|
|
Line 949: |
Line 949: |
| |char=Sonic | | |char=Sonic |
| |c1=Blue | | |c1=Blue |
| | |desc1=Based on his modern appearance in ''Sonic Adventure'' onwards. |
| |c2=Purple | | |c2=Purple |
| |desc2=Resembles [http://sonic.fandom.com/wiki/NiGHTS NiGHTS], a character from Sega's ''{{s|wikipedia|NiGHTS into Dreams}}''. The cuffs are reminiscent of the purple [http://sonic.fandom.com/wiki/Chaos_Emerald Chaos Emerald]. | | |desc2=Resembles [http://sonic.fandom.com/wiki/NiGHTS NiGHTS], a character from Sega's ''{{s|wikipedia|NiGHTS into Dreams}}''. The cuffs are reminiscent of the purple [http://sonic.fandom.com/wiki/Chaos_Emerald Chaos Emerald]. |
|
NOTE: Every claimed source needs a cross-reference link; claimed sources need to be plausible, not awfully obscure; default costumes usually don't need descriptions since they are not alternate costumes; returning costumes original to Smash do not need references to their appearances in previous Smash games.
|
Each character in Super Smash Bros. 4 has a set of alternate costumes. Due to the presence of 8-Player Smash, all characters now have eight costumes (except for Little Mac, who has 16). Some costumes have slight visual differences between the 3DS and Wii U versions.
Some characters possess certain alternate costumes with more drastic design differences, and are not merely recolors of their standard outfits. Wario, Zero Suit Samus, Little Mac, Shulk, Cloud and Bayonetta have different outfits available; Villager, Wii Fit Trainer, Robin and Corrin all have male and female variants; Olimar and Bowser Jr. have model swaps that change them into new characters, complete with corresponding voice and Announcer clips, though like all other alternate costumes, they bear no gameplay differences.
Team Battles no longer confine characters to using their respective team color schemes, as teams are now indicated by colored outlines around the characters, giving players the freedom to pick whichever alternate costume they want to use in Team Battles.
On the Find Mii stage in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, the Dark Emperor uses magic that affects all players of the same color. Each alternate costume is allocated to one of the twelve Mii colors: black, brown, red, orange, yellow, light green, green, light blue, blue, purple, pink, and white. These colors are noted in the below lists as a bar underneath the corresponding portrait; as several characters have multiple costumes that share this color, the main color names as used on this page do not conform to this system.
Half of Bayonetta's costumes are based on her design from Bayonetta 2, while the other half are based on her design from Bayonetta. For the former half, she wields Love is Blue, which has blue attack trails. For the latter half, she wields Scarborough Fair, which has red attack trails, and speaks English even in the Japanese version.
Giga Bowser is always treated as yellow in Find Mii.
Bowser Jr.'s alternate costumes replace him with each of the seven Koopalings. Bowser Jr. rides the Junior Clown Car[3] which was introduced in New Super Mario Bros. Wii, whereas the Koopalings ride in a mass-produced Koopa Clown Car[4] with a design unique to Super Smash Bros..
Half of Cloud's costumes are based on his appearance in Final Fantasy VII, while the other half are based on his "Cloudy Wolf" design from the movie Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children.[6] In two of his Advent Childen costumes, his Geostigma-infected arm is covered by a sleeve, while it is exposed in the other two, revealing the red ribbon he wrapped around it in memory of Aerith Gainsborough. His costumes with the exposed arm are based on his appearance in Advent Children after his fight with Bahamut SIN, during which his sleeve is torn off.
He wields the Buster Sword in the former outfits and the Fusion Swords in the latter outfits.
Half of Corrin's costumes are male, while the other half are female.
Male
|
|
Female
|
|
Red
|
Resembles Saizo, the elder twin of their retainer Kaze from Fire Emblem Fates.
|
Orange
|
|
Blue
|
|
Pink
|
Resembles the overworld sprites of Valla-aligned units from Fire Emblem Fates as well as the flames emitted by Omega Yato.
|
Green
|
Resembles the overworld sprites of allied units in the Fire Emblem games.
|
Black
|
Resembles her appearance as a Nohr Noble in Fire Emblem Fates.
|
Black
|
|
Green
|
|
Brown
|
|
Yellow
|
|
Red
|
|
Blue
|
|
White
|
Resembles Pit. Dark Pit retains his black wings and gains a red scarf, likely to better differentiate the two. It is complementary to Pit's "fallen angel" costume.
|
Purple
|
Bears a slight resemblance to the Eggplant Wizard enemies from the Kid Icarus games.
|
White
|
Resembles his appearance in Dr. Mario 64, but with navy jeans instead of white trousers.
|
Red
|
|
Blue
|
|
Green
|
Resembles his appearance in Dr. Mario for the original Game Boy.
|
Black
|
Referred to as the "Unlicensed Doctor" on the Melee website.[9] Also invokes the coats worn by earlier doctors before the shift to white coats.
|
Yellow
|
|
Purple
|
|
Pink
|
Resembles the color of the scrubs worn by Nurse Toadstool.
|
Duck Hunt's alternate costumes change the dog and/or the duck's colors to resemble real variants of the respective animals.
Blue
|
|
Red
|
|
Pink
|
Resembles Lickitung and Lickilicky, two other Pokémon with long tongues.
|
Black
|
|
Lavender
|
|
Green
|
|
Grey
|
|
Purple
|
|
Unlike previous games, none of Jigglypuff's alternate costumes change it to its Shiny coloration.
Kirby's palette swaps are based on his alternate colors that regularly appear in his own series.
Little Mac is the only character with 16 different costumes, having a wireframe variant of each of his eight standard costumes. The wireframe variants are based on the player's appearance in the original arcade Punch-Out!![13] His wireframe palette swaps have slightly brighter cel-shaded colors than their non-wireframe counterparts.
Giga Mac is always treated as green in Find Mii.
Mega Lucario is always treated as blue in Find Mii.
Blue
|
|
Red
|
|
White
|
|
Grey
|
|
Teal
|
|
Navy
|
|
Green
|
|
Purple
|
|
Yellow
|
|
Orange
|
Based on Claus, Lucas's twin brother from Mother 3.
|
Blue
|
|
Red
|
|
Grey
|
Based on the Masked Man from Mother 3. The shirt features a sprite of the Masked Man's head.
|
Cyan
|
Based on Duster from Mother 3.
|
Green
|
Based on Boney's human disguise from Mother 3. The shirt's design features a sprite of Boney's head.
|
Purple
|
The shirt's design features a sprite of a baby Drago from Mother 3.
|
Lucina's alternate costumes are based on female characters from Fire Emblem Awakening.[14]
Green
|
Based on his appearance in Super Mario 3D Land.
|
Orange
|
|
Pink
|
The original Super Smash Bros. website referred to this costume as "Strawberry Luigi".[5]
|
Cyan
|
|
White
|
Based on Fire Luigi.
|
Purple
|
Based on Waluigi, although the "L" on his cap is purple instead of yellow. This was not the case in Brawl.
|
Blue
|
Resembles Mario's appearance on the Game & Watch boxart for Donkey Kong Jr.
|
Yellow
|
Resembles the appearance of a boy on the boxart of the Widescreen rerelease for the Game & Watch game Manhole, but with brown shoes instead of red ones.
|
All of Mega Man's alternate costumes were derived from those of the Mega Man titles when he was using weapons or items.
Blue
|
This design has been carried over to the later Kirby titles.
|
White
|
Resembles one of his alternate costumes in Kirby Air Ride.
|
Red
|
Resembles his red color in Kirby Air Ride.
|
Green
|
Resembles his "yellow" color in Kirby Air Ride, although his feet is purple instead of brown. This was not the case in Brawl.
|
Navy
|
Resembles his original appearance in Kirby's Adventure, but with red eyes.
|
Pink
|
Resembles his "green" color in Kirby Air Ride, as well as Kirby.
|
Purple
|
Based on Galacta Knight.[19]
|
Grey
|
Based on Dark Meta Knight.[20]
|
Default
|
|
Orange
|
Resembles one of the possible colors for Mewtwo in the Pokémon Stadium titles.
|
Blue
|
Resembles one of the possible colors for Mewtwo in the Pokémon Stadium titles.
|
Brown
|
|
Pink
|
Resembles its original artwork from Pokémon Red and Green, which was presented as pink rather than purple later on.
|
Yellow
|
Resembles its original Shiny coloration from Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal.
|
Cyan
|
Reminiscent of the colors of its Shiny coloration since Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire, but more cyan.
|
Purple
|
Reminiscent of Shadow Lugia from Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness.
|
The Mii Fighters' various costume options are distinct from how other characters' alternate costumes work. The colors of these costumes match the Mii's original color from the Mii Maker. In addition, the Mii's original color is used in Find Mii. To view the Mii Fighters' alternate costumes, see here.
Black
|
|
Red
|
Reminiscent of characters and objects as depicted on the Virtual Boy.
|
Yellow
|
Reminiscent of characters and objects as depicted on the original Game Boy.
|
Blue
|
|
Teal
|
Reminiscent of the two shades commonly used by the Game Boy for the background and foreground.
|
Cyan
|
Reminiscent of the backlit display of the Game Boy Light.
|
Green
|
|
White
|
Reminiscent of the monochromatic LCD screen of the Game & Watch games.
|
Red
|
|
White
|
Resembles Fuel from Mother 3, but with a cap.
|
Yellow
|
Based on the uniforms of the Hanshin Tigers, a Japanese baseball team.[5] The shirt's pattern is reminiscent of the Gigantic Ant enemy from EarthBound.
|
Green
|
His clothes resemble the color scheme of Everdred’s outfit in EarthBound.
|
Blue
|
Resembles his younger self.
|
Black
|
The shirt features a sprite of Mr. Saturn on the front.
|
Cyan
|
The shirt features Master Belch from EarthBound.
|
Purple
|
The shirt features the tile pattern on the file select and character naming screens in EarthBound.
|
Four of Olimar's costumes replace him with Alph, one of the protagonists of Pikmin 3.
Tan
|
|
Red
|
|
Green
|
|
Blue
|
Combines elements of his white and blue costumes from Brawl.
|
Alph
|
Replaced with Alph.
|
Alph Green
|
Based on Charlie, Alph's captain in Pikmin 3.
|
Alph Pink
|
Based on Brittany, Alph's co-worker in Pikmin 3.
|
Alph Red
|
Based on Olimar's appearance from the original Pikmin.
|
Most of Pac-Man's alternate costumes change his model to give him colored armbands and/or the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.
Default
|
|
Blue
|
Resembles his in-game sprite with the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.
|
Yellow
|
|
Black
|
|
Purple
|
|
White
|
Resembles promotional artwork of his appearance with the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.
|
Red
|
The armbands are noticeably thinner, which makes them resemble compression sleeves, and he wears red leggings instead of Wing Shoes.
|
Plaid
|
His gloves and boots are reminiscent of oven mitts.
|
White
|
|
Yellow
|
|
Red
|
Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Gold Arrow and reaching Level 4 strength in the original Kid Icarus.
|
Green
|
Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Bronze Arrow and reaching Level 2 strength in Kid Icarus.
|
Blue
|
Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Sacred Arrow and reaching Level 5 strength in Kid Icarus.
|
Black
|
Referred to as a "fallen angel" on the Brawl DOJO!!.[8] Unlike in Brawl, Pit retains his white wings and gains a purple scarf, likely to better differentiate him from Dark Pit.
|
Cyan
|
Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Silver Arrow and reaching Level 3 strength in Kid Icarus .
|
Pink
|
|
R.O.B.’s default costume switches between the first and second ones listed depending on if the game is the Japanese version or not.
Tan
|
Based on the Japanese version of R.O.B., the "Family Computer Robot", which was released as a peripheral for the Famicom.[22] It is the default color for Japanese releases of Super Smash Bros. 4.
|
Grey
|
Based on the Western version of R.O.B. released for the NES. The text on his base reads "R.O.B. - Robotic Operating Buddy" instead of "Family Computer Robot". It is the default color for American and PAL releases of Super Smash Bros. 4, though some visual elements retain the Famicom color as primary.
|
Yellow
|
Resembles Spike, a glitch enemy from Stack-Up.
|
Purple
|
Resembles Flipper, a glitch enemy from Stack-Up. Also resembles the North American color scheme for the SNES.
|
Blue
|
|
Green
|
Resembles the R.O.B. Launcher enemy from Super Smash Bros. Brawl's Subspace Emissary.
|
White
|
|
Red
|
Resembles the Virtual Boy.
|
Half of Robin's costumes are male, while the other half are female.
Most of Roy's alternate costumes seem to be based on characters from Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade.
Most of Ryu's alternate costumes appear to derive from his alternate colors in Street Fighter II titles.
White
|
|
Grey
|
His alternate color from Street Fighter II': Champion Edition when playing in a Mirror Match.
|
Cyan
|
His default color from Street Fighter II': Hyper Fighting.
|
Black
|
His default color from Super Street Fighter II Turbo.
|
Orange
|
His "Light Kick" color ("Short" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
|
Blue
|
His "Medium Kick" color ("Forward" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
|
Green
|
His "Heavy Kick" color ("Roundhouse" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
|
Red
|
Resembles his "Start" color in Super Street Fighter II, but with a purple headband instead of a black one. It also resembles Dan Hibiki, another fighter from the Street Fighter series.
|
With the exception of his first and last alternate costumes, all of Shulk's costumes are based on the color schemes of his party members from Xenoblade Chronicles.[14]
Red
|
|
White
|
Based on Mecha-Fiora.
|
Black
|
Based on Dunban.
|
Orange
|
Based on Reyn.
|
Blue
|
Based on Sharla.
|
Lavender
|
Based on Melia.
|
Yellow
|
Based on Riki.
|
Trunks
|
Based on his "Swimsuit" armor set and his appearance with weapons unequipped in Xenoblade Chronicles. His skin is slightly tanned when wearing this costume. Officially dubbed "Ecru Type" as of Xenoblade Chronicles: Definitive Edition.
|
Villager's appearance varies greatly between costumes, with differing eyes, hair, gender and clothing. All of Villager's alternate costumes, with the exception of the yellow costume, are based on how the player may look at the start of a new game depending on how they answer questions asked by Kapp'n or Rover in Animal Crossing: Wild World and Animal Crossing: City Folk respectively.
Red
|
Male villager wearing a "No. 1 Shirt" as he appears in artwork for City Folk.
|
Pink
|
Female villager wearing a "Daisy Shirt" as she appears in artwork for Wild World.
|
Yellow
|
Male villager wearing a "Racer 6 Tee". The corresponding starting appearance in Wild World and City Folk instead sports the "Paw Tee" and a different hairstyle.
|
Green
|
Female villager wearing a "Turnip Top".
|
Cyan
|
Male villager wearing a "Blue Tie-Dye Tee" as he appears in artwork for City Folk.
|
Blue
|
Female villager wearing a "Rugby Tee".
|
Purple
|
Male villager wearing a "Four-Ball Tee".
|
Chartreuse
|
Female villager wearing a "Yellow Bolero".
|
Half of Wario's costumes use his biker outfit from the WarioWare series, while the other half use his classic outfit.
Wario-Man is always treated as pink in Find Mii.
Wario is the only character to have their number of costumes decrease from Brawl, going from 12 in Brawl to 8 in SSB4.
Half of the Wii Fit Trainer's costumes are female, while the other half are male.
Female
|
Her color scheme in Wii Fit.
|
Male
|
His color scheme in Wii Fit.
|
Green
|
Her color scheme in Wii Fit Plus and Wii Fit U.
|
Male Green
|
His color scheme in Wii Fit Plus and Wii Fit U.
|
Red
|
Complementary to the color scheme of the Aerobics category in Wii Fit titles.
|
Male Red
|
Complementary to the color scheme of the Aerobics category in Wii Fit titles.
|
Yellow
|
Her color scheme in Wii Fit Plus that appears during Yoga or Strength Training activity in My Wii Fit Plus mode.
|
Male Yellow
|
His color scheme in Wii Fit Plus that appears during Yoga or Strength Training activity in My Wii Fit Plus mode.
|
Unlike in previous installments, the spots on Yoshi's Egg now match those of the selected costume.
Stats
- There are a total of 448 alternate costumes.
- The average number of costumes per character is 8.
- Little Mac is the only character who has 16 color swaps, 8 of them in his wireframe variant.
References
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U - Final Video Presentation. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2015-12-15). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “There's also a color variation inspired by Jeanne.”
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "A Bowser Impostor?! – In Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, Mario fights a blue fake Bowser before the real thing. That blue fake is his eighth color in this game!"
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Palutena's Guidance: "I wonder if his father bought him that Junior Clown Car. It's decked out with all sorts of bells and whistles."
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Palutena's Guidance: "That Koopa Clown Car is the mass-produced type."
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t 色ちがいのひみつ
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U - Final Video Presentation. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2015-12-15). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “There's also a color variation inspired by Jeanne.”
- ^ https://www.sourcegaming.info/2016/01/20/sakurai-x-nomura-creator-interview-2016-part-one/
- ^ a b c d e Smash Bros. DOJO!! - Color Changes
- ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! :ドクターマリオ (Japanese)
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-05-23). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2018-04-28. “For this game, Ike's design is based on the hero that appears in Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-06-24). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Here's Link in an outfit based on his ordinary clothes in Skyward Sword! The art style looks a little different, but the actual clothing model is still his usual tunic.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-11-10). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-11-08. Retrieved on 2021-05-01. “The one large change we made to this stage is this Hylian text. I wonder what it says? Also featured in this pic is Link in Fierce Deity colors.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-05-12). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Here's wire frame Little Mac--re-envisioned from the original Punch-Out!! game. The man that actually drew the pixel art wire frame in the original was none other than Shigeru Miyamoto. He said he drew the pixels for the wire frame on graph paper.”
- ^ a b Masahiro Sakurai (2014-10-27). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. The color variations for Shulk are all based off outfit colors of his travel companions…excluding one of them. Lucina's color variations are also based off the female characters in Fire Emblem Awakening.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-07-10). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. The character farther in the back isn't from the Imperial forces, and the character in the front is not the infamous drum-playing puppet in Osaka. No, Mario is actually wearing an outfit from Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course! NES Open Tournament Golf might be a more familiar title.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-09. Retrieved on 2018-04-28. “We gave Marth a full makeover, giving him design elements from Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and newer games.”
- ^ a b Masked Man (translator) (2016-02-23). Nintendo Dream Interview with Sakurai: Part 2. SourceGaming. Retrieved on 2018-04-18.
- ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! : アンケート集計拳!! - Page 11 in post-launch.
- ^ Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (North America) - Tip: "Galacta Knight – Meta Knight's seventh color variation is based on Galacta Knight, who makes an appearance in Kirby Super Star Ultra and is said to be the strongest warrior in the galaxy."
- ^ Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (North America) - Tip: "Dark Meta Knight – Meta Knight's eighth color variation is based on a shadow version of Meta Knight, Dark Meta Knight, who appears in Kirby & The Amazing Mirror."
- ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! : アンケート集計拳!! - Page 31 in post-launch.
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "R.O.B.: Color Variations – R.O.B.'s red-and-white second color is based on the Japan version of R.O.B. In fact, it's even his default color in the Japanese version of this game!"
- ^ a b c d Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Until now, you were only able to choose from four, or sometimes five or six colors for each character. This time, though, all characters have eight colors to choose from! The first four color schemes for Samus are based off her Varia Suit, Fusion Suit, Gravity Suit from Super Metroid, and the Dark Suit.”
- ^ Wii U & Nintendo 3DS Developer Direct. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2014-07-11). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “Until now Samus was based off the design from Super Metroid, but she's been given a major makeover. Her design is now closer to that of Metroid: Other M.”
- ^ a b c d Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “…And here she is in the color schemes of the Gravity Suit from Metroid Prime, Green Samus (a regular in the Smash series), the Light Suit, and Dark Samus. A total of eight colors.”
- ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Looking at the number of days we have left for development, it would be an impossible task to create this… That's what I told my staff. But thanks to the determination of her female designer, these Zero Suit outfits got completed in time. From the ending of Metroid: Zero Mission, here's Samus in shorts!”
- ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "Zero Suit Samus's 7th Color – Zero Suit Samus's seventh color variation is a unique orange outfit. This outfit first appeared in certain endings of Metroid: Zero Mission."