During these freeze frames, all hitboxes are disabled. This takes into account all hitlag modifiers, with one exception: the electric modifier is applied based on whether the '''character's''' hitbox has the electric effect. So if Pichu's ftilt clanks with Chrom's ftilt, Chrom will be frozen for 13 frames (typical for Chrom ftilt, which is the stronger move), but Pichu will be frozen for 19 frames (equivalent to hitlag that Chrom's ftilt would have if it had the electric effect).
 
After the freeze frames are over, characters go through a unique rebound animation.
 
Prior to ''[[Super Smash Bros. Ultimate|Ultimate]]'', the length of the rebound animation increased proportionately to the damage each hitbox would have dealt. This meant that the fighter that performed the weaker attack would get out of rebound before the other and have frame advantage. The calculation for rebound duration depends on the game, but "R" always means rebound frames and "d" always means damage dealt, rounded down. In ''[[Melee]]'', the calculation is roughly <code>R=Roundup(0.559*(d+10))</code>, except for Dr. Mario, for which it is <code>R=Roundup(0.615*(d+10))</code> instead. In ''[[Smash 4]]'', the calculation is <code>R=Floor((d*15/8)+7.5)</code>.
 
In ''Ultimate'', the length of the rebound animation for both characters is based on the damage dealt by the stronger hitbox (again, regardless of whether the user of the stronger move is going through rebound or not). It uses the same formula as ''Smash 4'', although the maximum rebound is 58 frames.


===Ground attacks and projectiles===
Overall, this means that, in ''Ultimate'', if both characters go through rebound they will be actionable on the same frame. The exception is if one character clanked using an electric move; that character will be actionable a bit later than the opponent due to the extra freeze frames.
The hitboxes of normal ground attacks follow the ''law of high and low priority''. This means that they interact with each other in terms of the damage they deal, which in turn classifies each as having "high" or "low" priority. When two ground attack hitboxes overlap, they will collide, and will either cancel each other out, or one will override (out-prioritize) the other. This collision is signified by a white "bubble", and in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee|Melee]]'', a distinct "ting" sound, as if swords are clanging, is also heard. The law of high and low priority functions in terms of a damage (priority) range of 9%. On these terms, one ground attack must deal 9% or more damage than another attack if it is to out-prioritize it, hence, the "priority range" in ''Smash Bros'' games is 9% (note that in the original ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', the priority range is instead 10%).


If two attacks cancel each other out, the animations may or may not be interrupted. This is dependent on a separate value within the hitbox, and it is believed to be irrespective of the other hitbox that collided with it.
If only one character goes through rebound, they will often be hit by the opponent's move as it continues. However, this is not necessarily the case if the original move was sufficiently disjointed or if the clank happens on the last frame of the opponent's hitbox. In that case the opponent will suffer the end lag of their attack whereas the character will suffer the freeze frames plus rebound animation, with the length of both based on the opponent's move.


If one attack hitbox is above the priority range of another, that is, deals 9% or more than the other, the stronger hitbox out-prioritizes the weaker one, and the weaker attack is cancelled by the stronger one. However, if two colliding ground attack hitboxes are within the priority range, that is, damage dealt is less than 9% within each other, they will "clash", and both will cancel out, delivering no damage to either character. Thus, normal attacks with "high" priority are those whose hitboxes deal a large amount of damage, and are therefore more inclined to out-prioritize other attacks, while those with "low" priority deal little damage.
===Projectiles===
Similar rules apply when ground attack hitboxes overlap normal projectile hitboxes. If the ground move deals more than 9% more than the projectile, the projectile is destroyed and the ground move continues uninterrupted. If the two moves deal within 9% of each other, the projectile is destroyed and the ground move is canceled into rebound. If the projectile deals at least 9% more than the ground hitbox, the ground move is canceled into rebound and the projectile continues (usually hitting the opponent on the following frame).


For example:
Similarly, if two projectiles collide, the projectiles will clank and the weaker projectile will be destroyed. The stronger projectile will either continue or also be destroyed depending on whether it does at least 9% more than the weaker projectile.
*In ''Brawl'', if {{SSBB|Marth}}'s un-tipped forward smash collides with {{SSBB|Ike}}'s f-smash (14% vs. 22%), they will clash and cancel each other out.
*However, if Marth's un-tipped f-smash collides with {{SSBB|Ganondorf}}'s f-smash (14% vs. 24%), Ganondorf's f-smash will cancel out (out-prioritise) Marth's f-smash and hit Marth.
*If {{SSBB|Captain Falcon}}'s forward smash collides with {{SSBB|Ness}}' up tilt (19% vs. 7%), Captain Falcon's f-smash will out-prioritise Ness' up tilt and hit Ness.
*If Captain Falcon's [[Falcon Punch]] collides with {{SSBB|Yoshi}}'s [[Egg Roll]] (27% vs. 12%), the Falcon Punch will out-prioritise the Egg Roll and hit Yoshi.


The same rules apply when ground attack hitboxes overlap normal projectile hitboxes.
Note that there are some projectiles that don't get destroyed by clanking. However, their hitboxes are generally disabled for the character or object that clanked with them.


For example:
For example:
*Marth's un-tipped f-smash is out-prioritised by {{SSBB|Samus}}' fully charged [[Charge Shot]] (14% vs. 25%).
*Marth's un-tipped forward smash is out-prioritised by {{SSBB|Samus}}' fully charged [[Charge Shot]] (14% vs. 25%).
*However, if the second hitbox of {{SSBB|Bowser}}'s f-smash collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot, they will cancel each other out (23% vs. 25%).
*However, if the second hitbox of {{SSBB|Bowser}}'s forward smash collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot, they will cancel each other out (23% vs. 25%).


While most normal projectiles follow the rules of ground priority, Snake's [[Remote Missile]], Diddy Kong's [[Peanut Popgun]], and King Dedede's [[Waddle Dee Toss]] behave differently. While the 8% range does apply to Dedede's Gordo, its hitbox behaves like an airborne attack as it cannot be cancelled out. For example, if Captain Falcon's f-smash collides with a Gordo (19% vs. 23%), the clash bubble will appear, and the f-smash will be canceled out while the Gordo is not. However, since both hitboxes are within the priority range, the Gordo will go right through Captain Falcon without harming him, and continue along its natural path. It will, however, still possess its damaging hitboxes, and can still harm any other character it happens to touch along its route.
While most normal projectiles follow the rules of ground priority, Snake's [[Remote Missile]], Diddy Kong's [[Peanut Popgun]], and King Dedede's [[Waddle Dee Toss]] behave differently. While the 9% range does apply to Dedede's Gordo, its hitbox behaves like an airborne attack as it cannot be cancelled out. For example, if Captain Falcon's forward smash collides with a Gordo (19% vs. 23%), the clash bubble will appear, and the forward smash will be cancelled out while the Gordo is not. However, since both hitboxes are within the priority range, the Gordo will go right through Captain Falcon without harming him, and continue along its natural path. It will, however, still possess its damaging hitboxes, and can still harm any other character it happens to touch along its route.


Snake's Remote Missile has a damagable hitbox and behaves like a thrown item, such as a [[capsule]]. Hence, when opposing hitboxes collide with the Remote Missile, they will damage it instead of colliding with it. If the Remote Missile takes enough damage, it will be destroyed. The peanuts from Diddy Kong's Peanut Popgun behave the same way, but any colliding hitbox, even if it only deals 1%, will destroy the peanuts.
Snake's Remote Missile has a damagable hitbox and behaves like a thrown item, such as a [[capsule]]. Hence, when opposing hitboxes collide with the Remote Missile, they will damage it instead of colliding with it. If the Remote Missile takes enough damage, it will be destroyed. The peanuts from Diddy Kong's Peanut Popgun behave the same way, but any colliding hitbox, even if it only deals 1%, will destroy the peanuts.


===Aerial attacks===
===Aerial attacks===
Different rules apply to the hitboxes of normal aerial attacks. When a normal aerial attack hitbox overlaps that of a normal ground attack or another normal aerial, the attacks do not clank. If an overlap between the hitboxes of two such attacks occurs, both will persist, irrespective of each other, and will damage their foes if they contact them.


Different rules apply to the hitboxes of normal aerial attacks. When a normal aerial attack hitbox overlaps that of a normal ground attack or another normal aerial, the attacks cannot collide or clash and the law of high and low priority does not apply. If an overlap between the hitboxes of two such attacks occurs, both will persist, irrespective of each other, and will damage their foes if they contact them.
For example:
 
For example
*If {{SSBB|Sonic}}'s back aerial overlaps {{SSBB|Mario}}'s up tilt, neither attack is cancelled, and both characters are hit by each other's attacks.
*If {{SSBB|Sonic}}'s back aerial overlaps {{SSBB|Mario}}'s up tilt, neither attack is cancelled, and both characters are hit by each other's attacks.


However, the hitboxes of aerial attacks can collide with normal projectiles, in which case the law of high and low priority functions. However, aerial attack animations cannot be canceled out, and will continue even if out-prioritised.
However, the hitboxes of aerial attacks '''can''' clank with projectiles. The aerial will suffer freeze frames based on the stronger move as described above, but then the aerial will continue. The projectile will be destroyed unless it deals more than 9% more than the aerial attack. In that case it is likely to hit the aerial user on the following frame.


For example:
For example:
*If Marth's fair collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (10% vs. 25%), his fair will not be canceled out, but it will fail to cancel out the Charge Shot. As a result, the collision action will occur, but Samus' Charge Shot will out-prioritise the forward aerial and hit Marth.
*If Marth's forward aerial collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (10% vs. 25%), his forward aerial will not be cancelled out, but it will fail to cancel out the Charge Shot. As a result, the collision action will occur, but Samus' Charge Shot will out-prioritise the forward aerial and hit Marth.
*However, if Ganondorf's fair collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (17% vs. 25%), his fair will cancel out the Charge Shot and Ganondorf will not be harmed.
*However, if Ganondorf's forward aerial collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (17% vs. 25%), his forward aerial will cancel out the Charge Shot and Ganondorf will not be harmed.
 
===Grabs===
Grabboxes are not bound by usual priority rules. Instead, in each game, they behave differently if a grab connects with an opponent at the same time the opponent strikes the grabber with a standard hitbox.
 
*In ''Smash 64'' and ''Melee'', the grab has full priority over the hitbox, with the grabber ignoring it entirely and hitting the opponent.
*In ''Brawl'', the grab has priority over the hitbox, but the hitbox still causes damage to the grabber, instead having them [[armor]] through it.
*In ''Smash 4'' and ''Ultimate'', hitboxes outprioritize grabs; in this situation, the grabber receives full damage and knockback from the standard hitbox, while the attacker is [[grab release]]d and takes 3% damage (or more if the grab came from a special move and the grab itself dealt damage, like the beginning of [[Falcon Dive]]). In ''Ultimate'', however, a select few attacks' hitboxes are coded to be outprioritized by grabs, with the grabber taking damage but armoring through the attack like in ''Brawl''; this is the case for {{SSBU|Sonic}}'s [[Homing Attack]], [[Spin Dash]], and [[Spin Charge]], and more notably {{SSBU|Banjo & Kazooie}}'s [[Wonderwing]] (which also causes the grabber to take 0.25× damage from the hitbox).
 
Likewise, if both characters attempt to grab each other at the same time, the situation is resolved differently in each game. In ''Smash 64'', ''Melee'', and ''Brawl'', this is determined by [[port priority]], with the character in the lower port always getting the grab. In ''Smash 4'', port priority is no longer a factor, with either character having an equally [[random]] chance to get the grab instead. ''Ultimate'' resolves both quirks by simply causing both grabs to cancel each other out, akin to a [[clang]]. This property is known as '''grab parrying''' by the in-game [[tip]]s, and results in both characters taking 1% damage and performing their rebound animation (unless they are in the air, where their grab release animation is used instead). The exact timing of when this can happen is specific to every animation of every character, and may even be assigned to actions that are not grabs.


===Exceptions===
==Exceptions to normal priority==
These attacks are as follows:
===Transcendent priority===
*Meta Knight - [[Mach Tornado]] and [[Drill Rush]] (both grounded and airborne), glide attack
'''Transcendent priority''' (also known as '''transcending priority''') refers to hitboxes that cannot clank with other hitboxes, meaning they won't cancel out, or be cancelled out by, other hitboxes, even other transcendent hitboxes.
*{{SSBB|Olimar}} - '''all Pikmin based attacks'''
*{{SSBB|Zero Suit Samus}} - neutral air, up smash* (second hitbox only)
*{{SSBB|Ness}} - up smash, down smash
*{{SSBB|Fox}} - [[Fox Illusion]]
*{{SSBB|Falco}} - [[Falco Phantasm]]


'''*'''The second hitbox of Zero Suit Samus' up smash behaves like an aerial. It may be out-prioritised by another character's aerial, but the u-smash's animation and subsequent hitboxes cannot be cancelled.
Transcendent grounded moves cannot clank with other grounded moves, meaning that they are more prone to trading. They are also unable to cancel out projectiles.


The hitboxes of the above attacks can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks regardless of if they're ground or aerial attacks. When such a collision occurs, the clash bubble will appear and the outcome will follow the law of high and low priority. However, airborne attacks cannot be cancelled out, including airborne special moves. Thus, while the results of a collision will follow the law of high and low priority, the appearance of such a collision will differ to that of two colliding ground attacks.
Transcendent projectiles will go through other projectiles as if they're not there, and can't clank with aerials or grounded moves (meaning that they will generally hit the opponent if the opponent attempts to clank).


If one of the above ground attacks collides with an aerial, or one of the above aerials collides with a ground attack, and the ground attack is below the priority range of the aerial, the ground attack will be cancelled and the airborne attack can damage the wielder of the ground attack. If the two hitboxes are within the priority range, the ground attack will be cancelled out, and, since it is an aerial attack, the animation of the airborne attack will persist. However, the airborne hitbox becomes harmless, and the wielder of the ground attack will not at all be knocked or damaged by the airborne hitbox, regardless of whether it connects or not.
In ''Smash 64'', transcendent priority only existed for certain projectiles (such as {{SSB|Fox}}'s {{b|Blaster|Fox}}) but from ''Melee'' onward, it could exist for any kind of attack.


For example:
For example:
*If King's Dedede up tilt collides with Meta Knight's glide attack (12% vs. 13%), Dedede's up tilt will be canceled out, but he will not be harmed, even if the hitbox of Meta Knight's glide attack contacts King Dedede's body.
*''Brawl'' Meta Knight's forward smash is transcendent. If a pair of Meta Knights use their forward smash at the same time, and the forward smash hitboxes overlap each other, they will not collide, and their animations and damaging properties will continue until the attack ends naturally. If the two Meta Knights are close enough together, each will be hit by the other's forward smash.
*Lucas' forward smash is transcendent. If Donkey Kong's forward smash overlaps with Lucas' forward smash (20% vs. 15%), Lucas' forward smash will go through Donkey Kong's without colliding. If its hitboxes touch Donkey Kong, he will receive damage and knockback from Lucas' forward smash, while Lucas will be hit by Donkey Kong's forward smash as well since normal hitboxes will go through transcendent hitboxes.
*As of version 9.0.0, many [[rapid jab]]s and their finishers in ''[[Ultimate]]'' are transcendent. This is to ensure that the final hit will connect without the fear of an opponent canceling the move with their own [[jab]].
 
====Attacks with transcendent priority====
{{incomplete|Very likely not complete}}
{| class="wikitable sortable" width=62%
|-
!width=8%|Character
!width=50%|Move
!width=5%|Games
|-
|[[Banjo]] & [[Kazooie]]
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Bayonetta]]
|[[Heel Slide]] and [[After Burner Kick]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Bullet Arts]] on all applicable moves
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|All smash attacks (aerial-only hitbox)
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Bowser]]
|[[Fire Breath]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|[[Koopa Klaw]] (the attack hitbox, not the grab)
|-
|Fire Shot
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Forward smash]] (clean hitbox only)
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Captain Falcon]]
|[[Falcon Punch]]
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSBB|Charizard}}
|Up smash
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Chrom]]
|[[Flare Blade]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Double-Edge Dance]]
|-
|[[Cloud]]
|Limit Break [[Blade Beam]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Corrin]]
|Forward smash (charging portion)
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Diddy Kong]]
|Dash attack
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Banana Peel (move)|Banana Peel]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Donkey Kong]]
|[[Hand Slap]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Dr. Mario]]
|Forward smash (sweetspot only)
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Super Sheet]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Dr. Tornado]] (all hitboxes except the final hit in ''Melee'', only the final hit in ''Smash 4'')
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Falco]]
|[[Blaster]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Reflector]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Fox]]
|[[Blaster]]
|{{GameIcon|SSB}}{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Fox Illusion]] (only when airborne)
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Ganondorf]]
|[[Down aerial]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Warlock Punch|Warlock Blade]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Warlock Thrust (sourspot only)
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Hero]]
|[[Zap / Zapple / Kazap]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Woosh]]
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Ice Climbers]]
|[[Squall Hammer]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Blizzard]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=5|[[Ike]]
|Up smash
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|Down smash
|-
|All aerial attacks
|-
|[[Eruption]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Aether]] (all hitboxes except the initial one in ''Brawl'', all hitboxes in ''SSB4'' and ''Ultimate'')
|-
|rowspan=1|{{SSBU|Incineroar}}
|[[Darkest Lariat]]
|rowspan=1|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBB|Ivysaur}}
|Neutral attack
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Bullet Seed]]
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=1|[[Joker]]
|[[Gun / Gun Special]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=1|[[Kazuya]]
|[[Wind God Fist|Electric Wind God Fist]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=4|[[King Dedede]]
|All smash attacks
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|Neutral aerial
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Super Dedede Jump]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Jet Hammer]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Kirby]]
|Dash attack
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|{{b|Hammer|move}} (grounded only in ''Melee'', grounded and aerial from ''Brawl'' onwards)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Final Cutter]] (projectile only in ''Melee'', sword strike and projectile from ''Brawl'' onwards)
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Link]]
|[[Grab aerial]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|[[Spin Attack]] (only initial hitbox for grounded version from ''Brawl'' onwards)
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Lucario]]
|Forward smash (sweetspot only in ''Brawl'', late hitbox only in ''Smash 4'')
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Aura Sphere]] (charging hitbox)
|-
|[[Force Palm]] (projectile portion)
|rowspan=7|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=6|{{SSBB|Lucas}}
|Forward smash
|-
|Down smash
|-
|Neutral aerial
|-
|[[Back aerial]] (sweetspot only)
|-
|[[PK Freeze]]
|-
|[[PSI Magnet]]
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Lucina]]
|[[Shield Breaker]]
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Dancing Blade]]
|-
|[[Dolphin Slash]]
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Mario]]
|Forward smash (sweetspot only)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Cape]]
|-
|[[Mario Tornado]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Marth]]
|[[Shield Breaker]]
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Dancing Blade]]
|-
|[[Dolphin Slash]]
|-
|rowspan=4|{{SSBB|Meta Knight}}
|All standard attacks except dash attack, [[glide attack]], and [[floor attack]] (trip)
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Shuttle Loop]]
|-
|[[Dimensional Cape]]
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBM|Mewtwo}}
|Forward smash (sweetspot only)
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|Down smash
|-
|[[Disable]]
|-
|rowspan=4|{{SSB4|Mii Gunner}}
|[[Forward aerial]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Laser Blaze]]
|-
|Up aerial
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|Forward smash
|-
|[[Min Min]]
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSBB|Mr. Game & Watch}}
|[[Chef]] (frying pan hitbox)
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Mythra]]
|[[Lightning Buster]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Photon Edge]]
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Ness]]
|Dash attack
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[PK Flash]]
|-
|[[PK Thunder]] (projectile only)
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Olimar]]
|Down smash (sweetspot only)
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|All Pikmin based aerials
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSB4|Palutena}}
|All smash attacks
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Down aerial
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBB|Peach}}
|Up tilt
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|Up smash (sourspot only)
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBM|Pichu}}
|Forward smash
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|{{b|Thunder|Pokémon}}
|-
|rowspan=5|[[Pikachu]]
|Neutral attack
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|Forward smash (sweetspot only in ''Brawl'')
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Up smash (late hitbox only)
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Down smash
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Thunder
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBU|Piranha Plant}}
|[[Ptooie]]
|rowspan=9|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Rapid jab]]
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|-
|[[Pyra]]
|[[Flame Nova]] (final hit only)
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Richter]]
|[[Rapid jab]]
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBU|Ridley}}
|Forward smash
|-
|[[Rapid jab]]
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBB|R.O.B.}}
|[[Robo Beam]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Arm Rotor]]
|-
|rowspan=6|[[Robin]]
|[[Rapid jab]]
|rowspan=4|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|-
|[[Arcfire]] (pillar)
|-
|[[Neutral aerial]] (Bronze)
|-
|All smash attacks (Levin)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|All late aerials (Levin)
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Roy]]
|[[Flare Blade]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Double-Edge Dance]]
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Blazer]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSB4|Ryu}}
|[[Shoryuken]] (all versions)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Focus Attack (fist hitbox only)
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBM|Samus}}
|Grab aerial
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|[[Bomb]]
|{{GameIcon|SSB}}
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Sheik]]
|[[Needle Storm]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Chain]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|[[Vanish]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Bouncing Fish]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Shulk}}
|Up smash
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Simon]]
|[[Rapid jab]]
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|-
|rowspan=4|[[Snake]]
|Forward smash
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Hand Grenade]] (explosion)
|-
|[[C4]]
|-
|Down smash
|rowspan=1|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=1|[[Squirtle]]
|Up smash (launcher hit only)
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=1|[[Terry]]
|[[Burning Knuckle / Crack Shoot]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSBB|Toon Link}}
|Spin Attack (all hits except final grounded hit)
|rowspan=1|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Wario]]
|Down aerial (final hit only)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Wario Waft]]
|-
|Forward smash
|rowspan=1|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Wolf]]
|{{b|Blaster|Wolf}}
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|Forward tilt (only the highest priority hitboxes)
|-
|Up tilt (In ''Brawl'', only the lowest priority hitbox of the clean hit. In ''Ultimate'', only the highest priority hitbox of the clean hit)
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBM|Young Link}}
|Grab aerial
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|Spin Attack (airborne only)
|-
|[[Rapid jab]] finisher
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=15|[[Zelda]]
|Neutral attack
|rowspan=5|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Forward tilt
|-
|Up tilt
|-
|Dash attack
|-
|Forward smash
|-
|Up smash (except final hitbox)
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Down smash
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|Neutral aerial
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Forward aerial (sweetspot only in ''Smash 4'')
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Back aerial (sweetspot only in ''Smash 4'')
|-
|Up aerial
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|Down aerial (sourspot only)
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Nayru's Love]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Din's Fire]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}
|-
|[[Farore's Wind]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|rowspan=3|[[Zero Suit Samus]]
|Dash attack
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|Down smash
|-
|[[Flip Jump]] (kick)
|rowspan=1|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|}
 
===Moves that cannot rebound===
{{incomplete|Needs a complete list of moves for every game}}
 
Some attacks cannot ever rebound (also known as '''trampling'''); in other words, they will continue their animations as if they did not collide at all, but the hitbox will count as blocked for other clanking character, as long as the trampling move was not more than 9% stronger. However, if the trampling move has multiple hits, then later hits can still connect as clanking blocks only the current hit. This can be advantageous for moves with this property that are either multihitting in nature, very fast, or very damaging (which would increase the length and therefore vulnerability of the rebounding animation), but is disadvantageous if the move's endlag is longer than the length of the opponent's freeze frames plus rebounding animation. Additionally, two moves that cannot rebound that are used against each other are more prone to damaging both characters instead of cancelling out their hitboxes.
 
Strangely in ''Brawl'', the hitbox flag which should determine whether a move can rebound or not is discarded as soon as the hitbox is generated. This means that moves in ''Brawl'' which are not supposed to rebound (such as {{mvsub|Jigglypuff|SSBB|dash attack|poss=y}}) will rebound anyway. This was most likely a coding error.
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" width=47%
|-
!width=8%|Character
!width=35%|Move
!width=5%|Games
|-
|{{SSB4|Bayonetta}}
|All [[smash attack]]s (except the aerial-only hitbox in ''Ultimate'')
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSB4|Bowser}}
|[[Forward smash]] (late)
|-
|[[Up smash]] (first hit only)
|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSB4|Cloud}}
|[[Limit Break]] [[Cross Slash]]
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Climhazzard]] (regular and Limit Break version, first hit only)
|-
|[[Finishing Touch]]
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Falco]]
|Forward smash
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}**
|-
|[[Falco Phantasm]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|rowspan=2|[[Fox]]
|Forward smash
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|[[Fox Illusion]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|{{SSBU|Hero}}
|Forward tilt (hit 1)
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Ike}}
|[[Dash attack]] (early)
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Jigglypuff]]
|Dash attack
|{{GameIcon|SSBM}}{{GameIcon|SSBB}}*{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSB4|Little Mac}}
|[[Neutral attack]]
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|All [[tilt attack]]s
|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Lucario}}
|[[Force Palm]] (projectile portion)
|rowspan=5|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Mewtwo}}
|Neutral attack (infinite)
|-
|{{SSB4|Mii Brawler}}
|[[Shot Put]]
|-
|{{SSB4|Mii Swordfighter}}
|[[Gale Strike]]
|-
|{{SSB4|Palutena}}
|All tilt attacks
|-
|{{SSBU|Richter}}
|[[Forward tilt]]
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSB4|Ryu}}
|Forward tilt (held, both hits)
|rowspan=3|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|[[Tatsumaki Senpukyaku]] (all versions)
|-
|[[Focus Attack]] (arm hitbox)
|-
|{{SSBU|Simon}}
|Forward tilt
|{{GameIcon|SSBU}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Zero Suit Samus}}
|[[Up tilt]] (both hits)
|rowspan=2|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|{{SSB4|Zelda}}
|[[Farore's Wind]] (first hit, grounded)
|}
<nowiki>*</nowiki> Should not rebound but rebounds anyway, due to the anti-rebound flag not working properly in ''Brawl''.
 
<nowiki>**</nowiki> Does not rebound in later games, but the effect is nullified by the move gaining transcendent priority.
 
===Considered both airborne and grounded===
{{incomplete|Needs data on non-Brawl games}}
 
{| class="wikitable sortable" width=47%
|-
!width=8%|Character
!width=35%|Move
!width=4%|Games
|-
|{{SSBB|Falco}}
|[[Falco Phantasm]]
|rowspan=10|{{GameIcon|SSBB}}
|-
|{{SSBB|Fox}}
|[[Fox Illusion]]
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSBB|Meta Knight}}
|[[Mach Tornado]] (both grounded and airborne)
|-
|[[Drill Rush]] (both grounded and airborne)
|-
|[[Glide attack]]
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBB|Ness}}
|Up smash
|-
|[[Down smash]]
|-
|{{SSBB|Olimar}}
|All [[Pikmin (species)|Pikmin]]-based attacks
|-
|rowspan=2|{{SSBB|Zero Suit Samus}}
|[[Neutral aerial]]
|-
|[[Up smash]]* (second hitbox only)
|}


If the hitbox of a ground attack is above the priority range of a colliding airborne hitbox, both attack animations will persist, but the airborne hitbox will become harmless, while the ground attack is still able to damage. Thus, if the hitbox of the ground attack connects with the body of the character who used the airborne special, this character will take the damage and knockback of the ground attack. A notable example of a special move that can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks while airborne is {{SSBB|Meta Knight}}'s [[Mach Tornado]]. If performed on the ground (grounded), it can be canceled out, but if airborne, it cannot be canceled. Mach Tornado is a multi-hit move that deals 1% per hit during the main portion of the attack.
'''*'''The second hitbox of Zero Suit Samus' up smash behaves like an aerial. It may be out-prioritised by another character's aerial, but the up smash's animation and subsequent hitboxes cannot be cancelled.


For example:
The hitboxes of the above attacks can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks regardless of if they're ground or aerial attacks. When such a collision occurs, the clash bubble will appear and the outcome will follow the law of high and low priority. However, airborne attacks cannot be cancelled out, including airborne special moves. Thus, while the results of a collision will follow the law of high and low priority, the appearance of such a collision will differ to that of two colliding ground attacks.
*If Captain Falcon's f-tilt collides with a hitbox of Meta Knight's grounded Mach Tornado (10% vs. 1%), the f-tilt will collide with, and cancel out the Mach Tornado.
*If the Mach Tornado is airborne, Captain Falcon's f-tilt can cancel one of its hitboxes, but cannot cancel the hitboxes that follow. Mach Tornado cannot cancel his f-tilt either, because it is too weak (10% vs. 1%). However, unless the hitbox of Captain Falcon's f-tilt connects with Meta Knight's body, the Mach Tornado will continue and can afterwards damage Captain Falcon, despite the fact that his f-tilt out-prioritised it.


==Transcendent priority==
If one of the above ground attacks collides with an aerial, or one of the above aerials collides with a ground attack, and the ground attack is below the priority range of the aerial, the ground attack will be cancelled and the airborne attack can damage the wielder of the ground attack. If the two hitboxes are within the priority range, the ground attack will be cancelled out, and, since it is an aerial attack, the animation of the airborne attack will persist. However, the airborne hitbox becomes harmless, and the wielder of the ground attack will not at all be knocked or damaged by the airborne hitbox, regardless of whether it connects or not.
'''Transcendent priority''' (also known as '''transcending priority''') describes the set of rules that apply to transcendent attack hitboxes, as distinct from ''normal'' attack hitboxes. In ''Smash Bros.'' games, particular attacks and hitboxes are assigned transcendent priority by the game designers; the property is not inherent of any attack type or character. However, it should be noted that all of {{SSBB|Meta Knight}}'s standard attacks, except dash attack, are transcendent. Transcendent hitboxes ignore the rules of normal priority: they cannot collide with, clash with, cancel out, or be cancelled out by other hitboxes.  


For example:
For example:
*Meta Knight's f-smash is transcendent. If a pair of Meta Knights use their f-smash at the same time, and the f-smash hitboxes overlap each other, they will not collide, and their animations and damaging properties will continue until the attack ends naturally. If the two Meta Knights are close enough together, each will be hit by the other's f-smash.
*If King's Dedede up tilt collides with Meta Knight's glide attack (13% vs. 13%), Dedede's up tilt will be cancelled out, but he will not be harmed, even if the hitbox of Meta Knight's glide attack contacts King Dedede's body.
*Lucas' f-smash is transcendent. If Donkey Kong's f-smash overlaps with Lucas' f-smash (20% vs. 15%), Lucas' f-smash will go through Donkey Kong's without colliding. If its hitboxes touch Donkey Kong, he will receive damage and knockback from Lucas' f-smash, while Lucas will be hit by Donkey Kong's f-smash as well since normal hitboxes will go through transcendent hitboxes.


===In ''Melee''===
If the hitbox of a ground attack is above the priority range of a colliding airborne hitbox, both attack animations will persist, but the airborne hitbox will become harmless, while the ground attack is still able to damage. Thus, if the hitbox of the ground attack connects with the body of the character who used the airborne special, this character will take the damage and knockback of the ground attack. A notable example of a special move that can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks while airborne is {{SSBB|Meta Knight}}'s [[Mach Tornado]]. If performed on the ground (grounded), it can be cancelled out, but if airborne, it cannot be cancelled. Mach Tornado is a multi-hit move that deals 1% per hit during the main portion of the attack.


The following is a list of [[character]]'s attacks in ''Melee'' that contain hitboxes with transcendent priority.
For example:
 
*If Captain Falcon's forward tilt collides with a hitbox of Meta Knight's grounded Mach Tornado (10% vs. 1%), the forward tilt will collide with, and cancel out the Mach Tornado.
*{{SSBM|Bowser}} - [[Fire Breath]], [[Koopa Klaw]] (the attack hitbox, not the grab)
*If the Mach Tornado is airborne, Captain Falcon's forward tilt can cancel one of its hitboxes, but cannot cancel the hitboxes that follow. Mach Tornado cannot cancel his forward tilt either, because it is too weak (10% vs. 1%). However, unless the hitbox of Captain Falcon's forward tilt connects with Meta Knight's body, the Mach Tornado will continue and can afterwards damage Captain Falcon, despite the fact that his forward tilt out-prioritised it.
*{{SSBM|Donkey Kong}} - [[Hand Slap]]
*{{SSBM|Dr. Mario}} - [[Super Sheet]], [[Dr. Tornado]] (all hitboxes but the final hit)
*{{SSBM|Falco}} - [[Blaster]]
*{{SSBM|Fox}} - [[Blaster]]
*{{SSBM|Ganondorf}} - Down air
*{{SSBM|Ice Climbers}} - [[Blizzard]]
*{{SSBM|Kirby}} - [[Hammer]] (grounded only), [[Final Cutter]] (projectile only), dash attack
*{{SSBM|Link}} - [[Spin Attack]], zair
*{{SSBM|Mario}} - [[Cape]], [[Mario Tornado]], forward smash (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBM|Marth}} - [[Shield Breaker]], [[Dancing Blade]], [[Dolphin Slash]]
*{{SSBM|Mewtwo}} - [[Disable]], forward smash (sweetspot only), down smash
*{{SSBM|Ness}} - [[PK Flash]], [[PK Thunder]] (projectile only)
*{{SSBM|Pichu}} - {{b|Thunder|Pokémon}}, forward smash
*{{SSBM|Pikachu}} - {{b|Thunder|Pokémon}}, forward smash, down smash
*{{SSBM|Roy}} - [[Flare Blade]], [[Blazer]]
*{{SSBM|Samus}} - Zair
*{{SSBM|Young Link}} - [[Spin Attack]] (airborne only), zair
*{{SSBM|Zelda}} - [[Nayru's Love]], [[Din's Fire]], Neutral attack, forward tilt, up tilt, dash attack, forward smash, down smash, neutral air, forward air, back air, up air,


===In ''Brawl''===
The following is a list of [[character]]'s attacks in ''Brawl'' that contain hitboxes with transcendent priority. Note that while there are standard aerials with transcendent priority, this only comes into effect if they collide with a projectile or one of the few attacks containing hitboxes that can collide with airborne attacks such as the Mach Tornado. This is because the hitboxes of aerials cannot collide with the hitboxes of standard ground attacks and other aerial attacks.


*{{SSBB|Charizard}} - Up smash
===Non-character objects with complex animations===
*{{SSBB|Diddy Kong}} - Dash attack
A select few attacks in ''SSB4'' will collide with other attacks, but can only nullify projectiles within the 9% range and will always lose a trade with regular hitboxes regardless of the 9% rule, much like a grab. For example, Bayonetta's up smash cannot be used as effectively as other up smashes to hit opponents in the air, as any hitbox that comes into contact with it will render the up smash inert, and if the hitbox is close enough to Bayonetta at the moment of colliding, only Bayonetta will take damage. However, if the opposing hitbox is a projectile or another attack with this property (i.e. Lucario's [[Aura Sphere]] or another Bayonetta's up smash), both characters will take damage as if one of them used an aerial hitbox (but the collision bubble will still appear). The overarching pattern among these attacks is that they are character-specific props that feature complex animations beyond simply moving or rotating, and thus it is possible (but not proven) that the game short-sightedly does not attempt to make them capable of trading with attacks from other animating elements (i.e. characters).
*{{SSBB|Falco}} - [[Blaster]], [[Reflector]]
*{{SSBB|Fox}} - [[Blaster]]
*{{SSBB|Ganondorf}} - Down air
*{{SSBB|Ice Climbers}} - [[Squall Hammer]], [[Blizzard]]
*{{SSBB|Ike}} - [[Eruption]], [[Aether]] (all but the initial hitbox), up smash, down smash, '''all aerials'''
*{{SSBB|Ivysaur}} - [[Bullet Seed]], neutral attack
*{{SSBB|King Dedede}} - [[Jet Hammer]], [[Super Dedede Jump]], '''all smashes''', neutral air
*{{SSBB|Kirby}} - [[Hammer]] (both grounded and airborne), [[Final Cutter]] (both the sword strike and projectile)
*{{SSBB|Link}} - [[Spin Attack]] (only initial hitbox)
*{{SSBB|Lucario}} - [[Force Palm]] (the projectile portion), forward smash (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBB|Lucas}} - [[PK Freeze]], [[PSI Magnet]], forward smash, down smash, neutral air, back air (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBB|Mario}} - [[Cape]], forward smash (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBB|Marth}} - [[Shield Breaker]], [[Dancing Blade]], [[Dolphin Slash]]
*{{SSBB|Meta Knight}} - [[Dimensional Cape]], [[Shuttle Loop]], '''all standard attacks except dash attack and glide attack'''
*{{SSBB|Mr. Game & Watch}} - [[Chef]] (frying pan only, not the projectiles)
*{{SSBB|Ness}} - [[PK Flash]], dash attack
*{{SSBB|Peach}} - Up smash (sourspot only), Up tilt
*{{SSBB|Olimar}} - Down smash (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBB|Pikachu}} - {{b|Thunder|Pokémon}}, neutral attack, down smash, forward smash (sweetspot only)
*{{SSBB|R.O.B.}} - [[Robo Beam]], [[Arm Rotor]]
*{{SSBB|Sheik}} - [[Needle Storm]], [[Chain]], [[Vanish]]
*{{SSBB|Snake}} - Forward smash
*{{SSBB|Squirtle}} - Up smash
*{{SSBB|Sonic}} - Neutral air
*{{SSBB|Toon Link}} - [[Spin Attack]]
*{{SSBB|Wario}} - [[Wario Waft]], down air (final hit only), Forward Smash
*{{SSBB|Wolf}} - [[Blaster]]
*{{SSBB|Zelda}} - [[Nayru's Love]], [[Farore's Wind]], neutral attack, forward tilt, up tilt, dash attack, forward smash, up smash (all but the final hitbox), neutral air, up air
*{{SSBB|Zero Suit Samus}} - Dash attack, down smash


==Misconceptions==
Because they cannot override regular hitboxes and it is not always clear to players whether a hitbox is attached to a character or a prop, these attacks are often perceived as having "low priority", and some moveset repositories such as [[Kurogane Hammer]] list them under such term.
It is a common misconception that attacks are given priority independent of the damage they deal - for example, many people consider attacks such as Captain Falcon's [[Raptor Boost]], to have "low priority". However, such attacks simply seem to have "high" or "low" priority relative to the favorability of their hitboxes - attacks with small or late hitboxes often appear to get "out-prioritised" by other attacks, when, in reality, the wielders of these hitboxes are often hit by their opponents' before they are able to connect with them.


Characters' whole movesets are also often described as having "good" or "bad" priority, such as Captain Falcon's and {{SSBB|Sonic}}'s movesets having "low" priority, and sword attacks having "high" priority. Again, this is technically incorrect, because, with the exception of transcendent priority, priority itself is not a character-specific independent value. However, if a character's most frequently used moves deal low damage, and are hence often out-prioritised by other characters' common moves, his or her moveset will appear to have "worse priority" than other characters' movesets. A similar problem occurs with characters with small hitbox attacks (Captain Falcon has such a problem with some of his attacks), which means opposing attacks with better range will strike hurtboxes before their attacks finish, resulting in having "lower" priority because the attacks don't actually connect. Most characters, including Sonic and Captain Falcon, as well as sword attacks, deal similar damage compared to each other, and therefore all have similar levels of priority.
{| class="wikitable sortable" width=47%
|-
!width=8%|Character
!width=35%|Move
!width=4%|Games
|-
|{{SSB4|Bayonetta}}
|All smash attacks (except for first hit of [[down smash]])
|rowspan=6|{{GameIcon|SSB4}}
|-
|rowspan=3|{{SSB4|Corrin}}
|Forward smash (non-[[charge|charging]] portion)
|-
|[[Dragon Fang Shot]] (both portions)
|-
|[[Dragon Lunge]] (initial lunge only)
|-
|{{SSB4|Olimar}}
|All [[Pikmin (species)|Pikmin]]-based attacks
|-
|{{SSB4|Villager}}
|[[Timber]] (tree hitboxes only, both sprouting and falling)
|}


==Gallery==
==Gallery==
<gallery widths="250">
<gallery widths="250">
File:Priority1.jpg | Marth's f-smash about to collide with Ike's f-smash.
File:Priority1.jpg | Marth's forward smash about to collide with Ike's forward smash.
File:Priority2.jpg | Since both colliding hitboxes are within the priority range, they clash and cancel each other out.
File:Priority2.jpg | Since both colliding hitboxes are within the priority range, they clash and cancel each other out.
File:Priority3.jpg | Marth's f-smash about to collide with Ganondorf's f-smash.
File:Priority3.jpg | Marth's forward smash about to collide with Ganondorf's forward smash.
File:Priority4.jpg | Since the hitbox of Ganondorf's f-smash is above the priority range of the hitbox of Marth's un-tipped f-smash, Marth's f-smash is canceled out.
File:Priority4.jpg | Since the hitbox of Ganondorf's forward smash is above the priority range of the hitbox of Marth's un-tipped forward smash, Marth's forward smash is cancelled out.
File:Priority5.jpg | Captain Falcon's f-smash about to collide with Ness' up tilt.
File:Priority5.jpg | Captain Falcon's forward smash about to collide with Ness' up tilt.
File:Priority6.jpg | Since the hitbox of Captain Falcon's f-smash is above the priority range of the hitbox of Ness' up tilt, Ness' up tilt is canceled out.
File:Priority6.jpg | Since the hitbox of Captain Falcon's forward smash is above the priority range of the hitbox of Ness' up tilt, Ness' up tilt is cancelled out.
File:Priority7.jpg | Bowser's f-smash about to collide with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot.
File:Priority7.jpg | Bowser's forward smash about to collide with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot.
File:Priority8.jpg | Since the second hitbox of Bowser's f-smash is within the priority range of Samus' fully charged Charge Shot, they clash, and each is cancelled out.
File:Priority8.jpg | Since the second hitbox of Bowser's forward smash is within the priority range of Samus' fully charged Charge Shot, they clash, and each is cancelled out.
File:Priority9.jpg | Captain Falcon's f-tilt about to collide with a grounded Mach Tornado.
File:Priority9.jpg | Captain Falcon's forward tilt about to collide with a grounded Mach Tornado.
File:Priority10.jpg | Since the hitbox of Captain Falcon's f-tilt is above the priority range of Mach Tornado (excluding the final hit), Mach Tornado is canceled out.
File:Priority10.jpg | Since the hitbox of Captain Falcon's forward tilt is above the priority range of Mach Tornado (excluding the final hit), Mach Tornado is cancelled out.
File:Priority11.jpg | Captain Falcon's f-tilt collides with an airborne Mach Tornado.
File:Priority11.jpg | Captain Falcon's forward tilt collides with an airborne Mach Tornado.
File:Priority12.jpg | Since attacks that are airborne cannot be canceled out, neither attack is canceled out and both continue to progress through their entire attack duration.
File:Priority12.jpg | Since attacks that are airborne cannot be cancelled out, neither attack is cancelled out and both continue to progress through their entire attack duration.
</gallery>
</gallery>
 
==Trivia==
*In ''Melee'' and ''Ultimate'', a unique metallic sound effect can be heard when hitboxes with a [[slash]] effect clang with each other.
[[Category:Game physics]]
[[Category:Game physics]]
[[Category:Hitboxes]]
[[Category:Hitboxes]]

Latest revision as of 15:20, March 28, 2024

This article is about priority in relation to attacks. For controller slot priority, see Port priority.
The white "bubble" between Kirby and Pikachu's attacks indicates that two hitboxes have collided.

Priority is the system that governs how opposing attacks interact with each other in the Super Smash Bros. series. Most commonly, when the hitboxes of two characters' attacks collide with each other, they clank, freezing both in place for a moment. If the attacks are roughly equal in strength - the difference in damage is 9% or less - then both characters rebound from the impact and pause for a moment before they can do anything else. If one attack is much stronger than the other, it wins outright, and more often than not will continue on to strike the enemy stuck rebounding. The most common exception is aerial attacks, which usually can clank with projectiles, but not with ground attacks or other aerials, and cannot rebound at all. Certain hitboxes are also marked as being "cannot clank" or "cannot rebound", affecting their ability to cancel out (and be cancelled out by) opposing moves.

While the effects of priority are calculated based on individual hitboxes, the results are applied to the attacker as a whole. For example, if one hitbox clanks with an enemy attack, the entire move clanks, regardless of how many other hitboxes would not have clanked. In addition, an attack that clanks is still dangerous to bystanders until rebound begins, even if it was entirely outprioritized by the opposing attack.

The term "priority" is often informally used to describe a move's general ability to beat other moves, due to factors such as its damage output, hitbox position, attack speed, non-vulnerable hurtboxes, or other properties.

Normal priority[edit]

Normal priority describes the set of rules that apply to normal attack hitboxes, that is, any attack hitbox that does not have a special property such as transcendent or trample. As such, the majority of standard attacks, aerials, special attacks, and projectiles contain hitboxes with normal priority.

Ground attacks[edit]

When two ground attack hitboxes overlap, they will clank. This collision is signified by a white "bubble", and in Melee, a distinct "ting" sound, as if swords are clanging, is also heard. If two actual swords clank, such as Link and Marth's blades, a more realistic "ting" sound is heard. If the stronger hitbox (by %) deals more than 9% (the "priority range") more than the weaker hitbox, the stronger move will continue as normal and the weaker move will end, with the character going into rebound. If both hitboxes deal within 9% of each other, both moves will end and both characters will go into rebound. (note that in the original Super Smash Bros., the priority range is instead 10%). This comparison happens after most damage multipliers but before the 1v1 multiplier in Ultimate.

In Melee, the weaker hitbox won't hit the opponent if it clanks. However, the stronger hit can still hit the user of the weaker hit immediately, or on the following frames. In Ultimate, however, neither player can be hit by the clanking opponent on the frame that the clank occurs. If the stronger move continues, it can hit the clanking opponent on the following frame, assuming the move still has a hitbox on that frame.

For example:

  • In Brawl, if Marth's un-tipped forward smash collides with Ike's forward smash (14% vs. 22%), both moves will end and both characters will go through rebound.
  • However, if Marth's un-tipped forward smash collides with Ganondorf's forward smash (14% vs. 24%), Ganondorf's forward smash will continue and may hit Marth as Marth rebounds.
  • If Captain Falcon's forward smash collides with Ness' up tilt (19% vs. 7%), Captain Falcon's forward smash will continue and hit Ness as Ness starts to rebound.

Rebound[edit]

Depending on the relative strength of the ground moves, either one or both characters will go through rebound.

First, a rebounding character will suffer freeze frames equal to the hitlag of the stronger attack (by %). This is true whether the user of the stronger attack goes through rebound or not. During these freeze frames, all hitboxes are disabled. This takes into account all hitlag modifiers, with one exception: the electric modifier is applied based on whether the character's hitbox has the electric effect. So if Pichu's ftilt clanks with Chrom's ftilt, Chrom will be frozen for 13 frames (typical for Chrom ftilt, which is the stronger move), but Pichu will be frozen for 19 frames (equivalent to hitlag that Chrom's ftilt would have if it had the electric effect).

After the freeze frames are over, characters go through a unique rebound animation.

Prior to Ultimate, the length of the rebound animation increased proportionately to the damage each hitbox would have dealt. This meant that the fighter that performed the weaker attack would get out of rebound before the other and have frame advantage. The calculation for rebound duration depends on the game, but "R" always means rebound frames and "d" always means damage dealt, rounded down. In Melee, the calculation is roughly R=Roundup(0.559*(d+10)), except for Dr. Mario, for which it is R=Roundup(0.615*(d+10)) instead. In Smash 4, the calculation is R=Floor((d*15/8)+7.5).

In Ultimate, the length of the rebound animation for both characters is based on the damage dealt by the stronger hitbox (again, regardless of whether the user of the stronger move is going through rebound or not). It uses the same formula as Smash 4, although the maximum rebound is 58 frames.

Overall, this means that, in Ultimate, if both characters go through rebound they will be actionable on the same frame. The exception is if one character clanked using an electric move; that character will be actionable a bit later than the opponent due to the extra freeze frames.

If only one character goes through rebound, they will often be hit by the opponent's move as it continues. However, this is not necessarily the case if the original move was sufficiently disjointed or if the clank happens on the last frame of the opponent's hitbox. In that case the opponent will suffer the end lag of their attack whereas the character will suffer the freeze frames plus rebound animation, with the length of both based on the opponent's move.

Projectiles[edit]

Similar rules apply when ground attack hitboxes overlap normal projectile hitboxes. If the ground move deals more than 9% more than the projectile, the projectile is destroyed and the ground move continues uninterrupted. If the two moves deal within 9% of each other, the projectile is destroyed and the ground move is canceled into rebound. If the projectile deals at least 9% more than the ground hitbox, the ground move is canceled into rebound and the projectile continues (usually hitting the opponent on the following frame).

Similarly, if two projectiles collide, the projectiles will clank and the weaker projectile will be destroyed. The stronger projectile will either continue or also be destroyed depending on whether it does at least 9% more than the weaker projectile.

Note that there are some projectiles that don't get destroyed by clanking. However, their hitboxes are generally disabled for the character or object that clanked with them.

For example:

  • Marth's un-tipped forward smash is out-prioritised by Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (14% vs. 25%).
  • However, if the second hitbox of Bowser's forward smash collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot, they will cancel each other out (23% vs. 25%).

While most normal projectiles follow the rules of ground priority, Snake's Remote Missile, Diddy Kong's Peanut Popgun, and King Dedede's Waddle Dee Toss behave differently. While the 9% range does apply to Dedede's Gordo, its hitbox behaves like an airborne attack as it cannot be cancelled out. For example, if Captain Falcon's forward smash collides with a Gordo (19% vs. 23%), the clash bubble will appear, and the forward smash will be cancelled out while the Gordo is not. However, since both hitboxes are within the priority range, the Gordo will go right through Captain Falcon without harming him, and continue along its natural path. It will, however, still possess its damaging hitboxes, and can still harm any other character it happens to touch along its route.

Snake's Remote Missile has a damagable hitbox and behaves like a thrown item, such as a capsule. Hence, when opposing hitboxes collide with the Remote Missile, they will damage it instead of colliding with it. If the Remote Missile takes enough damage, it will be destroyed. The peanuts from Diddy Kong's Peanut Popgun behave the same way, but any colliding hitbox, even if it only deals 1%, will destroy the peanuts.

Aerial attacks[edit]

Different rules apply to the hitboxes of normal aerial attacks. When a normal aerial attack hitbox overlaps that of a normal ground attack or another normal aerial, the attacks do not clank. If an overlap between the hitboxes of two such attacks occurs, both will persist, irrespective of each other, and will damage their foes if they contact them.

For example:

  • If Sonic's back aerial overlaps Mario's up tilt, neither attack is cancelled, and both characters are hit by each other's attacks.

However, the hitboxes of aerial attacks can clank with projectiles. The aerial will suffer freeze frames based on the stronger move as described above, but then the aerial will continue. The projectile will be destroyed unless it deals more than 9% more than the aerial attack. In that case it is likely to hit the aerial user on the following frame.

For example:

  • If Marth's forward aerial collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (10% vs. 25%), his forward aerial will not be cancelled out, but it will fail to cancel out the Charge Shot. As a result, the collision action will occur, but Samus' Charge Shot will out-prioritise the forward aerial and hit Marth.
  • However, if Ganondorf's forward aerial collides with Samus' fully charged Charge Shot (17% vs. 25%), his forward aerial will cancel out the Charge Shot and Ganondorf will not be harmed.

Grabs[edit]

Grabboxes are not bound by usual priority rules. Instead, in each game, they behave differently if a grab connects with an opponent at the same time the opponent strikes the grabber with a standard hitbox.

  • In Smash 64 and Melee, the grab has full priority over the hitbox, with the grabber ignoring it entirely and hitting the opponent.
  • In Brawl, the grab has priority over the hitbox, but the hitbox still causes damage to the grabber, instead having them armor through it.
  • In Smash 4 and Ultimate, hitboxes outprioritize grabs; in this situation, the grabber receives full damage and knockback from the standard hitbox, while the attacker is grab released and takes 3% damage (or more if the grab came from a special move and the grab itself dealt damage, like the beginning of Falcon Dive). In Ultimate, however, a select few attacks' hitboxes are coded to be outprioritized by grabs, with the grabber taking damage but armoring through the attack like in Brawl; this is the case for Sonic's Homing Attack, Spin Dash, and Spin Charge, and more notably Banjo & Kazooie's Wonderwing (which also causes the grabber to take 0.25× damage from the hitbox).

Likewise, if both characters attempt to grab each other at the same time, the situation is resolved differently in each game. In Smash 64, Melee, and Brawl, this is determined by port priority, with the character in the lower port always getting the grab. In Smash 4, port priority is no longer a factor, with either character having an equally random chance to get the grab instead. Ultimate resolves both quirks by simply causing both grabs to cancel each other out, akin to a clang. This property is known as grab parrying by the in-game tips, and results in both characters taking 1% damage and performing their rebound animation (unless they are in the air, where their grab release animation is used instead). The exact timing of when this can happen is specific to every animation of every character, and may even be assigned to actions that are not grabs.

Exceptions to normal priority[edit]

Transcendent priority[edit]

Transcendent priority (also known as transcending priority) refers to hitboxes that cannot clank with other hitboxes, meaning they won't cancel out, or be cancelled out by, other hitboxes, even other transcendent hitboxes.

Transcendent grounded moves cannot clank with other grounded moves, meaning that they are more prone to trading. They are also unable to cancel out projectiles.

Transcendent projectiles will go through other projectiles as if they're not there, and can't clank with aerials or grounded moves (meaning that they will generally hit the opponent if the opponent attempts to clank).

In Smash 64, transcendent priority only existed for certain projectiles (such as Fox's Blaster) but from Melee onward, it could exist for any kind of attack.

For example:

  • Brawl Meta Knight's forward smash is transcendent. If a pair of Meta Knights use their forward smash at the same time, and the forward smash hitboxes overlap each other, they will not collide, and their animations and damaging properties will continue until the attack ends naturally. If the two Meta Knights are close enough together, each will be hit by the other's forward smash.
  • Lucas' forward smash is transcendent. If Donkey Kong's forward smash overlaps with Lucas' forward smash (20% vs. 15%), Lucas' forward smash will go through Donkey Kong's without colliding. If its hitboxes touch Donkey Kong, he will receive damage and knockback from Lucas' forward smash, while Lucas will be hit by Donkey Kong's forward smash as well since normal hitboxes will go through transcendent hitboxes.
  • As of version 9.0.0, many rapid jabs and their finishers in Ultimate are transcendent. This is to ensure that the final hit will connect without the fear of an opponent canceling the move with their own jab.

Attacks with transcendent priority[edit]

An icon for denoting incomplete things.
Character Move Games
Banjo & Kazooie Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Bayonetta Heel Slide and After Burner Kick Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Bullet Arts on all applicable moves
Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
All smash attacks (aerial-only hitbox)
Bowser Fire Breath Super Smash Bros. Melee
Koopa Klaw (the attack hitbox, not the grab)
Fire Shot Super Smash Bros. 4
Forward smash (clean hitbox only) Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Captain Falcon Falcon Punch Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Charizard Up smash Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Chrom Flare Blade Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Double-Edge Dance
Cloud Limit Break Blade Beam Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Corrin Forward smash (charging portion)
Diddy Kong Dash attack Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Banana Peel Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Donkey Kong Hand Slap Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Dr. Mario Forward smash (sweetspot only) Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Super Sheet Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Dr. Tornado (all hitboxes except the final hit in Melee, only the final hit in Smash 4)
Falco Blaster Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Reflector Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Fox Blaster Super Smash Bros.Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Fox Illusion (only when airborne) Super Smash Bros. Melee
Ganondorf Down aerial Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Warlock Blade Super Smash Bros. 4
Warlock Thrust (sourspot only)
Hero Zap / Zapple / Kazap Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Woosh
Ice Climbers Squall Hammer Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Blizzard Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. Brawl
Ike Up smash Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Down smash
All aerial attacks
Eruption Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Aether (all hitboxes except the initial one in Brawl, all hitboxes in SSB4 and Ultimate)
Incineroar Darkest Lariat Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Ivysaur Neutral attack Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Bullet Seed
Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Joker Gun / Gun Special Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Kazuya Electric Wind God Fist Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
King Dedede All smash attacks Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Neutral aerial Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. Ultimate
Super Dedede Jump Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Jet Hammer Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Kirby Dash attack Super Smash Bros. Melee
Hammer (grounded only in Melee, grounded and aerial from Brawl onwards) Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Final Cutter (projectile only in Melee, sword strike and projectile from Brawl onwards)
Link Grab aerial Super Smash Bros. Melee
Spin Attack (only initial hitbox for grounded version from Brawl onwards) Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Lucario Forward smash (sweetspot only in Brawl, late hitbox only in Smash 4) Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Aura Sphere (charging hitbox)
Force Palm (projectile portion) Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Lucas Forward smash
Down smash
Neutral aerial
Back aerial (sweetspot only)
PK Freeze
PSI Magnet
Lucina Shield Breaker Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Dancing Blade
Dolphin Slash
Mario Forward smash (sweetspot only) Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Cape
Mario Tornado Super Smash Bros. Melee
Marth Shield Breaker Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Dancing Blade
Dolphin Slash
Meta Knight All standard attacks except dash attack, glide attack, and floor attack (trip) Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Shuttle Loop
Dimensional Cape
Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Mewtwo Forward smash (sweetspot only) Super Smash Bros. Melee
Down smash
Disable
Mii Gunner Forward aerial Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Laser Blaze
Up aerial Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Forward smash
Min Min Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Mr. Game & Watch Chef (frying pan hitbox) Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Mythra Lightning Buster Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Photon Edge
Ness Dash attack Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. Brawl
PK Flash
PK Thunder (projectile only) Super Smash Bros. Melee
Olimar Down smash (sweetspot only) Super Smash Bros. Brawl
All Pikmin based aerials Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Palutena All smash attacks Super Smash Bros. 4
Down aerial
Peach Up tilt Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Up smash (sourspot only)
Pichu Forward smash Super Smash Bros. Melee
Thunder
Pikachu Neutral attack Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Forward smash (sweetspot only in Brawl) Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Up smash (late hitbox only) Super Smash Bros. 4
Down smash Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Thunder Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. Brawl
Piranha Plant Ptooie Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Rapid jab
Rapid jab finisher
Pyra Flame Nova (final hit only)
Richter Rapid jab
Rapid jab finisher
Ridley Forward smash
Rapid jab
Rapid jab finisher
R.O.B. Robo Beam Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Arm Rotor
Robin Rapid jab Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Rapid jab finisher
Arcfire (pillar)
Neutral aerial (Bronze)
All smash attacks (Levin) Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
All late aerials (Levin)
Roy Flare Blade Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Double-Edge Dance Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Blazer Super Smash Bros. Melee
Ryu Shoryuken (all versions) Super Smash Bros. 4
Focus Attack (fist hitbox only)
Samus Grab aerial Super Smash Bros. Melee
Bomb Super Smash Bros.
Sheik Needle Storm Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Chain Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Vanish Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Bouncing Fish Super Smash Bros. 4
Shulk Up smash
Simon Rapid jab Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Rapid jab finisher
Snake Forward smash Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. Ultimate
Hand Grenade (explosion)
C4
Down smash Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Squirtle Up smash (launcher hit only) Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. Ultimate
Terry Burning Knuckle / Crack Shoot Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Toon Link Spin Attack (all hits except final grounded hit) Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Wario Down aerial (final hit only) Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Wario Waft
Forward smash Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Wolf Blaster Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. Ultimate
Forward tilt (only the highest priority hitboxes)
Up tilt (In Brawl, only the lowest priority hitbox of the clean hit. In Ultimate, only the highest priority hitbox of the clean hit)
Young Link Grab aerial Super Smash Bros. Melee
Spin Attack (airborne only)
Rapid jab finisher Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Zelda Neutral attack Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Forward tilt
Up tilt
Dash attack
Forward smash
Up smash (except final hitbox) Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Down smash Super Smash Bros. Melee
Neutral aerial Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Forward aerial (sweetspot only in Smash 4) Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. 4
Back aerial (sweetspot only in Smash 4)
Up aerial Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Down aerial (sourspot only) Super Smash Bros. 4
Nayru's Love Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4
Din's Fire Super Smash Bros. Melee
Farore's Wind Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Zero Suit Samus Dash attack Super Smash Bros. BrawlSuper Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Down smash
Flip Jump (kick) Super Smash Bros. Brawl

Moves that cannot rebound[edit]

An icon for denoting incomplete things.

Some attacks cannot ever rebound (also known as trampling); in other words, they will continue their animations as if they did not collide at all, but the hitbox will count as blocked for other clanking character, as long as the trampling move was not more than 9% stronger. However, if the trampling move has multiple hits, then later hits can still connect as clanking blocks only the current hit. This can be advantageous for moves with this property that are either multihitting in nature, very fast, or very damaging (which would increase the length and therefore vulnerability of the rebounding animation), but is disadvantageous if the move's endlag is longer than the length of the opponent's freeze frames plus rebounding animation. Additionally, two moves that cannot rebound that are used against each other are more prone to damaging both characters instead of cancelling out their hitboxes.

Strangely in Brawl, the hitbox flag which should determine whether a move can rebound or not is discarded as soon as the hitbox is generated. This means that moves in Brawl which are not supposed to rebound (such as Jigglypuff's dash attack) will rebound anyway. This was most likely a coding error.

Character Move Games
Bayonetta All smash attacks (except the aerial-only hitbox in Ultimate) Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Bowser Forward smash (late)
Up smash (first hit only) Super Smash Bros. Brawl*Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Cloud Limit Break Cross Slash Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Climhazzard (regular and Limit Break version, first hit only)
Finishing Touch
Falco Forward smash Super Smash Bros. Melee**
Falco Phantasm Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. 4
Fox Forward smash Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. Brawl*Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Fox Illusion Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. 4
Hero Forward tilt (hit 1) Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Ike Dash attack (early) Super Smash Bros. 4
Jigglypuff Dash attack Super Smash Bros. MeleeSuper Smash Bros. Brawl*Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Little Mac Neutral attack Super Smash Bros. 4
All tilt attacks Super Smash Bros. 4Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Lucario Force Palm (projectile portion) Super Smash Bros. 4
Mewtwo Neutral attack (infinite)
Mii Brawler Shot Put
Mii Swordfighter Gale Strike
Palutena All tilt attacks
Richter Forward tilt Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Ryu Forward tilt (held, both hits) Super Smash Bros. 4
Tatsumaki Senpukyaku (all versions)
Focus Attack (arm hitbox)
Simon Forward tilt Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Zero Suit Samus Up tilt (both hits) Super Smash Bros. 4
Zelda Farore's Wind (first hit, grounded)

* Should not rebound but rebounds anyway, due to the anti-rebound flag not working properly in Brawl.

** Does not rebound in later games, but the effect is nullified by the move gaining transcendent priority.

Considered both airborne and grounded[edit]

An icon for denoting incomplete things.
Character Move Games
Falco Falco Phantasm Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Fox Fox Illusion
Meta Knight Mach Tornado (both grounded and airborne)
Drill Rush (both grounded and airborne)
Glide attack
Ness Up smash
Down smash
Olimar All Pikmin-based attacks
Zero Suit Samus Neutral aerial
Up smash* (second hitbox only)

*The second hitbox of Zero Suit Samus' up smash behaves like an aerial. It may be out-prioritised by another character's aerial, but the up smash's animation and subsequent hitboxes cannot be cancelled.

The hitboxes of the above attacks can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks regardless of if they're ground or aerial attacks. When such a collision occurs, the clash bubble will appear and the outcome will follow the law of high and low priority. However, airborne attacks cannot be cancelled out, including airborne special moves. Thus, while the results of a collision will follow the law of high and low priority, the appearance of such a collision will differ to that of two colliding ground attacks.

If one of the above ground attacks collides with an aerial, or one of the above aerials collides with a ground attack, and the ground attack is below the priority range of the aerial, the ground attack will be cancelled and the airborne attack can damage the wielder of the ground attack. If the two hitboxes are within the priority range, the ground attack will be cancelled out, and, since it is an aerial attack, the animation of the airborne attack will persist. However, the airborne hitbox becomes harmless, and the wielder of the ground attack will not at all be knocked or damaged by the airborne hitbox, regardless of whether it connects or not.

For example:

  • If King's Dedede up tilt collides with Meta Knight's glide attack (13% vs. 13%), Dedede's up tilt will be cancelled out, but he will not be harmed, even if the hitbox of Meta Knight's glide attack contacts King Dedede's body.

If the hitbox of a ground attack is above the priority range of a colliding airborne hitbox, both attack animations will persist, but the airborne hitbox will become harmless, while the ground attack is still able to damage. Thus, if the hitbox of the ground attack connects with the body of the character who used the airborne special, this character will take the damage and knockback of the ground attack. A notable example of a special move that can collide with the hitboxes of other attacks while airborne is Meta Knight's Mach Tornado. If performed on the ground (grounded), it can be cancelled out, but if airborne, it cannot be cancelled. Mach Tornado is a multi-hit move that deals 1% per hit during the main portion of the attack.

For example:

  • If Captain Falcon's forward tilt collides with a hitbox of Meta Knight's grounded Mach Tornado (10% vs. 1%), the forward tilt will collide with, and cancel out the Mach Tornado.
  • If the Mach Tornado is airborne, Captain Falcon's forward tilt can cancel one of its hitboxes, but cannot cancel the hitboxes that follow. Mach Tornado cannot cancel his forward tilt either, because it is too weak (10% vs. 1%). However, unless the hitbox of Captain Falcon's forward tilt connects with Meta Knight's body, the Mach Tornado will continue and can afterwards damage Captain Falcon, despite the fact that his forward tilt out-prioritised it.


Non-character objects with complex animations[edit]

A select few attacks in SSB4 will collide with other attacks, but can only nullify projectiles within the 9% range and will always lose a trade with regular hitboxes regardless of the 9% rule, much like a grab. For example, Bayonetta's up smash cannot be used as effectively as other up smashes to hit opponents in the air, as any hitbox that comes into contact with it will render the up smash inert, and if the hitbox is close enough to Bayonetta at the moment of colliding, only Bayonetta will take damage. However, if the opposing hitbox is a projectile or another attack with this property (i.e. Lucario's Aura Sphere or another Bayonetta's up smash), both characters will take damage as if one of them used an aerial hitbox (but the collision bubble will still appear). The overarching pattern among these attacks is that they are character-specific props that feature complex animations beyond simply moving or rotating, and thus it is possible (but not proven) that the game short-sightedly does not attempt to make them capable of trading with attacks from other animating elements (i.e. characters).

Because they cannot override regular hitboxes and it is not always clear to players whether a hitbox is attached to a character or a prop, these attacks are often perceived as having "low priority", and some moveset repositories such as Kurogane Hammer list them under such term.

Character Move Games
Bayonetta All smash attacks (except for first hit of down smash) Super Smash Bros. 4
Corrin Forward smash (non-charging portion)
Dragon Fang Shot (both portions)
Dragon Lunge (initial lunge only)
Olimar All Pikmin-based attacks
Villager Timber (tree hitboxes only, both sprouting and falling)

Gallery[edit]

Trivia[edit]

  • In Melee and Ultimate, a unique metallic sound effect can be heard when hitboxes with a slash effect clang with each other.