Final Destination (SSBM): Difference between revisions
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|universe = {{uv|Super Smash Bros.}} | |universe = {{uv|Super Smash Bros.}} | ||
|games = ''[[Melee]]'' | |games = ''[[Melee]]'' | ||
|hometo = {{SSBM| | |hometo = [[Master Hand]]<br/>[[Crazy Hand]]<br/>[[Giga Bowser]]<br/>{{SSBM|Roy}} ([[All-Star Mode|All-Star]])<br/>[[Mewtwo]] (unlocking/[[Classic Mode|Classic]]/[[All-Star Match]])<br/>[[Bowser]] ([[Adventure Mode|Adventure]])<br/>{{SSBM|Ganondorf}} (unlocking/[[All-Star Match]]) | ||
|availability = [[Unlockable stage|Unlockable]] | |||
|unlockcriteria = Clear all 51 event matches. | |unlockcriteria = Clear all 51 event matches. | ||
|music = ''{{MeleeMusic|Final Destination}}''<br>''{{MeleeMusic|Multi-Man Melee 2}}'' ([[Alternate music|Alternate]])<br>''{{MeleeMusic|Giga Bowser}}'' (When facing Giga Bowser in [[Adventure Mode]]) | |music = ''{{MeleeMusic|Final Destination}}''<br>''{{MeleeMusic|Multi-Man Melee 2}}'' ([[Alternate music|Alternate]])<br>''{{MeleeMusic|Giga Bowser}}'' (When facing Giga Bowser in [[Adventure Mode]]) |
Revision as of 13:49, April 1, 2015
Final Destination | |
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File:SmashBrosSymbol.png | |
Universe | Super Smash Bros. |
Appears in | Melee |
Availability | Unlockable |
Unlock criteria | Clear all 51 event matches. |
Tracks available | Final Destination Multi-Man Melee 2 (Alternate) Giga Bowser (When facing Giga Bowser in Adventure Mode) |
Final Destination (終点, Endpoint), sometimes abbreviated as FD or Final D, is a neutral stage in Super Smash Bros. Melee that players often use in tournament battles. It is unlocked by clearing every event match.
In Classic Mode, the player fights Master Hand and Crazy Hand on this stage; in Adventure Mode, Bowser and Giga Bowser; in All-Star Mode, Roy and any of his teammates, and two All-Star Matches, Mewtwo and Ganondorf. Some event matches are also played here. This stage is very similar to its Smash 64 counterpart, but much larger.
Description
Final Destination is a flat, medium sized stage. It is octagonal in shape, with a purple outline. There is a floating orb under the platform. While having no effect on gameplay, the background of the stage changes as the platform "flies" through space. The stage starts out in space, but as match progresses, it reaches other areas that have different styles of background. The entire cycle lasts about 216 seconds.
Controversy in competitive play
Some players believe that Final Destination is one of the most fair levels; others do not consider this true. Certain elements of gameplay are dominant on this stage. For instance, projectile users have an advantage on Final Destination, as there are no platforms for enemies to escape to or to interrupt projectiles. Since many characters have projectiles, the game balance tends to lead towards the ones who have the abilities to counter them. It also favors chain throwing because it is the widest available perfectly flat space, an environment suited to chain throws that move the enemy across stage (often due to DI). Additionally, the excess free space make camping a viable option for fast characters like Fox, Falco, Captain Falcon, Marth, and Sheik.
While a fair number of players who call it cheap or accuse it of being balance-skewed, there is no matchup or strategy that has been proven completely unwinnable on this stage. The primary effect that Final Destination tends to have on competitive play is that it heightens the advantage that high-tiered characters have in their best matchups. For instance, Jigglypuff against Fox runs fairly the same on Final Destination as it does on the Dream Land stage, in terms of wins and losses. However, Bowser tends to fare more poorly than normal on Final Destination, particularly against projectile-using characters, because his lack of non-interruptible moves, his large hitbox, and his short overall jump height make him an excellent target of projectile abuse, which can be mitigated in stages with platforms.
Some say that by adding additional options for characters, platforms expand gameplay and allow smashers to play more creatively. The inverse of this argument is that Final Destination removes options and therefore makes gameplay more rigid and pre-defined. However, neither of these positions are a comprehensive argument for banning the stage. As mentioned before, ranged, chain throwing and juggling characters gain most from this stage, and the game mechanics still allow for a large degree of varied play and styles, some of which are not possible with platforms. For instance, under-platform camping (a technique where a character with good vertical melee range hides under a platform to prevent his opponents from attacking with Air Attacks) is invalidated here, forcing characters that rely on camping (such as Peach and Marth) to take the offense occasionally or lose to a stronger projectile or approach. Additionally, the distant side and bottom blastlines enhance the importance of edge-guarding and recovery, so while a projectile such as Falco's Blaster or Dr. Mario's Megavitamins can control the stage and rack up easy damage, their poor recoveries are amplified.
Classically, the notion of a high level of balance on Final Destination comes from traditional 2-D fighters; almost all fighting games prior to Smash 64 take place on fixed stages with fixed edges, and are balanced to play as such. All in all, the stage is considered balanced for tournament because it allows all characters to move effectively and evade and attack properly in melee combat, and because the imbalances it creates are not dissimilar to the imbalances created by Pokémon Stadium and Fountain of Dreams - largely character and matchup based, and situational. Additionally, competitive play at the high levels of fighting games, and the tournament scene for any game involves creating and researching situations where the used character selections gain slight, but not overwhelming advantages; therefore, the player with the most stage knowledge is most likely to pick the correct stage and gain an advantage. Advanced stage selection can counter an advanced player's particular skillset, however, not in such a way that the same player cannot use their other basic and advanced skillsets to overcome the issue, and this is the scale that balance rests upon. Advanced Slob Picks are used in tournament stage selection to prevent exploitation by game winners or negative variance and a minimized level selection that a full Random, neutral stage select would give. If feeling that a character or matchup will do poorly on Final Destination, an option to ban it may be exercised, or simply another stage picked.
Trophy Info
As time passes on this stage, the level appears to travel through a wormhole from the imaginary Super Smash Bros. Melee world into reality. You move through a cloud-filled sky over a vast mountain range, then into a deep-space vista of dark blues and purples. The scenery is as real as you get in this fantastical world.
Gallery
Trivia
- It is possible to jump under Final Destination with Jigglypuff and Mewtwo. This can also be done by Kirby if he copies Mewtwo's Shadow Ball, and by Peach if she wears a Bunny Hood.
- The track for Final Destination is very similar to Super Smash Bros. 64's Credits theme. This is very evident during the end verse.
- This is the only time where Final Destination is an unlockable stage.
- Final Destination is the only stage of five neutral stages whose stage design is not similar to that of Battlefield's.
Stages in Super Smash Bros. Melee | |
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Starter 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 · Final Destination · Flat Zone · Fourside · Mushroom Kingdom II · Poké Floats |
Unlockable Past Stages | Dream Land · Kongo Jungle · Yoshi's Island |