Pikachu (SSB): Difference between revisions
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*Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are technically the first two playable characters in ''Smash'' to actually be neutral characters rather than either heroes or villains. This is most likely due to the fact that unlike the human characters in ''Pokémon'', the Pokémon themselves do not have any sense of morality, and therefore do not belong in either alignment, instead willingly choosing to side with whatever alignment said humans are on. | *Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are technically the first two playable characters in ''Smash'' to actually be neutral characters rather than either heroes or villains. This is most likely due to the fact that unlike the human characters in ''Pokémon'', the Pokémon themselves do not have any sense of morality, and therefore do not belong in either alignment, instead willingly choosing to side with whatever alignment said humans are on. | ||
*Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are also the first two playable characters in ''Smash'' whose actual genders are never revealed. (as with all other playable Pokémon characters except for Mewtwo, who is technically genderless due to it being a legendary, up until the introduction of the Pokémon Trainer in ''Brawl'') This is most likely due to the fact that the first game was released long before the concept of genders was introduced in the ''Pokémon'' games proper, explaining why Samus is the only truly female character in that game, as well as the reason why all Pokémon are referred via gender-neutral pronouns such as "it" regardless of said Pokémon's actual gender. | *Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are also the first two playable characters in ''Smash'' whose actual genders are never revealed. (as with all other playable Pokémon characters except for Mewtwo, who is technically genderless due to it being a legendary, up until the introduction of the Pokémon Trainer in ''Brawl'') This is most likely due to the fact that the first game was released long before the concept of genders was introduced in the ''Pokémon'' games proper, explaining why Samus is the only truly female character in that game, as well as the reason why all Pokémon are referred via gender-neutral pronouns such as "it" regardless of said Pokémon's actual gender. | ||
{{SSBCharacters}} | {{SSBCharacters}} | ||
{{Pokémon universe}} | {{Pokémon universe}} |
Revision as of 14:51, February 1, 2020
Pikachu in Super Smash Bros. | |
---|---|
Universe | Pokémon |
Other playable appearances | in Melee in Brawl in SSB4 in Ultimate |
Availability | Starter |
Tier | S (1) |
“ | This popular Pokémon has become so famous that these days, everyone knows its name. Pikachu's electricity attacks are a real shock to any opponent. | ” |
—Super Smash Bros's instruction manual |
Pikachu (ピカチュウ, Pikachu) is a starter character in Super Smash Bros. It originates from the Pokémon series, being its recognizable mascot. Pikachu is generally a light, quick character, which would serve as the archetype for some other lightweight characters in the series. Pikachu is voiced by Ikue Ōtani, who voices it in the anime, and other game appearances.
Pikachu ranks 1st on the tier list its best placement in the series due to having many overwhelming advantages: its mobility is among the best, with fast walking, dashing, and air speeds, though its falling speed is slightly below average. Pikachu is notable for its amazing offstage and edgeguarding game, with fast and powerful aerials that can also combo well with or without certain other moves, along with a recovery on Quick Attack that covers a long distance while also being unpredictable, as well as having some invincibility frames and the ability to easily sweetspot the edge. While its attacks are generally fast, it has a few rather powerful moves, though its moveset is overall more combo-oriented. This is evident in its solid ground game, with an up tilt that can rack up large damage by chaining into itself and can easily combo into virtually any other move as well, along with powerful smash attacks and an exceedingly powerful back throw. It also has a projectile in its Thunder Jolt, as well as Thunder, which is notable for being able to KO near the upper blast line very early; the Thunderspike technique can easily set this up.
Pikachu, however, is not perfect. It is a lightweight character, allowing for it to be KOed earlier than most other characters, and can also be easily comboed by others. Pikachu also has limited options out of a tech.
Despite this, Pikachu's strengths exceed its weaknesses, and it has held the best tournament results in competitive play, alongside good representation. Pikachu's prowess in Smash 64 is considered undisputed to such a great extent that in the NTSC version of the game, it is considered to have the best matchup spread of any character in the series, with even its worst non-mirror matchup (Captain Falcon) being 55/45, meaning that it holds the distinction of being the only Super Smash Bros. character that is favored in every single non-mirror matchup. Even in the Japanese version of the game, it is still one of only four characters in the series (the other three being Fox in Melee, Falco in Melee, and Meta Knight in Brawl) to have no disadvantageous matchups, and some of its matchups are actually improved compared to on the NTSC version.
Attributes
Pikachu is a small, very quick character with fast moves, a great recovery, great finishers, a projectile, disjointed hitboxes, great comboing and edgeguarding abilities, and an exceedingly powerful back throw. Often cited as the main reason Pikachu is first on the tier list is its recovery: it is considered the best, and in many ways the only hard to edgeguard recovery in Smash 64. Its aerial game is very potent; all of its aerials inflict high damage and have good KO potential, and its back and up aerials have large disjoints making them good edgeguarding moves. Going too far offstage while edgeguarding is also not too risky for Pikachu due to its very long recovery. However, Pikachu lacks a meteor smash, unlike most other characters.
Pikachu has a variety of specials. Its Thunder Jolt is a relatively underused attack, but it can be useful potentially for edge guarding and camping. Quick Attack is by far the best recovery move in Smash 64 - as well as traveling a huge distance, it can also allow Pikachu to escape certain situations, and it can be extended so Pikachu does not lose its momentum after the second warp. If used perfectly, Pikachu has the ability to stall on the ledge infinitely, and it will be invulnerable due Quick Attack's invincibility frames. Pikachu's down special, Thunder, is a very powerful move that can be used as a finisher, but it is most notable for the Thunderspiking technique - which involves using it when the opponent is near the upper blast line for a Star KO. This is performed easiest with an up smash.
Pikachu has among the best and most versatile combo ability in the game. It has four great combo starters: up tilt, up aerial, neutral aerial, and down aerial. It also has the second fastest air speed in the game to compliment its combo ability. Its up tilt can be used to combo into itself from low to mid/mid-high percentages, or just about any other move (including a grab). It can start a combo, and can even lead into a KO move such as an up smash followed by Thunder, a grab then a back throw, or a back aerial to set up an edgeguard. The up tilt can also be followed by another up tilt for shield pressure. Its attacks, most notably its forward smash and back aerial, have strange hitboxes, with the forward smash being an excellent finisher, but being very slow compared to Pikachu's other moves. Its combo ability is accentuated by its Thunderspiking ability, as explained above. Due to quick, strong aerials, Pikachu's shield pressure is commonly considered to be the third or fourth best in the game, behind Fox, Kirby, and possibly Captain Falcon.
A well known Pikachu combo is the Greenhouse combo, created by Isai. It can only be performed in the "Tent" section of Hyrule Castle. This example shows Pikachu using multiple up tilts, then a back throw to knock the opponent into the wall, then a back aerial so they bounce off the green wall towards Pikachu, then an up smash followed by a Thunderspike. Pikachu can also use multiple forward and back throws at the wall before using the up tilt.
Overall, Pikachu has excellent matchups and beats the majority of the characters in the game, with only a few even or close to even matchups. The main ones are Fox on Hyrule Castle and Captain Falcon on Dream Land. Every other matchup is at least 60-40 in Pikachu's favour.
The problems Pikachu faces are small, but still noticeable. It is moderately easy to combo, along with the fact it is light weight, despite usually being able to get out of bad situations with Quick Attack. Its up special, despite its invincibility frames and wonderful range, leaves Pikachu vulnerable if it simply warps onto the stage from above the edge due to its ending lag. Even if it is used to escape from situations, it can also leave Pikachu vulnerable if the opponent has a fast enough dashing speed so that they can reach Pikachu before it can act. If one can get over these small issues, Pikachu will be a huge asset.
Differences between game versions
NTSC-J to NTSC-U
Pikachu was noticeably buffed in the North American version. Its up angled forward tilt and dash attack are stronger, and forward smash has more range, making it easier to hit with. Thunder Jolt, however, covers less distance, slightly worsening its projectile game although its aerial hit is stronger. Pikachu also benefits from the changes to gameplay mechanics more than any other character, due to the higher presence of SDI allowing it to escape combos easier (despite its forward aerial being slightly less reliable for combos), whereas the removal of momentum sliding makes its mobility one of the best. As a result, despite its worse matchup spread, Pikachu is considered to far better than in the Japanese version.
Ground attacks
- Neutral attack has decreased base knockback (8 → 4).
- Up angled forward tilt deals more damage (9% → 11%).
- Down angled forward tilt deals less damage (10% → 9%).
- Dash attack has higher base knockback (20 → 40).
- Forward smash has more range.
Special attacks
- Clean Thunder Jolt deals more damage (8% → 10%).
- Thunder Jolt covers less distance.
NTSC-U to PAL
Pikachu was buffed again in the PAL versions. Forward smash, down aerial and Thunder all deal more damage making them stronger KO moves.
Ground attacks
- Up tilt has increased base knockback (10 → 15).
- Late forward smash deals more damage (18% → 20%).
Aerial attacks
- Down aerial deals more damage (13% → 14%).
Special attacks
- Thunder deals more damage (12% (thunderbolt)/16% (shockwave) → 14%/18%).
Moveset
For a gallery of Pikachu's hitboxes, see here.
Name | Damage | Description | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
Neutral attack | 2% | Pikachu headbutts forward. Can chain into itself. | ||
Forward tilt | ↗ | 11%, 9% (NTSC-J) | Pikachu stands on its two hands and kicks its two feet forward. | |
→ | 10% | |||
↘ | 9%, 10% (NTSC-J) | |||
Up tilt | 11% | Does a tail whip upwards. | ||
Down tilt | 12% | A tail sweep. | ||
Dash attack | 12% | Does a running headbutt while falling onto the ground. | ||
Forward smash | 18%, 20% (PAL late) | Can be slightly aimed up or down but barely. Pikachu releases a short jolt of electricity from its cheeks. The electrical effect is in 2-D. Along with Captain Falcon and Ness, it is the 5th strongest Forward Smash in the game, KOing as early as 95%. | ||
Up smash | 18% (clean), 9% (late) | Pikachu flips itself and moves its tail from front to back, hitting nearby opponents. A powerful vertical KO move, in fact the 6th strongest Up Smash in the game, KOing as early as 91%. | ||
Down smash | 16% (front), 13% (back) | Does a spinning breakdance attack on the floor. Has two hits. | ||
Neutral aerial | 14% (clean), 11% (late) | Pikachu sticks out its foot for a few seconds. An easily definable sex kick. | ||
Forward aerial | 3% (hits 1-7), 21% (total), 6% (landing) | Does a drill-like move forward, surrounded by electricity. 7 hits at a rate of 3% per hit, can be used as a combo starter. | ||
Back aerial | 16% (clean), 14% (late) | Pikachu kicks behind itself, its small foot getting slightly larger for a short second. | ||
Up aerial | 10% | A flipping upwards tail swing. Knockback angle depends on area of tail. | ||
Down aerial | 13%, 14% (PAL) | Does a drill-like like move downward, surrounded by electricity. Knocks opponents horizontally. Along with Link's down aerial, this is the only down aerial in Smash 64 to lack a meteor smash hitbox. | ||
Grab | — | Grabs the opponent. | ||
Forward throw | 12% | Pikachu grabs the foe, flips and releases them. | ||
Back throw | 18% | Pikachu puts the foe on its back and releases electricity. This throw would later become its forward throw in future Smash Bros. iterations, but a much weaker variant. | ||
Forward roll Back roll |
— | — | ||
Techs | — | — | ||
Floor attack (front) Floor getups (front) |
6% | Kicks on both sides and gets up. | ||
Floor attack (back) Floor getups (back) |
6% | Kicks on both sides and gets up. | ||
Edge attack (fast) Edge getups (fast) |
6% | Is evenly good with other ledge attacks outside of Fox's and Donkey Kong's where it is considered worse. | ||
Edge attack (slow) Edge getups (slow) |
6% | Slowly gets up and whips its tail. | ||
Neutral special | Thunder Jolt | 10% (ball), 7% (wave), 8% (NTSC-J ball) | Shoots a sphere of electricity diagonally downwards and when it hits the ground, it will turn into a wave. The projectile will wrap around corners, and will snake along walls and ceilings if the corners are not too sharp and the jolt lives for long enough. | |
Up special | Quick Attack | 0% | Moves in two directions at warp speed. The directions can be controlled with the Control Stick, with the second warp being optional, though the direction of second warp must be at least 45 degrees different than the direction of the first warp. This is easily the best recovery move in the game due to the huge distance it covers, and the invincibility frames. Deals no damage. | |
Down special | Thunder | 12% (bolt), 16% (blast), 14% (PAL bolt), 18% (PAL blast) | Pikachu drops a bolt of lightning from the sky causing slight vertical knockback to any opponent in the bolt's way. Upon hitting the user, a large shockwave is created with stronger knockback than the lightning itself. Can stall Pikachu in midair if timed correctly. |
On-screen appearance
- Releases from a Poké Ball, similar to other Pokémon.
Taunt
- Turns to its left, stands on tiptoes, lowers its tail, waves its arms four times, and looks to its left then to its right, accompanied by it saying "Pika Pika!" (the "a" is much longer in the second "Pika").
Crowd cheer
English | Japanese | |
---|---|---|
Cheer | File:Pikachu Cheer NTSC SSB.ogg | File:Pikachu Cheer JP SSB.ogg |
Description | *clap* Pi-ka- *clap* -chu | *clap* Pika- *clap* -chu |
Pitch | Group chant | Group chant |
Victory poses
- Sleeps.
- Scratches right ear.
- Backflips and spins around (also its character selection animation).
In Competitive play
Matchups
International versions
Avg. | |||||||||||||
Pikachu has incredibly favorable matchups, and has by far the best matchup average in the game in the current matchup chart with an average of 65:35. For comparison, the four characters below it on the tier list have a matchup average of 55:45. It does not have any negative nor even matchups, making Pikachu have only positive matchups on the rest of the cast (with the exception of Captain Falcon in the Japanese version). Other than that, the only two matchups that Pikachu can consider even are stage-dependent, with Fox on Hyrule Castle (who dominates the stage with his Blaster's ability to projectile camp) and Captain Falcon on Dream Land. Even then, these matchups are described as 55-45 in Pikachu's favour.
However, in the current metagame, Pikachu's matchups across the cast, although still strong, has weakened over time. Pikachu still does well against the majority of the characters below it, but in recent years, two characters are now considered to have even matchups with it. Falcon has become the common counterpick against Pikachu, due to the majority of combos he has on it and a few zero to death combos. Falcon's long last hitboxs and long reach, allow him to somewhat edge guard Pikachu. For a time due to aformentioned tools Falcon had against Pikachu, it was considered by many that Falcon had beaten Pikachu, but recently, it has went back to being considered even. Yoshi is the only other character to be considered to have a even matchup with it, due to Yoshi's parry mechanics allowing it to deal with Pikachu's multi-hit attacks and counter attack it. Yoshi also has a few zero to death combos on Pikachu along with a few tools to deal with it in edge guarding. Other characters, who still lose to him, aren't as dominated as originally thought in the case of Fox and Jigglypuff. Fox's strong combo game, neutral tools and great mobility allows it to keep up with the Pokemon. However, Fox still gets edge guarded easily and his lasers bypassed due Pikachu's small frame. Jigglypuff, although still gets combo'ed into kill confirms and gets edge guarded easily, has shown a strong combo game on Pikachu into Rest, with some zero to deaths on the character. At the moment, Pikachu still has the best matchup spread in the game, but it is no longer as dominant as once thought.
Japanese version
Avg. | |||||||||||||
Notable players
- See also: Category:Pikachu professionals (SSB)
Active
- Isai - Considered one of the all-time best Pikachu players.
- wario - One of the best Pikachu players in the world.
- Alvin - One of the best Pikachu players in the world.
- SuPeRbOoMfAn - Widely considered to be the best Pikachu main and one of the best Smash 64 players in the world.
- Mariguas - Known for his intricate combo game. Placed 8th on the 2017 64 League Rankings.
- Gerson - Infamous for 4-stocking Isai. Placed 1st at Sunset Blast.
- Josh Brody - Formerly known as BarkSanchez. Placed 1st at The Big House 9.
- Dext3r - considered to be one of the best Pikachu mains in North America. Placed 2nd at Operation Desert Smash II
- Shears - Placed 1st in doubles in The Big House 8 with partner Josh Brody.
- Banze - placed 1st at Smash Vintage 2018.
- Marbles - Formerly known as MrMarbles. Placed 5th at Smash the Record 2015.
- Jam - Placed 1st at Fête.
- JimmyJoe - Best known as the voice of the East Coast Smash 64 community. Placed 5th at Fête.
- Greginator - Placed 7th at CEO Dreamland.
- Battlecow - Placed 1st at Show Me Your Moves 16.
- CabeLo - Placed 9th at UFSmash 3.
- KeroKeroppi - Retired for a little bit before returning to competitive smash.
Inactive
- A$ - Mains Pikachu and Kirby, but also is a top Link. Placed 3rd at Zenith 2013.
- Johnny - One of the best online Smash 64 players before his retirement in 2008.
- Kefit - One of the top Pikachu mains in the United States. Placed 1st at Northwest Majors VII.
- Sensei - Placed 1st at Smashacre Gluttony.
- Marka - Placed 2nd at Tacna 2014. Retired in early 2015.
Tier placement and history
Since the beginning of the metagame of Smash 64, Pikachu has always been the character at the top of the tier list. In the third tier list, Pikachu even had its own tier at the top of the list, similarly to Meta Knight in Brawl and Fox in Melee ; this is no longer the case as of the fourth tier list, but Pikachu is still considered the best character by a significant margin.
Due to the the majority of Pikachu players and the character's overwhelming dominance, there were talks in the community of having the character banned in 2017. Even notable Pikachu main KeroKeroppi thought he should have been banned due to his over dominance in the current meta and SuPeRbOoMfAn even going Pikachu a lot due to it being easier. However, this ban never ended up happening and Pikachu was left to continue to dominate the scene. Though in recent years, Pikachu is considered to have two even matchups now while in the past, he undisputedly had none. These two matchups that are considered even are against Falcon, who has been a common counterpick to the character for years, and recently Yoshi, due to his parry mechanics and having a few zero to combos on the character.
Techniques
Thunderspiking
This technique involves launching the opponent to the top of the screen and using Thunder for a Star KO. The easiest way to perform this is to use an up smash. At percentages around (possibly a bit below) 100%, up smash combos into Thunder effectively, and at percentages around 140%, an up tilt can combo into Thunder. The technique can be used as a combo finisher (notably at the end of Isai's Greenhouse combo) or just for raw KOing.
Extended Quick Attack
By allowing the control stick to snap back to its neutral position before the animation of one of the warps in Quick Attack ends, Pikachu's aerial momentum will not be cancelled, allowing it to cover more horizontal distance. This can be used on either warps, and it is even possible to extend both warps, though this runs a high risk of missing the second warp. Extending the move is essential for recovering from a large distance, though the player may choose not to in certain situations, such as landing on a platform onstage on Dream Land to evade the opponent.
Jab grab
A technique that enables Pikachu to instantly use a grab while abusing the shield stun of its jab. This can be performed by Mario and Fox to a lesser extent. A highly useful technique in competitive play, due to allowing Pikachu to shield pressure the opponent.
Ledge-stalling
Pikachu can stall on the edge by abusing the invincibility frames of Quick Attack. This is performed by simply edge dropping, jumping, then aiming Quick Attack straight down to regrab the edge. The process can be repeated for as long as one's reflexes allow.
In Single-player
In the game's Single-player mode, Pikachu is fought on the Saffron City stage.
Description
From the Game
Pikachu
Mouse PKMN
Height 1'4"
Weight 13 lbs
When several of these Pokémon gather, their electricity could cause lightning storms.
(Pokédex excerpt)
Works:
- Pokémon (GB)
Alternate costumes
Trivia
- Pikachu is one of the two only characters in the game to lack a meteor smash, along with Link.
- Most of Pikachu's static and electric effects are rendered in 2D due to technical limitations.
- In the Japanese version, Pikachu is the only character ranked first in the tier list to have a disadvantageous matchup (against Captain Falcon).
- Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are technically the first two playable characters in Smash to actually be neutral characters rather than either heroes or villains. This is most likely due to the fact that unlike the human characters in Pokémon, the Pokémon themselves do not have any sense of morality, and therefore do not belong in either alignment, instead willingly choosing to side with whatever alignment said humans are on.
- Pikachu, along with Jigglypuff, are also the first two playable characters in Smash whose actual genders are never revealed. (as with all other playable Pokémon characters except for Mewtwo, who is technically genderless due to it being a legendary, up until the introduction of the Pokémon Trainer in Brawl) This is most likely due to the fact that the first game was released long before the concept of genders was introduced in the Pokémon games proper, explaining why Samus is the only truly female character in that game, as well as the reason why all Pokémon are referred via gender-neutral pronouns such as "it" regardless of said Pokémon's actual gender.
Fighters in Super Smash Bros. | |
---|---|
Fighters | Captain Falcon · Donkey Kong · Fox · Jigglypuff · Kirby · Link · Luigi · Mario · Ness · Pikachu · Samus · Yoshi |