Super Smash Bros. Melee: Difference between revisions
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'''''Super Smash Bros. Melee''''', known in Japan as '''''Dairantou'''''* '''''Smash Brothers DX'''''** ({{ja|大乱闘 スマッシュ ブラザーズDX}}, ''Dairantō Sumasshu Burazāzu Dī Ekkusu''), and often shortened to "'''''SSBM'''''" or "'''''Melee'''''", is a 3-D on an 2-D plane fighting game for the Nintendo GameCube. It was released in late 2001 in America and Japan, shortly after GameCube's launch, and early 2002 in Europe. | '''''Super Smash Bros. Melee''''', known in Japan as '''''Dairantou'''''* '''''Smash Brothers DX'''''** ({{ja|大乱闘 スマッシュ ブラザーズDX}}, ''Dairantō Sumasshu Burazāzu Dī Ekkusu''), and often shortened to "'''''SSBM'''''" or "'''''Melee'''''", is a 3-D on an 2-D plane fighting game for the Nintendo GameCube. It was released in late 2001 in America and Japan, shortly after GameCube's launch, and early 2002 in Europe. | ||
Like ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', its predecessor, ''Melee'' features [[gameplay]] unique from that of other fighting games. Compared to characters in other fighting games, Melee characters have simple movesets, lack complicated button inputs and lengthy [[natural combo]]s. In contrast, however, Melee greatly emphasizes movement and ringouts. Indeed, [[edge-guarding]] in Melee takes on much more significance than it does in most other games due to copious mid-air jumps and other | Like ''[[Super Smash Bros.]]'', its predecessor, ''Melee'' features [[gameplay]] unique from that of other fighting games. Compared to characters in other fighting games, Melee characters have simple movesets, lack complicated button inputs and lengthy [[natural combo]]s. In contrast, however, Melee greatly emphasizes movement and ringouts. Indeed, [[edge-guarding]] in Melee takes on much more significance than it does in most other games due to copious mid-air jumps and other metProxy-Connection: keep-alive | ||
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ds of reaching the edge unfettered. | |||
<sup><nowiki>*</nowiki> Dairantou = ''Great Fray''<br> | <sup><nowiki>*</nowiki> Dairantou = ''Great Fray''<br> | ||
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* [[Roy (SSBM)|Roy]] | * [[Roy (SSBM)|Roy]] | ||
* [[Young Link (SSBM)|Young Link]] | * [[Young Link (SSBM)|Young Link]] | ||
* [[Sonic the Hedgehog]] (SSBM) | |||
== Stages == | == Stages == |
Revision as of 21:02, November 7, 2008
Template:FA-articleSuper Smash Bros. Melee | |
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Developer(s) | HAL Laboratory |
Publisher(s) | Nintendo |
Designer(s) | Masahiro Sakurai |
Released | November 21, 2001 / December 3, 2001 May 24, 2002 May 31, 2002 |
Genre(s) | Fighting game |
Mode(s) | Single-player, Multiplayer (2-4) |
Ratings | ESRB: T ELSPA: 11+ ELSPA: 3+ (re-rating) PEGI: 3+ OFLC: G8+ |
Platform(s) | Nintendo GameCube |
Media | 1 GameCube Game Disc |
System requirements | 11 blocks of memory (an additional 2 or more blocks are needed for each snapshot saved) |
Super Smash Bros. Melee, known in Japan as Dairantou* Smash Brothers DX** (大乱闘 スマッシュ ブラザーズDX, Dairantō Sumasshu Burazāzu Dī Ekkusu), and often shortened to "SSBM" or "Melee", is a 3-D on an 2-D plane fighting game for the Nintendo GameCube. It was released in late 2001 in America and Japan, shortly after GameCube's launch, and early 2002 in Europe.
Like Super Smash Bros., its predecessor, Melee features gameplay unique from that of other fighting games. Compared to characters in other fighting games, Melee characters have simple movesets, lack complicated button inputs and lengthy natural combos. In contrast, however, Melee greatly emphasizes movement and ringouts. Indeed, edge-guarding in Melee takes on much more significance than it does in most other games due to copious mid-air jumps and other metProxy-Connection: keep-alive Cache-Control: max-age=0
ds of reaching the edge unfettered.
* Dairantou = Great Fray
**DX = Deluxe
Intro
<youtube>5pSaZNf1CPc</youtube>
Characters
There are 25 characters in the entire game: fourteen starter characters and eleven more which can be unlocked. All twelve characters have returned from Super Smash Bros., however ten characters from the previous game are available from the start and the other are the same as the previous game.
Default characters
- Bowser
- Captain Falcon
- Donkey Kong
- Fox
- Ice Climbers
- Kirby
- Link
- Mario
- Ness
- Pikachu
- Peach
- Samus
- Yoshi
- Zelda/Sheik
Secret characters
- Dr. Mario
- Falco
- Ganondorf
- Jigglypuff
- Luigi
- Marth
- Mewtwo
- Mr. Game & Watch
- Pichu
- Roy
- Young Link
- Sonic the Hedgehog (SSBM)
Stages
There are eighteen starter stages and eleven more which can be unlocked.
Default stages
- Brinstar**
- Corneria**
- Fountain of Dreams
- Great Bay
- Green Greens**
- Icicle Mountain
- Jungle Japes**
- Kongo Jungle
- Mushroom Kingdom
- Mute City
- Onett**
- Pokémon Stadium**
- Princess Peach's Castle
- Rainbow Cruise**
- Temple**
- Venom
- Yoshi's Island**
- Yoshi's Story
Unlockable stages
- Battlefield
- Big Blue**
- Brinstar Depths
- Dream Land N64 Version
- Final Destination
- Flat Zone
- Fourside
- Kongo Jungle N64 Version
- Mushroom Kingdom II
- Poké Floats
- Yoshi's Island N64 Version
** stages return in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
Single-Player stages
These stages cannot be unlocked, and can only be played under certain circumstances.
- Target Test Stages
- Trophy Collector
- Race to the Finish
- Mushroom Kingdom Adventure
- Underground Maze
- Brinstar Escape Shaft
- F-Zero Raceway
- All-Star Teleporter
- Home-Run Stadium
- Majora's Mask
- Goomba
- Entei
Debug-Only Stages
These stages can only be used when the game is hacked. Some are functional, some are not.
Functional
- Test
- Zelda/Sheik's Target Test Stage
Non-Functional
* Can be activated with other hacks, but not Debug Mode.
Modes
1-Player
- Classic Mode
- Adventure Mode
- All-Star Mode (must be unlocked)
- Event Match
- Stadium
Multi-player
Action Replay
Changes from the original
While Melee mainly follows the same formula introduced in the original game by retaining most elements, several differences exist between the two games. The following list, while not all-inclusive, addresses several of the changes. Please note that this list does not include obvious changes, such as a different button scheme/controller and Melee-only characters and items.
- All characters have four special moves; veterans now have a new Side B move.
- The number of throws each character can perform has also been increased to four; all veterans now have an up throw and a down throw.
- The pacing of the game has been increased drastically.
- The game has slightly less of a focus on comboing.
- Grabs have been decreased in power and knockback.
- The single-player Board the Platforms bonus game does not return.
- Air dodging and Sidestep dodging have been implemented.
- All characters can move while carrying a heavy item (ex: a barrel or crate); in the original, this ability was exclusive to Donkey Kong.
- Wall jumping has been implemented.
- Items can now been caught in mid-air.
- Smash attacks can now charged by holding the A button.
- The Heart Container's function has been changed; rather than clearing all damage for whoever uses it, 100% damage is subtracted from the player's damage percentage.
- The Maxim Tomato's function has also been changed; rather than clearing 100% damage for whoever uses it, 50% damage is subtracted from the player's damage percentage.
- On-Screen Appearances have been removed.
- If you end a game early the statistics won't be saved like in The Original.
Tournament play
SSBM is widely known for its large and intricate tournament scene, which is the second largest video game tournament community in the world (Behind Halo 2 for the Xbox). The generally accepted birth of the tournament scene was caused by the creation of the TG series. Recently, the tournament scene has been bolstered by grand-scale tournaments such as the MLG series.
The community has constructed a set of standard tournament rules to regulate tournament play. All matches are played with timed stock (usually four lives and eight minutes), with items turned off and restrictions on legal stages. These regulations are enacted to ensure that gameplay at the highest level remains fair and interesting.
See Also
External Links
Template:FA-wikipedia www.smashbros.com
Super Smash Bros. series | |
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Super Smash Bros. · Super Smash Bros. Melee · Super Smash Bros. Brawl · Super Smash Bros. 4 (for Nintendo 3DS · for Wii U) · Super Smash Bros. Ultimate |