Super Smash Bros. 4
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

Midgar: Difference between revisions

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*In ''Ultimate'', the underside of the left ledge is not modelled, although the right ledge is fully modelled.
*In ''Ultimate'', the underside of the left ledge is not modelled, although the right ledge is fully modelled.
*Midgar appears as a stage in the 2015 ''[[wikipedia:Dissidia Final Fantasy (2015 video game)|Dissidia Final Fantasy]]''. This makes it one of nine stages in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series to be featured as a stage in other fighting games, with the others being the [[Pyrosphere]], [[Green Hill Zone]], [[Fountain of Dreams]], [[Suzaku Castle]], [[Dracula's Castle]], [[King of Fighters Stadium]], [[Spring Stadium]] and [[Northern Cave]].
*Midgar appears as a stage in the 2015 ''[[wikipedia:Dissidia Final Fantasy (2015 video game)|Dissidia Final Fantasy]]''. This makes it one of nine stages in the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series to be featured as a stage in other fighting games, with the others being the [[Pyrosphere]], [[Green Hill Zone]], [[Fountain of Dreams]], [[Suzaku Castle]], [[Dracula's Castle]], [[King of Fighters Stadium]], [[Spring Stadium]] and [[Northern Cave]].
*Midgar's two music tracks are both taken directly from ''Final Fantasy VII'', making Midgar both the stage with the fewest amount of music tracks in ''Super Smash Bros. for Wii U'' and the first one lacking any ''Smash''-exclusive arrangements in its lineup. **This is not the case in ''Ultimate'' prior to version 10.0.0, with [[Yggdrasil's Altar]] not having any either, though it was tied with [[Flat Zone X]] for the least amount of tracks. In version 10.0.0, 9 songs were added, 4 of which were remixes.  
*Midgar's two music tracks are both taken directly from ''Final Fantasy VII'', making Midgar both the stage with the fewest amount of music tracks in ''Super Smash Bros. for Wii U'' and the first one lacking any ''Smash''-exclusive arrangements in its lineup.
**This is not the case in ''Ultimate'' prior to version 10.0.0, with [[Yggdrasil's Altar]] not having any either, though it was tied with [[Flat Zone X]] for the least amount of tracks. In version 10.0.0, 9 songs were added, 4 of which were remixes.  
*Interestingly, in the ''3DS'' version, whenever a match starts or resets in [[Training Mode]], the characters on the floating platforms will always perform their landing animation, as if they start in midair.<!--Does this not happen in Wii U?-->
*Interestingly, in the ''3DS'' version, whenever a match starts or resets in [[Training Mode]], the characters on the floating platforms will always perform their landing animation, as if they start in midair.<!--Does this not happen in Wii U?-->
*Midgar is the only stage in ''SSB4'' that can [[crush]].
*Midgar is the only stage in ''SSB4'' that can [[crush]].

Revision as of 04:52, December 18, 2020

Final Fantasy VII
Midgar
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FinalFantasySymbol.svg
Midgar as it appears in Smash.
Universe Final Fantasy
Appears in SSB4
Ultimate
Availability Downloadable (SSB4)
Starter (Ultimate)
Crate type Normal
Maximum players 4 (3DS)
8 (Wii U and Ultimate)
Music
Bolded tracks must be unlocked
for 3DS Main: Let the Battles Begin!
Alternate: Fight On!
for Wii U Let the Battles Begin!
Fight On!
Ultimate Final Fantasy series music
Main: Let the Battles Begin!
Alternate: Fight On!
Tournament legality
Smash 4 Singles: Counterpick (Ω form only)
Doubles: Banned
Ultimate Singles: Banned
Doubles: Banned
Grab the Summon Materia to call forth powerful beings. If a Summon knocks out a fighter, the point is awarded to whoever grabbed the Summon Materia, so make sure it's you!
Super Smash Blog, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Official Site

Midgar (ミッドガル, Midgar) is a Final Fantasy stage in Super Smash Bros. 4 which is available as downloadable content, as part of a set with Cloud. The stage returns in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. In Ultimate, Cloud is fought here for his unlock battle.

Stage overview

The basic layout of the stage consists, like Battlefield, of a main platform with three overhanging soft platforms in a triangle formation; however, the stage is slightly larger.

Summon Materia occasionally float around the stage and stops in a random location with a flash. When a character touches it they are surrounded by magical symbols, then a monster is summoned which unleashes an attack with greatly disruptive effects.

Ifrit's Hellfire.

Ifrit

Ifrit: uses Hellfire (Called Inferno by Masahiro Sakurai during the Final Video Presentation). A huge flame erupts randomly either under the middle of the stage (raising it), under one of its sides (heavily tilting it to the side), or from one of the lateral blast lines (pushing the stage towards the other lateral blast line). Contact with the main body of the flame deals 26%, while contact with its weaker parts deals 1% with no knockback. The summoner is immune. Unlike the rest of the summons, Ifrit's design comes from Final Fantasy VIII rather than Final Fantasy VII.

Ramuh's Judgment Bolt.

Ramuh

Ramuh: uses Judgment Bolt. The three floating platforms are electrified and their arrangement changes to another random one. The three platforms then, one by one, randomly glow and get electrified again. After all three have undergone this process they return to their original position. Landing on an electrified platform paralyzes fighters and deals continuous damage (up to 21%) before launching them; simply passing through them deals damage but will not paralyze. The summoner is immune.

The stage split in half by Odin's attack.

Odin

Odin: uses Zantetsuken. Odin slices through the stage with his sword, splitting the main platform and the top floating platform in half. Characters hit by this attack, except the summoner, receive 100% damage, and in most cases are KO'd. In Ultimate, this attack triggers a Special Zoom. While the stage is split, its inner ledges can be grabbed. The stage pulls itself back together after a while, crushing any character, summoner included, caught between the two halves or hanging from the inner ledges.

The stage flooded by Leviathan's attack.

Leviathan

Leviathan: uses Tidal Wave. The entire arena is flooded, making the main platform surf across a huge body of water. A strong current pushes swimming characters to the left; getting slammed into the right side of the stage deals 9% damage or, if the character has 100% or more damage, an instant KO. The summoner is susceptible to the current and the slam damage, but not to the instant KO. If a player happens to have invincibility and enters the water on the right side of the stage, the player may be carried away by the current when it subsides or pushed under the stage to the left side due to not slamming into it. [1] Fighters who enter the water under the effects of the Super Mushroom are trapped in the water (if on the right side) due to the low knockback and potentially KOed. This feature is not present in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, due to the removal of swimming in said game.

Bahamut ZERO's Teraflare.

Bahamut

Bahamut ZERO: Attacks with a devastating Teraflare, which destroys the city in the background and creates a damaging pillar of light covering about 1/3 of the stage. Getting caught in the beam deals continuous damage, up to 39%. The summoner is immune.

Any opponent KO'd by a monster's attack counts as a KO on behalf of the summoner.

In 8-Player Smash mode, no summoned monsters appear if there are five or more players. If the game is paused in Training Mode, all summon effects are paused but the rest of the action keeps going.

In both versions of Super Smash Bros. 4, in Training Mode, if the player summons a Smash Ball, the Summon Materia or the summons Leviathan and Ifrit will go away.

Ω forms and Battlefield form

In Super Smash Bros. 4, the Ω form removes the soft platforms and Summon Materia.

In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, the Ω form is identical to SSB4's Ω form, and the Battlefield form is identical to the normal form; however, they are slightly resized and reshaped to match Final Destination and Battlefield, respectively.

Hazards Off

With hazards off in Ultimate, no Summon Materia ever appears, leaving the stage in its Battlefield-shaped form.

Origin

Midgar as it appears in Final Fantasy VII Remake.

Midgar is the the first area visited in Final Fantasy VII and is where much of the game's beginning takes place. Midgar is the capital city and power base of the Shinra Electric Power Company, who built it. The city is divided up into nine sectors. This stage appears to take place on Midgar's top plates, above the ground-level slums that were commonly explored in Final Fantasy VII.

The Shinra Building, one of the most iconic locations in Final Fantasy VII, is visible in the background. A prominent dungeon within the game, it is the headquarters for the Shinra company which plays a central role in Final Fantasy VII's storyline. The building is where Aerith Gainsborough is imprisoned after her capture by the Turks during the destruction of Sector 7. Cloud, Barret Wallace and Tifa Lockhart infiltrate the building in order to rescue Aerith, and meet Red XIII, a sentient animal from Cosmo Canyon. The party is recaptured, but later freed, following a trail of blood to discover that Cloud's nemesis Sephiroth is still alive and has murdered President Shinra. After Sephiroth summons Meteor, a cannon known as the Sister Ray is attached to the building and is powered by the six remaining Mako Reactors. Cloud's party returns to Midgar at this time to stop Shinra once and for all.

Midgar is also seen in other media in the Compilation of Final Fantasy VII. In the film Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children, Midgar is mostly left in ruins as a result of Meteor's effects. In its stead, a city called Edge is built, where most of the movie's events take place, such as the outburst of the disease known as Geostigma. Cloud later fights Kadaj, and later Sephiroth, in the ruins of the Shinra Building. The ruins of Midgar are visited again in Dirge of Cerberus, where Vincent Valentine fights off the organization known as Deepground and the Omega Weapon, with a climatic confrontation against Weiss, the leader of Deepground, in the former President's Office.

Summons are a recurring element in the Final Fantasy series since their introduction in Final Fantasy III. They are powerful creatures that can be summoned into battle to attack enemies or support the party. In Final Fantasy VII, they can be summoned by equipping specific Materia: all the summons appearing on this stage are also available in Final Fantasy VII.

Tournament legality

While the Ω form of this stage is allowed, the standard stage is banned in tournaments, as in Smash 4, it overcentralizes gameplay on collecting Materia to gain an advantage; in addition, the summons themselves are quite powerful and can result in unfair advantages to those who summoned them. In Ultimate, the stage is banned due to the layout being very similar to Battlefield, as with a few other stages. Notably, the main platform has an asymmetrical shape, making recoveries hugging the stage slightly unpredictable, the lower platforms are taller than Battlefield, preventing some attacks from hitting opponents standing on them, and the stage is slightly larger. Because of these characteristics, Midgar is considered less ideal than Battlefield and is almost never used in its place.

Gallery

Super Smash Bros. 4

Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

Names in other languages

Language Name
Japan Japanese ミッドガル, Midgar
UK English Midgar
France French Midgar
Germany German Midgar
Spain Spanish Midgar
Italy Italian Midgar
China Chinese Midgar
South Korea Korean 미드가르, Midgar
Netherlands Dutch Midgar
Russia Russian Мидгар

Trivia

The underside of the left ledge, unmodelled
  • In Ultimate, the underside of the left ledge is not modelled, although the right ledge is fully modelled.
  • Midgar appears as a stage in the 2015 Dissidia Final Fantasy. This makes it one of nine stages in the Super Smash Bros. series to be featured as a stage in other fighting games, with the others being the Pyrosphere, Green Hill Zone, Fountain of Dreams, Suzaku Castle, Dracula's Castle, King of Fighters Stadium, Spring Stadium and Northern Cave.
  • Midgar's two music tracks are both taken directly from Final Fantasy VII, making Midgar both the stage with the fewest amount of music tracks in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U and the first one lacking any Smash-exclusive arrangements in its lineup.
    • This is not the case in Ultimate prior to version 10.0.0, with Yggdrasil's Altar not having any either, though it was tied with Flat Zone X for the least amount of tracks. In version 10.0.0, 9 songs were added, 4 of which were remixes.
  • Interestingly, in the 3DS version, whenever a match starts or resets in Training Mode, the characters on the floating platforms will always perform their landing animation, as if they start in midair.
  • Midgar is the only stage in SSB4 that can crush.
  • Odin's attack does not appear to use a hitbox, but instead, like Psystrike, it uses a searchbox and generates a hitbox inside any fighters detected by it. Like Psystrike, it is therefore possible for two of these hitboxes to overlap, resulting in fighters being hit by the attack twice on the same frame, for a total of 200% damage, and seemingly one-hit KOing them.
  • In Training Mode, if the game is paused while a summon is in effect, it will continue its effect indefinitely, continuing to affect other fighters (excluding Odin; instead, if paused upon slashing, the game stays slowed down until unpaused or the camera briefly zooms in on the fighter that he strikes (which doesn't happen if multiple fighters are hit) after they're KOed). Summons such as Ifrit and Bahamut ZERO allow for combos of up to 999 to be registered by the game. A similar exploit can be done on stages like Mario Circuit.
  • If Sonic is fighting on Midgar in the Wii U version, a graphical glitch will occur wherein his eyes appear to reflect the texture of the stage, turning them gray in color. This occurs even on the Ω form of the stage.
  • In Ultimate, the following Assist Trophies cannot appear on this stage: Waluigi, Skull Kid, the Moon, Midna, Nightmare, Knuckle Joe, Andross, Samurai Goroh, Color TV-Game 15, Devil, Nintendog, Dr. Kawashima, Nikki (due to the dark background obscuring her drawings), Squid Sisters, Ghosts and Shadow the Hedgehog. Additionally, Lunala cannot be summoned from a Poké Ball on this stage.

External links