Poké Ball: Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 18:20, June 14, 2014
Poké Ball | |
---|---|
Artwork of a Poké Ball in Brawl. | |
Universe | Pokémon |
Appears in | SSB SSBM SSBB SSB4 |
Item class | Throwing/Summoning |
Article on Bulbapedia | Poké Ball |
The Poké Ball (モンスターボール, Monsutābōru, Monster Ball) is an item that, if thrown, will release one of a number of Pokémon. Each Pokémon does a different thing, including attacking the thrower's opponents, changing the properties of the stage, and inducing status effects. The Poké Balls in Super Smash Bros. release Pokémon from Pokémon Red, Blue, and Yellow (Generation I), while the Poké Balls in Super Smash Bros. Melee release Pokémon from Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal (Generation II) in addition to Pokémon from Red, Blue, and Yellow. The Poké Balls in Super Smash Bros. Brawl also release Pokémon from Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, FireRed, LeafGreen, Diamond, and Pearl (Generations III and IV). In Brawl, the Poké Ball makes a unique sound effect when it appears, thus alerting one to its presence even if it appears off screen. The Poké Ball has been confirmed to return in Super Smash Bros. 4, and are able to release Pokémon from Pokémon Black, White, Black 2, White 2, Pokémon X, and Y (Generations V and VI).
Another version of the Poké Ball, the Master Ball, has been introduced in Smash 4, which is similar to the Poké Ball, but only releases rare or legendary Pokémon.
In Brawl, the number of Poké Balls that can be on-screen at once has been reduced to 3, instead of the unlimited number of Poké Balls that could appear in Melee.
The Poké Ball is also featured as a trophy in Melee and Brawl.
Damage
SSB | Melee | Brawl | |
---|---|---|---|
Throw | 16% | 13% | 13% |
Up tilt throw | 17% | 12% | 12% |
Down tilt throw | 13% | 15% | N/A |
Dash throw | 21% | 15% | 15% |
Forward smash throw | 20% | 16% | 13% |
Up smash throw | 21% | 12% | 12% |
Down smash throw | 13% | 19% | N/A |
Aerial throw | 18% | 15% | 15% |
Aerial drop | N/A | 12% | 12% |
Aerial up tilt throw | 20% | 12% | 12% |
Aerial down tilt throw | 21% | 15% | 15% |
Aerial forward smash throw | 21% | 15% | 15% |
Aerial up smash throw | 24% | 12% | 12% |
Aerial down smash throw | 24% | 15% | 15% |
Origin
In the Pokémon series, the Pokémon trainer has to capture wild Pokémon to add to his or her party Pokémon. When the Pokémon trainer encounters a wild Pokémon, he or she must use their Pokémon to weaken the wild Pokémon if necessary. When the Pokémon is weak enough, the trainer can throw a Poké Ball at it to capture it. It takes three wobbles and then a click from the Poké Ball for a successful catch. A Poké Ball catch attempt will fail if the caught Pokémon was able to break out of the ball. Poké Balls are also used for the storage of Pokémon. When the trainer gets in a battle, the trainer throws a Poké Ball out on the battlefield that contains the Pokémon of his or her choice and the Pokémon is released. The Poké Ball has been used in almost every Pokémon game since and functions the same. In the Super Smash Bros. series, the Poké Ball is an item that can be picked up, thrown, and release a random Pokémon (refer to the list below for all the Pokémon). [1]
List of Poké Ball Pokémon
Super Smash Bros.
- Beedrill
- Blastoise
- Chansey
- Charizard
- Clefairy
- Goldeen
- Hitmonlee
- Koffing
- Meowth
- Mew
- Onix
- Snorlax
- Starmie
Super Smash Bros. Melee
- Articuno
- Bellossom
- Blastoise
- Celebi
- Chansey
- Charizard
- Chikorita
- Clefairy
- Cyndaquil
- Ditto (Only available via Action Replay)
- Electrode
- Entei
- Goldeen
- Ho-oh
- Lugia
- Marill
- Mew
- Moltres
- Porygon2
- Raikou
- Scizor
- Snorlax
- Staryu
- Suicune
- Togepi
- Unown
- Venusaur
- Weezing
- Wobbuffet
- Zapdos
Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Pokémon | Relative frequency |
---|---|
Bellossom | 30 |
Bonsly | 30 |
Celebi | 0 |
Chikorita | 30 |
Deoxys | 3 |
Electrode | 40 |
Entei | 5 |
Gardevoir | 30 |
Goldeen | 40 |
Groudon | 5 |
Gulpin | 30 |
Ho-oh | 3 |
Jirachi | 0 |
Kyogre | 5 |
Latias and Latios | 30 |
Lugia | 3 |
Manaphy | 4 |
Meowth | 30 |
Metagross | 30 |
Mew | 0 |
Moltres | 4 |
Munchlax | 30 |
Piplup | 30 |
Snorlax | 30 |
Staryu | 30 |
Suicune | 4 |
Togepi | 20 |
Torchic | 30 |
Weavile | 30 |
Wobbuffet | 30 |
Note that Pokémon with a given frequency of 0 are assigned a combined 1/493 chance of appearing, independent of the rest of the frequency system. It should also be noted that at the time that this game was made, there were only 493 Pokémon, probably resulting in the variable of the Pokémon appearing.
Super Smash Bros. 4
- Abomasnow
- Arceus
- Bellossom
- Chespin
- Darkrai
- Dedenne
- Deoxys
- Eevee
- Electrode
- Entei
- Fennekin
- Fletchling
- Genesect
- Gogoat
- Goldeen
- Inkay
- Keldeo
- Kyurem
- Latias
- Lugia
- Meloetta
- Meowth
- Metagross
- Mew
- Moltres
- Oshawott
- Palkia
- Snivy
- Snorlax
- Spewpa
- Staryu
- Victini
- Xerneas
Super Smash Bros. instruction booklet description
When thrown, the ball opens up, and a Pokémon™ pops out. The Pokémon that appears is random; it performs its special skill then leaves.
Trophy info (Melee)
These balls are used to capture and contain wild Pokémon. Most Pokémon must be weakened in some way before they can be captured, but once they're inside a Poké Ball, they enjoy their new home, since Poké Balls contain an environment specially designed for Pokémon comfort. Master Balls are the strongest type.
- : Pokémon Red & Blue
Trophy info (Brawl)
An item used for capturing Pokémon and calling them out to battle. Pokémon live in these items which, despite appearances, actually contain a wide, comfortable, Pokémon-friendly world inside them. In Super Smash Bros., Pokémon give temporary support to whoever calls them out. You never know which Pokémon you'll get, but some of them are devastatingly powerful.
- : Pokémon Red/Blue
- : Pokémon Diamond/Pearl
Trivia
- In all games, the player can spawn the "pixie" legendary Pokémon (i.e. Mew, Celebi, Jirachi) from a Poké Ball, where they are incredibly rare, and will only fly up away without doing anything (though in Brawl they spawn "gifts" as noted below). In Melee and Brawl, the player will receive a notice for the first time they encounter each. Additionally, in Melee and Smash 64, the player will receive a hefty bonus at the end of a match (this doesn't occur in Brawl as bonuses were removed). Manaphy can also be spawned in Brawl, though it operates like the other Poké Ball Pokémon instead of like the pixie legendaries.
- In Super Smash Bros., the player has a 1 out of 151 chance of meeting Mew, 151 being a reference to how many Pokémon there were in Pokémon Red, Blue, and Yellow.
- In Melee, the player has a 1 out of 251 chance of meeting Mew or Celebi, 251 being a reference to how many Pokémon there were at the release of Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal.
- In Brawl, the player has a 1 out of 493 chance of meeting either Celebi, Mew, or Jirachi. Each Pokémon also gives a bonus to the player; Mew gives the player a CD or stickers if the player has all CDs, Jirachi gives away many stickers, and Celebi drops several trophies. 493 is a reference to how many Pokémon there were by the fourth generation of Pokémon, consisting of Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, HeartGold, and SoulSilver.
- CPUs in Melee will pursue a Poké Ball at all levels, no matter how far, even if it means that the CPU must cease fighting. This is less common in Brawl. Level 9 CPUs in the original Super Smash Bros. will pursue after any item.
- The operation of Pokémon ownership from a Poké Ball has changed between Melee and Brawl. In Melee, unless the Poké Ball is reflected (shield reflecting does not count), once a player picks up a Poké Ball, the Pokémon inside will belong to the player, even if they drop the Poké Ball or another player catches it while it is thrown. However, in Brawl, ownership of the Pokémon belongs to who threw the Poké Ball, meaning a Poké Ball caught in midair and then thrown will spawn a Pokémon belonging to the player that thrown it, and not to the player who picked it up initially. It also will not release the Pokémon inside if the character drops the Poké Ball via enemy attacks.
- The first Pokémon summoned from a Poké Ball in Training Mode will also be the first summoned in Versus Mode and the Single Player mode.
- The Poké Ball cannot be swallowed and is the only item along with the Smash Ball that can't be eaten by Munchlax either.
- In Melee's Training Mode, legendary Pokémon will not appear, and a few Poké Balls may not release any Pokémon at all.
Gallery
- Pokeball.JPG
The Poké Ball from Super Smash Bros.
- FireFlower, GreenShell, Pokeball SSB4.jpeg
A Poké Ball in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, along with some other items.
External links
Items in Super Smash Bros. (64) | |
---|---|
Normal | Beam Sword · Bob-omb · Bumper · Fan · Fire Flower · Green Shell · Hammer · Heart Container · Home-Run Bat · Maxim Tomato · Motion-Sensor Bomb · Poké Ball · Ray Gun · Red Shell · Star Rod · Starman |
Containers | Barrel · Capsule · Crate · Egg |
Items in Super Smash Bros. Melee | |
---|---|
Normal | Barrel Cannon · Beam Sword · Bob-omb · Bunny Hood · Cloaking Device · Fan · Fire Flower · Flipper · Food · Freezie · Green Shell · Hammer · Heart Container · Home-Run Bat · Lip's Stick · Maxim Tomato · Metal Box · Motion-Sensor Bomb · Mr. Saturn · Parasol · Poison Mushroom · Poké Ball · Ray Gun · Red Shell · Screw Attack · Star Rod · Starman · Super Mushroom · Super Scope · Warp Star |
Containers | Barrel · Capsule · Crate · Egg · Party Ball |
Other | Smash Coins |
Items in Super Smash Bros. Brawl | |
---|---|
Normal | Assist Trophy · Banana Peel · Beam Sword · Blast Box · Bob-omb · Bumper · Bunny Hood · Cracker Launcher · Deku Nut · Dragoon · Fan · Fire Flower · Food · Franklin Badge · Freezie · Golden Hammer · Gooey Bomb · Green Shell · Hammer · Heart Container · Home-Run Bat · Hothead · Lightning Bolt · Lip's Stick · Maxim Tomato · Metal Box · Motion-Sensor Bomb · Mr. Saturn · Pitfall · Poison Mushroom · Poké Ball · Ray Gun · Screw Attack · Smart Bomb · Smash Ball · Smoke Ball · Soccer Ball · Spring · Star Rod · Starman · Super Mushroom · Super Scope · Superspicy Curry · Team Healer · Timer · Unira · Warp Star |
Containers | Barrel · Capsule · Crate · Party Ball · Sandbag · Rolling Crates |
The Subspace Emissary |
Key · Stock Ball · Trophy Stand |
Collectibles | CD · Coins · Sticker · Trophy |
Other | Smash Coins and Bills |