List of rumors
Like many other games, the Super Smash Bros. series has had various rumors spread about it, usually through the Internet, and sometimes magazines. Most of the time, rumors claimed to contain information concerning playable characters, though rumors concerning other aspects of gameplay, such as development scheduling, can also appear. Rumors can be proven true or false on arrival via fact-checking or by waiting for relevant information from official sources, though a majority are proven false; some rumors, however, can contain true information, or even fabricated information that coincidentally becomes true in a later reveal or game. While rumors about the Smash series are made in the thousands on a daily basis, this article documents several particularly notable rumors, whether for being well known and widely spread, proven correct, leaked by a notable source, or other reasons worth mentioning.
Common/Recurring rumors
As with any game, the Smash Bros. series has had various works of fan art being passed off as supposedly leaked screenshots. Box art and character selection screens for Brawl were particularly common, though images of characters in the game also appeared. Shortly before and after the release of the game in Japan, these images had become more and more common, though the use of video streaming sites such as YouTube quickly disproved most of these rumors as more gameplay footage of the game became public.
Many character selection screens for Melee also made the rounds, though these screens were less credible due to the ability to quickly distribute images on the Internet being unfeasible during Melee's release; by then, all the unlockables had been well-known. Some of these fake rosters, however, were merely made as jokes, including a particularly famous image featuring over 108 characters and eight player slots. The inability to easily customize the character roster for the original game has prevented fake rosters from appearing, as there are no empty spaces, and the game was released before the Internet was widespread.
While extremely common, fake character rosters are relatively easy to debunk. Particularly low-quality rosters will often use art from various other sources, violating the trend in the series where all art is original to the games. For example, in the image to the right, Luigi's image is a mirrored version of his official artwork from Super Mario 64 DS; adding to this, the hoaxed image features both three-dimensional models (such as for the aforementioned Luigi and the F-Zero character Black Shadow) and two-dimensional illustrations (such as for Marth and Fire Emblem character Micaiah). Furthermore, hoaxers have sometimes made various oversights while producing such images. A minor hoax, for instance, claimed to feature the character Agnès from Bravely Default as a playable character, but the faked images improperly spelt her name as "Agnés", and her character portrait was different between the two images given[1].
Rumors about Super Smash Bros.
Non-playable characters hoaxes
Being able to play as characters such as Metal Mario, Giant Donkey Kong, Master Hand, or a Fighting Polygon was the main source of rumors during the game's era. As with other rumors of the time, the supposed criteria ranged from unusual (spinning the control stick 30 times) to ludicrous (completing the 1P Game as every character in a specific order on Very Hard with a stock of one). Many videos on YouTube continue to claim these rumors, but all of these which supposedly work merely use cheat devices to allow playability of these characters.
Cut characters rumor
A popular rumor about Smash 64 that came around long after its release was that several characters were planned to be playable in the game, but cut due to time and/or memory constraints. The characters most often rumored to have been planned but cut are Peach, Wario, Pit, and Meowth. A page on the official Smash 64 website claims that Bowser, King Dedede, and Mewtwo were indeed planned to be playable in Smash 64, but the reason for their exclusion is not specifically stated[2]. Additionally, Marth was planned but cut due to time constraints, according to an interview from a book titled Making of Fire Emblem: 25 Years of Development Secrets.[3] No sources, however, have been proven to support Pit, Meowth, Peach, Wario, or any other characters as having ever been planned to be playable in the game.
Rumors about Super Smash Bros. Melee
Sonic and Tails hoax
The Sonic and Tails rumor in Melee remains one of the most infamous rumors not just in the Super Smash Bros. series, but also in the world of video games. An April Fools' joke pulled by the gaming-themed magazine Electronic Gaming Monthly said that Sonic and Tails could be unlocked after defeating 20 enemies in Cruel Melee, then defeating the two in a two-against-one battle. The blurb also claimed that upon completing Classic Mode with either of the two characters, the player would get a "special surprise". While EGM was famous for its previous April Fools' Day pranks, such as the infamous "Sheng Long cheat" in Street Fighter II (which would later be referenced by Ryu's reveal trailer in Smash 4), many readers still fell for the rumor.
The rumor can be debunked through multiple pieces of evidence:
- The given unlock message does not follow the grammatical patterns of other unlock messages, specifically in its overuse of capitalized words. This can be seen by comparing the above image's notice with that of Pichu's.
- After unlocking all 25 characters, the player receives a Notice that they have unlocked all characters, so unlocking more characters would contradict the Notice.
- After obtaining all trophies, the player receives a Notice that they have unlocked all trophies, but clearing any of the one-player modes with Sonic or Tails should yield more trophies, thus contradicting the Notice.
- The pair's positions on opposite sides of the character selection screen defies the general rule that characters of a series are grouped together once everyone is unlocked. Additionally, their presence blocks the random character functionality with no apparent replacement, an unlikely occurrence in terms of game design.
- In the screenshot claiming to show Sonic as a selectable character, Sonic's art is identical to one of his official renders from Sonic Adventure on the Sega Dreamcast. In contrast, all other characters in the game have completely original art for their character select portraits.
- At the time of the production of Melee, Sega and Nintendo were rivals both in the software and hardware businesses, making it unlikely that the two would work together to develop a game.
- A later interview conducted by EDGE with former head of Sonic Team Yuji Naka, claimed that, on the topic of Sonic and Tails appearing in Melee, "it was very close, but time constraints did not allow us to continue with the idea."
- There is no data on the game's disc relating to the duo, and they cannot be selected with the debug menu.
- The method for unlocking the two simply does not work. Numerous videos have demonstrated getting more than 20 KOs in Cruel Melee, whether naturally or via exploits such as the Master Hand glitch, does not unlock the duo, and in the early years of the rumor, an infamous video featuring Pikachu getting 565 KOs in Cruel Melee effectively disproved the hoax.
- Although subtle, EGM attempted to hint readers that the cheat was actually an April Fools' joke; previous jokes would feature a "1" and "4" in some way as to reference April Fools' Day, as the shorthand date for the day is 4/1 in America or 1/4 in Europe. Owing to this, the Notice commemorating Sonic and Tails being unlocked had the date as "4.1.2002".
The rumor rapidly spread following its publication, with rival publication Nintendo Power publishing an article about how the rumor was a hoax, and the page on Melee in Nintendo's website also writing about how the rumor was false. EGM would eventually confess in its next issue that the cheat was an April Fools' joke, and, like its previous April Fools' Day jokes, mock those who took it seriously. EGM later offered a contest where players who submitted video proof of getting 20 or more KOs in Cruel Melee could receive a free copy of Sonic Adventure 2: Battle, Sonic's first game on a Nintendo system.
Sonic later became a playable character in all Smash games starting with Brawl, while Tails made a number of cameo appearances.
This rumor would later go on to be referenced in the "Super Smash Bros. Series" column of the Sonic the Hedgehog Encyclo-speed-ia, where it is jokingly stated within the unlock requirements for Sonic that "defeating ten enemies in Cruel Melee in Super Smash Bros. Melee is not one of them," though erroneously stating ten enemies needed to be defeated rather than 20.
Toad hoax
The Toad rumor, initially posted on a small Geocities site in November of 2002, stated that Toad could be unlocked as a playable character in Melee after obtaining a perfect score during the credits mini-game, which is played after completing any one-player mode; after hitting all the credits, the player would then have to clear Adventure Mode (with a requirement of "easily defeating" the Yoshis in the Mushroom Kingdom stage), after which they would be able to unlock him. The site also gave several fake screenshots depicting Toad in various in-game scenarios, propagating the rumor; it came to the point where the images had become more well-known than the site and the supposed method to unlock him, with explanations sometimes varying strongly from the original.
The method was disproved by the same evidence as the Sonic and Tails rumor, because in addition to Toad's place on the character select screen defying the rule that all characters in a series should be grouped together, the screenshots of Toad were made by taking images from Toad when he was running around the Mushroom Kingdom of the Adventure Mode of the game. Inconsistencies with the actual gameplay surrounding Toad also debunked the rumor; the site says that Toad has no accommodations in All-Star Mode, has no trophies, and has no videos for his Ending Sequence after finishing a 1-Player game, unlikely occurrences in terms of game design. The site itself also contributed to the debunking of the rumor; it was hosted on GeoCities, a former web hosting site that allowed anyone to create their own pages, causing the rumor to be considerably less credible than the Sonic and Tails rumor (which was featured in a widely-read magazine). The site also featured some incorrect information; for instance, when speaking about the game's Adventure Mode, the site claims that the ordeal is similar to unlocking Falco - Falco, however, is unlockable in Multi-Man Melee, not in Adventure Mode. Numerous spelling and grammatical errors were also present on the page, such as the misspelling of "taunt" as "taught". Tool-assisted runs of a perfect score of the credits and a perfect score by Porkyz on February 2, 2021[4][5] proved nothing is unlocked with a perfect score.
A supposed image of Toad's Notice message.
...and Yoshi's Island. These two images, however, were what caused the hoax to be debunked.
Rare characters rumor
Based on responses from fan questions confirming that Banjo and Kazooie from the Banjo-Kazooie games and James Bond from GoldenEye 007 would not be appearing in Melee, a popular rumor manifested, claiming that these characters were actually planned for inclusion but ultimately cut because Sakurai could not secure the rights from Rare (and, in the latter case, Eon Productions, the holders of Bond's film rights, which Rare secured to produce GoldenEye 007). However, Sakurai only said that the characters would be difficult to include, not that he had planned to include them. It is worth noting that there were going to be trophies of characters from Rare games, but because the possibility of playable characters was not mentioned in this statement, the chances of this rumor being true are slim.
Banjo & Kazooie would later be playable in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
NeoGAF Cut characters rumor
A rumor about Melee made by a NeoGAF user that came around long after its release was that several characters were planned to be playable in the game, but cut due to time and/or memory constraints. These include Leif from Fire Emblem: Thracia 776 as Marth's clone, Wario as a Mario clone, and Wolf as a Fox clone. [6]
Rumors about Super Smash Bros. Brawl
Lucas replacing Ness in Brawl rumor
Relating to the rumor in Melee, after Lucas was confirmed to be a newcomer in Brawl while Ness' confirmation had yet to be made, it was commonly speculated that Ness would not return, being replaced by Lucas, as was originally planned in Melee. A quote on the DOJO!! seemed to suggest this as well, claiming that "There's a character named Ness who has appeared in the Smash Bros. series up until now, and Lucas is very similar". Such speculation ended up untrue however, as Ness returned again as a playable character in Brawl. Lucas himself would later be cut in Super Smash Bros. 4 (albeit only initially, before reappearing as a downloadable character) while Ness returned as an unlockable character in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and a starter character in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Radio interview rumor
Shortly after Brawl's announcement, a rumor claimed that in a radio interview, Masahiro Sakurai confirmed that Ridley, a cel-shaded Link, and Bowser Jr. would be playable characters. Coinciding with this was the rumor of Young Link, the Ice Climbers, and Mr. Game & Watch being dropped. This was proven to be false; while Toon Link does replace Young Link in Brawl as the second Link, Ridley appears as a boss instead of a playable character, Bowser Jr. only appears as a sticker and trophy, and Mr. Game & Watch and the Ice Climbers returned as playable characters in Brawl.
Coincidentally, Bowser Jr. was later playable in SSB4, with technical limitations of the Nintendo 3DS also causing the Ice Climbers to be cut from the game; despite this, Ridley did not become a playable character until Ultimate, and Mr. Game & Watch still returned from Brawl.
Animal Crossing characters rumors
During the development of Brawl, multiple rumors suggested that a character from Animal Crossing, such as the generic playable character (termed an "Animal Crosser") or Tom Nook, would be playable in Brawl. A statement was reportedly made by Sakurai on the matter, which claimed that "On one hand, they have an innocent charm to them that could be ruined if they were in a fighting game"; the veracity of this statement, however, is disputed. Despite the lack of a playable character, Animal Crossing is strongly represented in Brawl by some music tracks, trophies, stickers, an Assist Trophy, a stage, and numerous cameos on said stage.
An Animal Crossing Villager eventually became a playable character in Super Smash Bros. 4; an interview with Sakurai also states that the Villager was considered for inclusion in Brawl, but the idea was rejected because "he wasn't suited for battle".
Assist trophy rumors
Towards the end of 2007, the Whobby Game Festival occurred in Japan; among its primary points of interests was that a playable demo of Super Smash Bros. Brawl would be available for play by attendants. Due to the event taking place only in Japan, a region with relatively little representation in most English-speaking websites, such as Smashboards, updates on the game were sparse and difficult to confirm. The most well-known claim, however, stated that Assist Trophies of Rosalina from Super Mario Galaxy, Duster from Mother 3, and Muddy Mole from Mole Mania would be featured in the game.
Amid an increase in English-speakers that played demos at events, as well as the release of the game, the rumor was proven false, and further hacking of the game proved that no such evidence of the trio were even planned to be included. It is unknown if the trophies were mistaken for other support characters (such as Gardevoir being confused for Rosalina or Mr. Resetti being confused for Muddy) or if these claims were deliberately hoaxed to fool players. Incidentally, Rosalina would become playable starting with Smash 4.
Third-party character rumors
Sakurai said that, after Sonic and Snake, there might be a third third-party character; prior to Sonic's announcement, he also claimed that "one or two" other third-party characters would appear. This led many players speculating that another third party character was guaranteed to be included. Popular options included Mega Man (who later appeared in Super Smash Bros. 4), Geno (who was a Mii Fighter costume in Smash 4), Leon S. Kennedy from the Resident Evil series, or a second Sonic character. However, none of these characters were included in Brawl, and until SSB4 there were only two third-party fighters in Smash.
After Pac-Man was revealed for Super Smash Bros. 4, Sakurai stated that, during the development of Brawl, Shigeru Miyamoto asked him if Pac-Man could be playable in the game. Thinking of Pac-Man's pizza shape, Sakurai rejected the idea, thinking at the time putting in Pac-Man with said shape was "a little too farfetched[7]." Furthermore, after the release of Brawl, Sakurai stated in an interview that he had considered including Geno as a playable character in the game, though the plans ultimately fell through for unknown reasons.
Downloadable content rumor
Shortly after Brawl was released in America, a newspost appeared on the Internet, claiming that Brawl would feature four downloadable characters and two downloadable stages, as well as a new Wii Channel of "Wii Want More". The discovery of multiple unused character files present in the game also added credence to the rumor, under the assumption that the empty files rendered it easier to create add-on content.
The rumor was quickly proven as false; Masahiro Sakurai himself stated that downloadable content would never be coming for Brawl, as the Wii's flash-based internal hardware is incapable of patching or otherwise modifying a game based on a downloaded file. The supposed release date of 13 May 2008 also passed without a "Wii Want More" channel being released or announced. Additionally, in a vein similar to the Toad rumor, the site was hosted on 110MB, a hosting site where anyone on the Internet can publish content. However, downloadable content would become a prominent part of subsequent games, starting with Super Smash Bros. 4.
Brawl is the last game rumor
During the development of Brawl, Sakurai reportedly said statements along the lines that he was making Brawl as the last installment in the Super Smash Bros. series. Additionally, some advertisements had the tagline of "One brawl to end them all!". This led several to believe that Brawl was the last installment. The rumor, however, is taken out of context; Sakurai stated he was making Brawl like it was the last one, not that it was going to be the last. Additionally, Sakurai said that Melee would have been the last installment on Smabura-Ken, and that did not hold true. This rumor was ultimately proven false at E3 2011, where a new Super Smash Bros. title was announced for both the Nintendo 3DS and Wii U consoles; development started in February 2012 and ended up being Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Super Smash Bros. for Wii U respectively.
Artificial intelligence rumors
While still suffering flaws like its predecessor, CPUs within Brawl came under scrutiny by members of the Brawl community after analyzing the behavior of them within fights. Two primary theories surrounding the AI eventually became commonplace:
- That the CPU was able to read inputs from human players and thus have perfect reaction times, explaining the excessive propensity of a CPU to perfect shield.
- That a "learning system" existed within Brawl's code that allowed computer players to slowly learn to adapt to human players.
The former rumor was especially controversial, as many smashers thought that allowing the AI to "cheat" was an unfair tactic, and such a programming decision was considered lazy. The American crew SLAPAHO attempted to see whether or not CPUs had perfect reaction times, but their results were eventually declared inconclusive, and more tests were intended to be carried out; inactivity by the group, however, caused these further tests to never occur. In 2013, Canadian smasher Toomai analyzed various animated GIFs of CPUs responding to aerial attacks; it was ultimately demonstrated that CPUs had a reaction time of one frame, and thus, did not read button inputs to form decisions.
The second rumor was primarily spread by a Nintendo Dojo blog post by American smasher Churro; entitled "The Wonders of Brawl's CPU Experience System", Churro claimed that CPUs in Brawl could learn from human players, with such changes being unique from different save files for Brawl. Churro provided video examples of these supposed changes, such as how a CPU Captain Falcon began to more frequently use Falcon Punch following an all-Captain Falcon match featuring overuse of the move. Other videos by other smashers also appeared to show CPUs using tactics such as dash dancing and DACUSes.
Initially widely believed, advances in the hacking scene for Brawl have since disproven the existence of a learning system for CPUs:
- Tests showed that there were no differences in CPU behavior from save files that were over several hundred hours old versus fresh save files; comparisons of two files with significant playtime also showed no differences, when such a case was supposed to have significantly different playstyles.
- Disassembling Replay files showed that no CPU inputs are saved in the file, only human inputs; as such, this meant that whenever a replay was played back, it meant that the CPU would have to react the same way every time in order to prevent desyncing. A learning system could potentially cause CPUs to react differently in replays, thus further disproving the rumor.
- Disassembling the Brawl save file showed that there were no flags or other notes about the AI.
- Disassembly of the game's AI demonstrated no coding for learning from human players.
- Videos demonstrating that the AI could learn are thought to have suffered from confirmation bias; what were thought to be cases of the AI learning were cases of the AI performing as expected, including specific overuse of some attacks.
A learning system similar to the above would eventually be used by amiibo in Super Smash Bros. 4, though no such learning system exists outside of this.
Rumors about Super Smash Bros. 4
Super Smash Bros. Universe rumor
Shortly after the official announcement of the fourth Super Smash Bros., an image circulated around the Internet detailing what appeared to be an advertisement or design document that was said to be from the official Nintendo headquarters in Japan for "Super Smash Bros. Universe"; multiple imageboards worked to translate the document, leading to some supposed preliminary idea for the games.[8] Sakurai, however, stated that he had not begun working on the new Smash Bros. at the time and was focusing on Kid Icarus Uprising; the documents were later finally disproven when it was demonstrated that the game's title would not be Super Smash Bros. Universe.
Namco worker rumor
On 12 December 2012, a thread on GameFAQs was started by a user named Halibuton; the user claimed that he worked for Namco and had some information told to him by his co-workers concerning the development of Super Smash Bros. 4.
Halibuton claimed that there would be a Nintendo Direct on the fifth anniversary of Brawl's Japanese release (31 January 2013) and said it would be centered around Smash 4, though likely more of a series retrospective with minor new info than a full-blown reveal trailer. He also said that he knew a bit about the early roster and claimed to know a few newcomers: Takamaru from The Mysterious Murasame Castle and Little Mac (chosen as recent-popularity classics and an "East vs. West" concept supposedly due to previous games featuring too many Japan-exclusive characters) as well as King K. Rool and Ridley (chosen due to popular demand and having movesets based on more recent games). Other claimed, less-finalized newcomers are Shulk from Xenoblade Chronicles, Dillon from Dillon's Rolling Western, Ghirahim from the Legend of Zelda series, a "Debu" from the at the time rumor-only Yoshi's Woolly World (supposedly a partner of Yoshi, with "Debu" possibly being just a nickname or placeholder), and a PlatinumGames character possibly from The Wonderful 101. Aside from characters, multiple stages were listed: Starship Mario (Super Mario Galaxy 2, later confirmed as background scenery in Mario Galaxy), Giant Chasm (Pokémon Black 2/White 2), Pushmo Park (Pushmo), and Cookie Country (Kirby's Return to Dream Land).
Halibuton's claimed date for the reveal of 31 January 2013, however, ultimately passed without a Nintendo Direct presentation, significant news about Smash 4, or mentions of any of the aforementioned characters, thus ultimately disproving the rumor after two months of speculation. Little Mac, Shulk, and a PlatinumGames character, Bayonetta would eventually be confirmed as newcomers, while Takamaru, Dillon, and Ghirahim would later be confirmed as Assist Trophies. Ridley would later be confirmed as a stage boss on Pyrosphere and would only later appear as a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
Gematsu leaks
Before E3 2013, the owner of the gaming site Gematsu, Sal Romano, claimed to have received an email from an anonymous source claiming to know which newcomers would be introduced at E3 2013. Initially doubting the veracity of the letter, Romano jokingly posted the list to NeoGAF as a "unlikely prediction". Among the predicted newcomers were an Animal Crossing Villager; Capcom's Mega Man; the female trainer from Wii Fit; Little Mac from Punch-Out!!; Nintendo's Mii; and Namco's Pac-Man.[9]
To the surprise of many observers, including Romano himself, the leak successfully predicted the reveal of the Villager, Mega Man, and female Wii Fit Trainer. This successful prediction, especially of the Wii Fit Trainer, would lead to a following of the leak and the subsequent leaks reported by Romano. With the leaks getting every newcomer right except for Rosalina, and failing to get any character completely wrong for over a year, the majority of observers treated the leaker as fully legitimate, with many seeing the characters implicated by the leaker as inevitable. The leaker's credibility was ultimately shattered when one of their implicated playable characters, Chrom, was disconfirmed in the 14 July reveal trailer, while two revealed playable characters, Robin and Lucina, were never implicated by the leaker.
In June 2015, Sakurai revealed in the Famitsu column that he did originally consider adding Chrom as a playable character, and even planned a moveset for him, but ultimately decided he would not be unique enough from Marth and Ike to justify an inclusion. [10] Coincidentally, Chrom became a playable character in Ultimate, albeit as an Echo Fighter for Roy, reinforcing Sakurai's hypothesis.
Lucina hoax
An AllIsBrawl post made on 25 June 2013 claimed that an image had been leaked on the Smash 4 website, presumably from the "image of the day". The image shows Mario and Lucina (from Fire Emblem Awakening) on a Fairy Isle in the Great Sea. There was no evidence on the site, however; the image of the day instead featured Link doing an aerial Spin Attack in Skyloft.
This image, while initially appearing to be legitimate, was actually compiled using a variety of elaborate hacks available for Brawl. The stage seen in the image is a Fairy Isle hacked stage, and the Mario in the image uses a texture hack to make his model more closely resemble his newer model in Super Smash Bros. 4; Lucina herself is identical to a Project Smash Attacks hack seen in "The Lucina PSA". While not particularly widespread outside All is Brawl, the hoax was the first to showcase the level of elaboration that Brawl hacks bring to rumor producers; later hoaxed images were made with similar techniques, and other hoaxes were often compared to existing Brawl hacks to check for their credibility.
Lucina was confirmed to be a playable character on 14 July 2014, over one year after the faked image was first posted.
Ness and Jigglypuff hoax
In November 2013, two supposedly leaked images of Ness and Jigglypuff in Super Smash Bros. 4 began to circulate on Smash-related message boards and other resources. One of these images depicted the "official" artwork of Ness for Smash 4, while the other picture featured both Ness and Jigglypuff standing on the Battlefield stage in the 3DS version. The gameplay image, however, was proven fake after cross-checking it with an actual image of Link and Toon Link standing on the same stage; numerous graphical differences could be seen between the two images, primarily in regards to the rendering of the outlines and shadows in the faked image.
Both characters were later unofficially confirmed after the game's Japanese release. Ness's actual artwork in the game, however, differs from the false artwork. Furthermore, Jigglypuff's model in the final game is different from the hoaxed images, particularly in regards to the size and spacing of its eyes.
Coincidentally, Ness's official artwork from Ultimate resembles the artwork from this fake leak, though with his left arm at his side instead of being outstretched.
Palutena hoax
On 22 January 2014, two supposedly leaked images of Palutena in the 3DS version of Super Smash Bros. 4 began to circulate on the internet. The veracity of the images were immediately questioned, though some observers noted that the model and poses used by Palutena were not seen in any previous photo, and unlike the Lucina rumor, no hacks available for Brawl could replicate the image seen. Of particular note is that after the two images were released, a series of Kid Icarus-related images were released on Miiverse, leading some observers to speculate that Sakurai was aware of the Palutena images.
During the 2014 E3 event, Nintendo confirmed Palutena's inclusion in the game, and gameplay footage of her was also shown; despite this, several differences between the models used in the rumored photos and the actual game were observed, which led to debate over whether or not the images were legitimate in the first place. The images were finally revealed hoaxes in a thread on 4chan concerning the ESRB leak; Mario and Palutena were created in an external program and these models were later digitally manipulated to resemble those from Super Smash Bros. 4.
Raiden leak
In early April 2014, Reuben Langdon, a voice actor known for voicing Ken Masters in the Street Fighter series and Dante in the Devil May Cry series, claimed in an interview that he had voiced Raiden from the Metal Gear series in Super Smash Bros.[11]. As Raiden's only appearance in Brawl was as a sticker (also mentioned in Iroquois Pliskin's trophy description), this seemed to leak Raiden having some sort of major role in SSB4, as well as indirectly confirming the return of Snake and their respective universe. When the news was first announced, some observers believed he was mistaking Super Smash Bros. for PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale, a Sony equivalent to Super Smash Bros. that featured Raiden as a playable character. This potential confusion, however, initially was eliminated when it was demonstrated that Raiden's voice actor in the game was Quinton Flynn, not Reuben Langdon. Langdon, however, would later reignite this confusion himself:
“ | Oh, the all-stars battle Royale was the one I was in. Lol! Yep. Totally got them confused. | ” |
—Reuben Langdon, http://www.gonintendo.com/s/225510-raiden-not-appearing-in-smash-bros-wii-u-3ds |
Langdon, who also does motion capture work for video games, additionally claimed he was referring to motion capture work. However, no official source credits Langdon as having done any such work in PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale, and the credits of that game do not list individual actors that performed motion capture work. As such, it was speculated by some that Langdon may have been trying to cover up an inadvertent leak by falsely confirming the mix-up.
Ultimately, the rumor was proven false when the Japanese version of Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS was released. Snake did not return for SSB4, Raiden did not make any appearances, and the Metal Gear universe does not have any representation in the game, suggesting that Langdon was in fact referencing PlayStation All-Stars Battle Royale. However, he eventually would appear in the Smash series, though not as Raiden, as he reprised his role as Ken in Ultimate. Additionally, given that Langdon has still never voiced or performed motion capture for Raiden in any game, even outside Smash, it seems likely that Langdon was purposefully misleading.
Chunky Kong hoax
During the E3 2014 demo and ensuing Smash-Fest, people reported seeing many previously unrevealed Assist Trophies, such as Shadow, Tingle, and Magnus. While these reports ended up being later confirmed by video evidence, one particular character implicated in these reports, Chunky Kong from Donkey Kong 64, completely eluded any sort of video or photographic evidence. Despite the lack of evidence, people initially generally believed this report, as it came from multiple independent sources, that even fully described his effect as "slamming the ground to make bananas fall from the sky". However, Smash-Fest passed without any sort of video or photographic evidence of Chunky Kong, and with the lack of direct or indirect confirmation from Sakurai, it became doubted if these reports were entirely telling the truth. Chunky Kong later became a minor in-joke within the Smash community; with the lack of any sort of concrete evidence to prove the character's existence despite multiple claims to the contrary, the character was jokingly compared to Bigfoot, a famous North American cryptid.
After E3 2014 passed, with there still being no visual evidence of Chunky Kong despite the tens of hours of new gameplay footage being seen, the Chunky Kong Assist Trophy was generally regarded as a false report, though it was not known if it was intentionally falsified information, or inadvertently mistaken with another gameplay element. The rumor was ultimately proven completely false after both the Japanese release of Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and the North American release of Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, where Chunky Kong was still absent. About a month after Smash 4's release on Wii U, the poster who first reported the Chunky Kong Assist Trophy confessed to fabricating the claim; he initially intended to use the false piece of information to help himself catch fake leaks, as well as see how many people would repeat his seemingly outlandish claim.
Rayman leak
On 1 August 2014, Nintendo of Canada held a session for Super Smash Bros. 4, where Matt Ryan, a manager of communications, marketing, and alliances of the Canadian division of the company, said the following statement during the session that suggested Rayman was in the game as a playable character:
“ | So Pac-Man is one of the new characters we announced at E3 2014, people are pretty excited about that, most excited about that. Rayman and a whole bunch of others. | ” |
—Matt Ryan |
This led to new speculation that Rayman was in Smash 4 as a playable character, rather than just the trophy depicting him. However, it is also speculated it may have been an honest slip-up, with confusion stemming from the common suffix of "Man". Shortly after the sentence, Nintendo of Canada would later clarify that Matt Ryan was referring to the previously seen Rayman trophy.[12] However, like with the Reuben Langdon slipup above, some observers believed it to be a false confirmation as to cover up an inadvertent leak; the release of the game in Japan, however, proved that the supposed confirmation of Rayman as playable was a mental blunder on Ryan's part.
Tower of Smash hoax
Roughly a month prior to the release of Super Smash Bros. for Wii U, a notable rumor began to circulate forums and Smashboards, concerning the ability to connect the 3DS version to the Wii U version, as well as extra information about the Wii U version.
The Tower of Smash rumor claimed that the Wii U version of the game would feature 40 new stages, alongside 15 "past" stages and a few stages shared with the 3DS version, such as Magicant; in addition to these stages, the Stage Builder was claimed to have returned from Brawl after being left out of the 3DS version, and the mode would feature improvements, such as no longer restricting players to one "theme". Arguably the most notable claimed addition was that of a "Tower of Smash" mode. A replacement for the Event Matches that were absent in the 3DS version, the Tower of Smash involved a 100-floor tower which tasked the player, with four characters of their choice, continuously taking part in one-on-one stock battles, with some matches having random modifiers. Various boss battles were also implicated, which would feature characters from outside series, such as Dyna Blade from the Kirby series. These bosses would also make up a new "Boss Rush" mode as somewhat of a successor to the Boss Battles from Brawl.
In addition, leakers claimed that five new characters could be unlocked when the 3DS and Wii U versions were connected. The five implicated characters were Ridley, the Chorus Kids, Dixie Kong, Mewtwo, and Impa from The Legend of Zelda. Notably, the first four characters were previously implicated by leakers in the ESRB leak, though the list was intentionally fabricated by the ESRB leaker in order to identify copycat leaks. As a final note to readers, the leaker also claimed that stages and characters would not be unlockable in the game, with all of them being available from the start. However, there were some notable oddities in these leaks, such as the fact that Ridley has no wings on the ground but can sprout them in the air, something that never happens in the Metroid series, and it was also said that Mewtwo would make "generic grunts".
The leak was proven false by an an official screenshot demonstrating amiibo. The screenshot showed the roster with characters such as Mr. Game & Watch completely absent, still needing to be unlocked by the player; also worth noting, however, was that Masahiro Sakurai had originally planned for all the characters in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U to be available from the start. The Nintendo Direct presentation on 23 October 2014 further refuted the rumor; while an improved Stage Builder was confirmed in the presentation, the Tower of Smash and Boss Rush modes went without mention, no information was given on Magicant or Mute City being shared stages, and all other implicated characters were absent. Furthermore, Ridley was confirmed to be a stage boss on Pyrosphere, and the Event Matches were confirmed to be returning for the game. While Mewtwo was revealed as a playable character, it was revealed to be a downloadable character, not an on-disc transferable character. Additionally, only 32 new stages and 21 past stages appear in the Wii U version, six of which need to be unlocked and nine of which are obtained via DLC.
Rayman DLC hoax
On February 14, 2015, multiple pictures taken of Ubisoft's Rayman supposedly in SSB4 were posted onto 4chan. The images were of Rayman's character select screen icon, his render, his character unlock splash art, and the main menu of Super Smash Bros. for Wii U with a new sub menu for a shop. Several hours later, video footage of Rayman's icon in the character select screen being highlighted was posted onto YouTube, but it was later taken down by the uploader. Mewtwo could also be seen above Rayman in the video. A similarly-updated character select screen from the 3DS version also surfaced. Many observers initially believed the hoax, since the images and the video were seemingly error-free, were of reasonably high quality, had renders not seen in any official material, and featured video footage, which was considered near-impossible to fake. This rumor also lined up with a previous rumor with similar information.
Ultimately, the Rayman rumor was disconfirmed the next day in a YouTube video showing how the images and video were faked by the user Artsy Omni, who revealed that he did it as a promotional stunt for his new web series, Smashified. Artsy Omni was also the artist and author of another previous high-quality fake of Klonoa becoming a playable character, which was quickly debunked because of errors in the Japanese text. Artsy Omni would later apologize for disappointing numerous Smash players with his hoax, though work on Smashified has continued.
Notably, the image of Rayman and Mewtwo's portraits in the 3DS version was not shown by Artsy Omni, instead being submitted by an unknown third party.
While a DLC shop for the game was added in a future update, it is only present in the 3DS version, as the Wii U version used the Nintendo eShop to purchase downloadable content; furthermore, the placement of the DLC Shop is in a completely different area than shown in the images.
Shovel Knight rumor
In late August 2015, Tamaki, an employee from Unseen64, reported that a "reputable source" had informed him of a forthcoming announcement of a Shovel Knight amiibo, and, by extension, an appearance of the character himself in Smash 4, which would be compatible with said amiibo, and retailers would be giving out download codes of said character. Yacht Club Games, the developers of Shovel Knight, did indeed reveal a Shovel Knight amiibo at PAX Prime 2015, but said amiibo was announced only as having compatibility with the Nintendo 3DS and Wii U versions of Shovel Knight. Shovel Knight's amiibo was also shown to have a different base and packaging from the Smash series of amiibo.
Despite these statements, Tamaki stated that Shovel Knight was still on the way according to his source, and was expected to come around the end of October or the beginning of November. The rumor was ultimately debunked following the final DLC announcements on December 15, 2015, where Shovel Knight failed to make an appearance of any kind. In 2018, the source came out and explained that he had the Shovel Knight amiibo leaked to him, wrongly “made the leap”, as there were only Smash Bros amiibo available at the time, and gave Tamaki the info.[13]
Eventually, Shovel Knight made it in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, but as an Assist Trophy.
Rigged Fighter Ballot rumor
On July 2, 2018, decompiler Ruben found that Bayonetta was chosen for DLC as early as before version 1.0.6, as her character slot was added to the game in that patch, which was launched only two weeks after the Smash Bros. Fighter Ballot opened and several months before Bayonetta was announced as the winner of the ballot. Decompilers Marioking64DS and Ehm from The Cutting Room Floor later confirmed that the character slot for Bayonetta existed in the patch, whose parameters were a near 1:1 copy of Zero Suit Samus, which would then gradually change in the subsequent patches to eventually match Bayonetta's parameters when she was released in 1.1.4[14]. This caused a backlash in the community, validating previous claims that Sakurai misrepresented the reasoning behind Bayonetta's inclusion or flatout lied about the ballot results, which used to be mockingly dismissed as conspiracies from fans disgruntled that didn't get their preferred character as DLC. It has been argued that it was possible the ballot's votes were frontloaded during the first two weeks it was open and so the ballot winner was chosen off of such early results, though it has also been counterargued that less than two weeks would have been too short a lead time to observe the ballot results, complete the licensing for Bayonetta, and get the development process far enough along for her to appear in the game data by 1.0.6. Regardless of if the ballot did actually play a role in deciding Smash 4's DLC, Sakurai would later state that he referred to the ballot when deciding on newcomers for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and, as a result, added Ridley, Simon, Richter, King K. Rool, Chrom, and Dark Samus.[15][16]
With the announcement of Sora as the final downloadable newcomer for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Sakurai would state that he was the most requested character on the Smash Ballot[17], farther supporting the idea that Bayonetta was pre-planned and not the true winner of the ballot. It has been argued this is inline with the initial statement that Bayonetta was the winner among "realizable and negotiable characters", with Sora not being an option at the time for unknown reasons, but it has also been counterargued that the criteria for the term "realizable and negotiable characters" is so vague that it could have been applied to any character that was already chosen for Smash 4 DLC prior to the ballot. Whether Bayonetta was legitimately chosen off of very early ballot results, or if she was pre-planned and had the ballot results misrepresented to justify her inclusion in Smash 4 as the "ballot winner", will likely never be conclusively determined, as neither Sakurai nor Nintendo have released the complete ballot results and have shown no indication that they will.
Rumors about Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Vergeben Leaks
The Vergeben leaks are a series of insider info from the user Vergeben, a well known leaker coming from a history of predicting fighting games, like Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Starting before E3 2018, Vergeben's leaks were undoubtedly infamous on which characters would make the cut for this new alleged game. While most people have argued over the legitimacy of these leaks, almost all of what Vergeben told was predicted right, with his only faults being that a Square Enix character would be the first one revealed as downloadable content and that Master Chief would be the fifth character in Fighters Pass Vol. 2.
Base Game Rumors
Super Smash Bros. 4 port
On 28 January 2016, Dr. Serkan Toto, CEO for Japan-based consultant firm Kantan Games, Inc. and lead writer for a blog on the Japanese mobile game industry, tweeted that Bandai Namco had been working on several titles for Nintendo's then-unofficially announced console, the Switch, codenamed NX at the time. One of these titles was reportedly intended to be Super Smash Bros. game as a launch title. A few minutes later, he added that his source was unclear on whether or not it would be a completely new game in the series or simply a port of Super Smash Bros. 4, though he still defended the veracity of the source.
About eleven months later, a tweet was posted on December 6th by Liam Robertson of Unseen64 and Did You Know Gaming?. He claimed new characters would appear in the next entry, though the number would be a small amount, with a separate source from Source Gaming reporting there are at least 2 new characters in development [18]. Source Gaming later followed up on the rumor, claiming that the game is a "director's cut" of Super Smash Bros. 4; that is, the game contains content from both versions (e.g., a combinations of stages, game modes, etc.), which includes the game's DLC announced back in April of 2016. The rumor quickly spread after this announcement, with multiple gaming sites, including IGN, reporting on it.
In February 2018, game developer and industry insider Emily Rogers also claimed that Super Smash Bros. was coming to the Nintendo Switch in some capacity, and that it would have brand new content, as well as some reworked content from the Wii U and Nintendo 3DS versions. However, it is unclear to her if the game will be marketed as a "director's cut" of sorts or a full sequel. Later in March, a Nintendo Direct showed that there is a new game for the Switch with the Inklings looking at the Smash roster and the Smash symbol. The announcement caused the rumors of the title being a port to lose credibility, as it showed Link in his design from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. In addition to that, the trailer shown did not show gameplay for the game and did not show the original release date in its copyright, which would be unusual for a port's announcement trailer, and the game's title was listed as a tentative title on the game's website. Other fans have pointed out the presence of a unique background music (which later revealed to be Lifelight), as teaser trailers of Smash games since Melee have a tradition of playing a variant of the menu theme, which acting as the main theme of each game; by that logic, it would be a new game. Despite these, the debate still continued until Nintendo of America denied the rumor on June 14, 2018, two days after the game's reveal at E3 2018, where Nintendo Treehouse localisation manager Nate Bihldorff stated as follows:
“ | It's definitely not an update. It's a brand new game built from the ground up. As far as it being a 'sequel,' I don't really think of Smash Bros. games as being sequels, they're just new Smash Bros. games. Everything has been built brand new. Of course, you see returning characters and returning movesets, but that's sort of the nature of a fighting game.[19] | ” |
—Nate Bihldorff |
Loz18 leaks
On June 11th, 2018, GameFAQs user Loz18 made a thread about Ultimate before its E3 reveal. In the first post, he stated the following:
- All previous characters will return.
- Inkling's ability to recharge ink and their special moves being Super Jump, Splattershot (albeit referred as "Tentatek Attack"), and Splat Bomb (albeit referred as "Bomb Attack").
- Ganondorf's outfit is based off of Ocarina of Time and his up smash changed from a kick to a sword attack.
- Zelda's outfit is based off A Link Between Worlds.
- Link's moveset is almost unchanged, but the Bombs from Twilight Princess are replaced with Remote Bombs from Breath of the Wild.
Two days after the E3 reveal confirmed all of this information to be correct, Loz18 made another thread about a Nintendo Direct in August stating:
- The Nintendo Direct will come around August.
- Info will be shown from the title screen to the menu options.
- Three modes will be shown besides All-Star Mode.
- Tournament mode is returning.
- The new mode will be revealed and it will be the primary way to unlock characters.
About a week before the August Direct, he made some more posts mentioning a cutscene with a heroes vs. villains theme, but not part of a story mode.
Despite the leaker's apparent credibility, much of the information regarding the Direct was wrong. While several menu screens, three new modes, Tournament Mode, and the heroes vs. villain cutscene (at the start of King K. Rool's reveal trailer) were indeed revealed, the title screen, All-Star Mode, and the mode to unlock characters were nowhere to be found, though come the game's release there would be a new fighter unlocking mode in the form of Challenger's Approach.
Loz18 has made several posts (such as here) stating that Skull Kid is probably playable. A few days after the Direct, he closed his GameFAQs account, but not before stating on Twitter that Dixie Kong has a high chance of being playable, and possibly Isaac (these tweets have since been deleted), though he would retract his statements on Isaac on a Discord server. However, none of his new predictions came true, aside from his final statement on Isaac.
amiibo Unlock rumor
On Best Buy of Canada's website, the Ridley amiibo has the following text in its description: "Simply tap the amiibo accessory to the NFC touchpoint on your game system to unlock this draconic Space Pirate." Wolf's has the same, but without the "draconic" part, and Inkling's has "trouble-making resident of the city of Inkopolis" in place of "draconic Space Pirate". All of these imply the amiibo can be tapped to instantly unlock the character.
It should be noted that the respective descriptions now all say "Simply tap the amiibo accessory on the NFC touchpoint on your compatible system or accessory and enjoy fun in-game extras in compatible games." except for the Inkling page, where it says "Simply tap the amiibo accessory to the NFC touchpoint" instead.
This was proven false upon the release of Ultimate, as tapping an amiibo only adds a Figure Player, not the actual fighter.
Dante rumor
Shortly after the reveal of Devil May Cry 5 at E3 2018, a 4chan user posted a thread claiming to have information related to the game and several other projects related to the franchise. Namely, that Dante, the protagonist of the series, would be a playable character in Ultimate. Throughout the year, several of the poster's claims would be verified, such as several story details, the existence of a training mode and the way that the character Nero purchases upgrades. Perhaps adding to the leak's credibility, a Netflix series based on the franchise was announced later that year, just as the poster had claimed. Users would go on to discover that a poll run by Hideki Kamiya, the original creator of the Devil May Cry and Bayonetta franchises, asked fans which version of Dante they'd prefer to see collaborate with Bayonetta. Users pointed out that the date of the poll, early 2016, aligns with the period of time which Sakurai had stated early development on Ultimate had begun, and that the version of Dante that won the poll was the same version that the 4chan poster had claimed would be in the game. In early August, Matt Walker, the producer of Devil May Cry 5, posted a suspicious tweet that seemed to allude to something related to the Nintendo Direct that would air during that week. Later in the year, Kamiya would meet up with Hideaki Itsuno, the current director of the Devil May Cry series at TGS 2018, adding fuel to the rumors. Eventually, the rumor had circulated enough that Walker took to Twitter to debunk Dante's presence in Smash.
As both Ultimate and Devil May Cry 5 released with Dante absent from the former and the latter being inconsistent with much of the original 4chan post, it's very likely that the original poster simply made several very lucky guesses that were bolstered by a series of coincidences. Additionally, Itsuno told the press that he'd prefer to see the Devil May Cry series debut on Nintendo consoles before considering Dante as a playable fighter in Smash. On May 6th, 2019 a port of the original Devil May Cry was announced to be coming to Nintendo Switch, leading to further speculation following the comments made by Hideaki Itsuno.
On June 28, 2021, Dante was announced as a Mii Swordfighter costume, which released alongside Challenger Pack 10 the following day.
4chan Render hoax
On August 30th, 2018, several photos of what appeared to be the faces of 7 unannounced characters were posted on 4chan, which included:
- Shadow from the Sonic series
- Isaac from Golden Sun
- Skull Kid from the Zelda series
- Ken from the Street Fighter series
- Chorus Kids from Rhythm Heaven
- Isabelle from Animal Crossing
- Agnès from Square Enix's Bravely Default series
- A question mark, similarly to the ESRB leak
About an hour later, another image was posted, a VS screen showing Wario and the aforementioned Shadow, Chorus Kids and Agnès. A picture of Isaac on the character select screen was posted as well. Both of these would show the new renders in higher detail.
The origin of the renders was unclear, though their authenticity as official renders was doubted, given some inconsistencies both between each other and with Ultimate's artstyle, such as Skull Kid resembling his Super Smash Bros. for Wii U model. Other details were pointed out, such as the VS screen misspelling Agnès' name (naming her Agnés) and the emblem for Rhythm Heaven being a "RH", alluding to the series' American name (The series has a different name in Japan, Europe and Korea).
On September 1st, 2018, the leaker revealed himself over Twitter and confirmed the leak was fake, apologizing for anyone angered over the fake leaks that circulated, while also revealing the renders in full.[20]
Before the leak was debunked by the creator, many images were created under the guise of being by the original poster. The most popular of these fakes would be the image primarily shared throughout Twitter, in which the question mark was swapped with a fake render of Lloyd Irving from Tales of Symphonia. This edit was mentioned by the creator of the original fake renders on Twitter following the confession, noting that it was not created by them.[21]
"The Grinch leak"
On October 24th, 2018, an image quickly circulated around the internet of the apparent final version of Ultimate's character banner; in it, Isaac, Banjo & Kazooie, Shadow the Hedgehog, Ken Masters, the Chorus Kids from Rhythm Heaven, Geno, and the Mach Rider can be seen. Images of the banner were apparently posted from an unknown artist's Snapchat, and quickly spread across the internet, before getting deleted by the original poster. It seems that the post was intended to be a leak, as a caption in the image reads "nique ninteno[sic] mdrrr", which translates from French as "fuck ninteno[sic] lolll" ("mdr" in French is short for "mort de rire", or "dying of laughter", an equivalent to the English "laughing out loud" or "lol"). The validity of the pictures of the banner was difficult to disprove, as, much like the ESRB leak, renders of the new characters have not been found elsewhere on the internet.
The leak has been dubbed the "Grinch leak", as a thought-to-be previously unseen render of the Grinch can be seen in the bottom right corner in one of the pictures, and another render of the Grinch with his dog, Max, can be seen at the top of another picture. The particular renders are promotional[citation needed] material for the then-upcoming 2018 film The Grinch, which supported the leak's validity, as few believed that a constructor of a fake banner would also put in the time and effort to associate it with an unrelated film.
Hours after the leak's emergence and popularity, several fans noted that there were inconsistencies with an official picture of the background seen in the banner, as well as the fact that one could easily photoshop characters out of the picture entirely,[22] and started to doubt its legitimacy.[23][24] It was also revealed by French graphics company Marina PLV that the leaker used to work for them, and left the company in 2016[25]; this, while true, was countered by the fact that the company the leak came from is ACP-PLV, where the leaker currently works.[26]
In the Nintendo Direct on November 1, 2018, Ken and Incineroar were revealed as the final fighters in the base roster, contradicting the banner's rumored characters. Shadow and Isaac were shown in the direct, but as Assist Trophies, while Mach Rider, Geno, and the Chorus Kids were later revealed as Spirits. Additionally, Ken's artwork is slightly different than the leaked banner's[27] and in a completely different location. Banjo and Kazooie are the only characters in the leak that didn't make an appearance in the base game in any shape or form, although they were revealed as the third DLC fighter in the Fighters Pass Vol. 1 on June 11th, 2019. While he didn't get a spot on the roster, Geno's Mii Costume (mostly unchanged from its appearance in the previous game) would also be revealed as DLC on December 17, 2020.
Fighters Pass Vol. 1 Rumors
Milk-BOSATU leak
On October 11th, 2018, Twitter user Milk-BOSATU (later named Team NepDon, and then later deleted and returned as @TeamNepDon_Lead) posted a few leaks for the then-upcoming Ultimate, such as the upcoming release of some form of VR, as well as the inclusion of Dragon Quest's Hero characters without any female costumes. This was followed up on December 14th, 2018, with a claim that a female character would be appearing as a playable DLC fighter in the Fighters Pass.
Sometime later in 2019, Milk-BOSATU made another tweet[citation needed] claiming that the 5th fighters pass fighter would be from a franchise that is already represented in the Super Smash Bros. series.
In April of 2019, Nintendo announced that the fourth Nintendo Labo kit would include VR. This kit was eventually made compatible with Super Smash Bros. Ultimate in an update released on May 30th. As part of Nintendo's E3 presentation for 2019 on June 11th, the Hero was announced, consisting of four different hero characters from the Dragon Quest series, but without any female versions, despite other popular rumors at the time claiming otherwise.
Later, on June 15th, 2019, he made another tweet claiming his sources came from his friend named Mr. H who visited Nintendo and saw the female character in development, claiming that she looks like she comes from a game of the fighting genre.[28] A day later, Milk-BOSATU claimed that Mr. H said that the character wasn't Reimu from Touhou Project.
The next day, he made another tweet stating that she holds a throwing weapon[29] like a hammer or a boomerang[30]. Two days after that tweet, he followed it up with another tweet about the female character's model that Mr. H saw but she doesn't have color at all and he didn't see her face, however speculation goes on that the model may had come from a 3D software.
On September 1st, 2019, Source Gaming staff member, NOKOLO talked to Milk-BOSATU on Twitter via chat and he claimed that she wears Japanese clothes and she is possibly not Nakoruru from Samurai Spirits due to her lack of relevancy outside of Japan. Two days later, he made a tweet claiming that Mr. H doesn't know if the female character is Nakoruru or not and later claimed that they both share features that are common with each other. A day later, in the September Nintendo Direct 2019, it was revealed that Nakoruru made a cameo appearance in Terry's trailer, confirming Milk-BOSATU's claim that the female character is not Nakoruru. She later appears as a spirit and as a downloadable costume for Mii Swordfighters.
While no concrete info has arrived regarding the leaker's claims, two character would confirm some part of what they transcribed. On January 16, 2020, the final fighter of the Fighters Pass was revealed to be Byleth, confirming the leaker's information regarding the 5th fighter coming from an already represented franchise, Fire Emblem. On June 22, 2020, Min Min was announced as the first fighter of Fighters Pass Vol. 2, confirming the description of the female character being from a game in the fighting genre, ARMS. However, it should be noted that Mr. H's description of Min Min wearing Japanese clothing is inaccurate, and Min Min does not have a proper throwing weapon of her own, although the Ramram could be interpreted as such.
Extra character slots datamine
On March 12, 2019, it was discovered that there were 16 character slots found for Adventure Mode, one of which was currently being used for Piranha Plant. While the next five are known to be part of the Fighters Pass (including Joker), the other ten are unknown. This has lead to speculation that there will be future DLC characters beyond the Fighters Pass. While a Nintendo Direct on September 4th, 2019 would confirm that there would be more DLC characters, later in September 24th, 2019, Source Gaming released a video with help from decompiler jam1garner which they discovered that Joker took a placeholder slot just like Piranha Plant but Banjo and Kazooie and the Hero did not take any of them, suggesting that two more fighters were added later in development of DLC, the exact number of additional DLC characters, and thus, the amount of slots they'd use up, is currently unknown.
IAmShifty/Brew Elfen Ryu Hayabusa Rumor
On August 30th, 2019, a YouTube user by the name of IAmShifty posted a video claiming that Ryu Hayabusa from the Ninja Gaiden series would be joining the Fighters Pass for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. According to the user, Ryu would be the fourth character to be announced for the Fighters Pass. Previously, he had supposedly correctly leaked Isabelle, Ken, Incineroar and Piranha Plant as playable characters, in addition to Marx appearing as a boss character in the game.
IAmShifty's claim was proven false on the September 4th, 2019 Nintendo Direct when Terry was revealed to be the fourth fighter in the Fighters Pass instead of Ryu Hayabusa, although whether or not the character would appear as a DLC fighter is yet to be seen.
On October 15th, 2019 IAmShifty reiterated by claiming that Ryu Hayabusa would be the fifth character in the Fighters Pass. This lined up with a leaker called Brew Elfen, who also claimed that Ryu would be the fifth character and who had previously leaked Piranha Plant on November 1st, 2018. These claims were proven false by the January 16, 2020 presentation when Byleth was revealed instead, and as of the conclusion of Fighters Pass 2 with Sora's announcement, Ryu Hayabusa would never be included in Ultimate in any capacity.
PapaGenos/Sabi Crash Bandicoot Rumor
On October 18, 2019, Smash Bros. YouTuber PapaGenos revealed that a source on his Discord had claimed that Crash Bandicoot from the Crash Bandicoot series would be the fifth fighter in the Fighters Pass. PapaGenos noted with a screenshot that on July 19, 2019, this source had correctly leaked Mii Costumes for Goemon, Zero, Proto Man, and the Team Rocket Grunts. The Mii Costume leak also mentioned Mii costumes for Chocobo from the Final Fantasy series and Mallow or Smithy from Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars, and it was also supposedly verified by three other people. PapaGenos also claimed that the source had correctly leaked both Banjo & Kazooie and the Luminary (later revealed to be the default for Hero).
A day later, Smashboards member Icedragonadam made a post stating that a supposed NOA source claimed that Crash Bandicoot and Tracer from Overwatch are not in the game, at least for the 5th Fighters Pass spot. They would later post a screenshot from PapaGenos two days later, claiming that the character in the 5th Fighters Pass spot is not a "front runner" like Crash Bandicoot, a Resident Evil character, or Ryu Hayabusa. Smashboards member Hinata also posted a screenshot from leaker Sabi, who claimed that the 5th character in the Fighters Pass would not be Ryu Hayabusa or Crash Bandicoot.
By the time of the January 16, 2020 presentation, the counterarguments were confirmed to be legitimate, as Byleth was confirmed as the fifth fighter in the Fighters Pass. It is unknown if the leaker had valid information or had some very lucky guesses. A Mii costume of Chocobo was eventually added to the game alongside Sephiroth, however.
Doom/Super Mario RPG Mii Costume rumor
On November 4th, 2019, a 4chan user posted a thread which included a picture of Ken alongside a Mii Brawler and Mii Gunner wearing headgear based on Mallow from Super Mario RPG: Legend of the Seven Stars and a Cacodemon from the Doom series, respectively, on Yggdrasil's Altar. Later, the same user would post two videos demonstrating said characters during gameplay. The image was compared with the image shown in a previous leak from 4chan that revealed Ken as a playable fighter: it features every character within the scene taunting—including Ken using his up taunt—and takes place in a Time match with the match timer frozen at 2:30, further demonstrated in the videos.
The latter point suggested that a developer build similar to that in the Ken leak was used for the media (and later, memes with Ken's taunt, dubbed "Thumbs Up Ken", being photoshopped onto future leaks and other unrelated media), and, along with the remaining similarities, raised speculation over the leaker being the author of both threads. Furthermore, it generated speculation about the additions of Geno and the Doom Slayer as downloadable fighters. Conversely, many argued the headgear to be Mii costume mods, in particular citing the possibility of a Smash 4 Mallow hat mod being ported to Ultimate. The creator of the mod alleged to be ported has also uploaded a Cacodemon hat mod, further implying correlation. Soon following Ultimate's release, the modding community noted the difficulty in modifying Mii costumes for the game, initially adding further credibility to the supposed leak; however, evidence to the contrary arose due to the spread of the rumor, and although publicized attempts by modders to recreate the Mallow and Cacodemon Mii Hats have yet to be of the high quality shown in the leaked picture and videos, the response to the "leaked" content has been largely doubtful.
In a January 2020 interview, Doom Eternal director Marty Stratton revealed that the Doom team hadn't been approached by Nintendo about content from the franchise appearing in Super Smash Bros., calling into question the validity of the rumor. Vault Boy, another character from a Bethesda-owned IP, was added as a Mii costume in June 2020; some believed this could point towards future Bethesda content in Smash such as the Cacodemon Mii hat, but most were skeptical that the Mii Fighter costumes would have remained unrevealed for upwards of seven months after their completion.
While returning Geno and new Doom Slayer Mii Fighter costumes would eventually be released in December 2020 and October 2021 respectively, neither of the rumored costumes ever appeared in Ultimate, and development of the game's DLC officially concluded alongside the addition of the Slayer costume.
Fighters Pass Vol. 2 Rumors
MandyCan Rumors
On October 22nd, 2019, Twitter user @MandyCanNot posted that Byleth would be Challenger Pack 5's fighter in the Fighters Pass, and that Crash Bandicoot would be released or revealed directly after the first Fighters Pass.
The user is notable in having claimed that Challenger Pack 5's fighter would not be revealed at The Game Awards, and having predicted the date of the January 16, 2020 Direct far in advance of an official Nintendo announcement. On January 20, 2020, MandyCan reiterated that Crash Bandicoot would be Challenger Pack 6's fighter.
On March 26, 2020, a Nintendo Direct Mini confirmed that the sixth fighter would be a character from the game ARMS. MandyCan confessed to having an unreliable source, but affirmed a personal belief that Crash Bandicoot would be released as one of the future characters within the pass.
The user has since deactivated their Twitter account; Fighters Pass Vol. 2 completed development without the appearance of any Crash Bandicoot content.
Ubisoft Club Sam Rayman fighter rumor
On April 22, 2020, people noticed that when they chat with the Ubisoft Club app's chatbot, Sam, about Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and/or its DLC, it would no longer display a message related to wanting Rayman from the Rayman franchise in the game and instead display a generic message, despite it formerly displaying such a message. This has lead to speculation of Nintendo removing the message so as to not prematurely leak a supposed reveal of Rayman as playable. Other speculation has suggested Ubisoft may not want to get fans' hopes up if Rayman is not a fighter, or that Nintendo requested the removal of the original message due to it mocking Byleth's playable status.
GameStop Geno rumor
On July 13, 2020, American games retailer GameStop released a video previewing Paper Mario: The Origami King. During a section of the video going over the history of Mario RPG spin-offs, the host Pamela Horton states that "people were freaking out when Geno was announced for Smash", something that had not happened at the time, though the video used footage of Geno's spirit battle during that particular scene. This led to speculation that Geno was an upcoming fighter. The video was later marked private, and when it was made public again, GameStop posted a comment explaining that they were referring to the speculation surrounding the spirit and that GameStop does not have any inside knowledge of which fighters will or will not appear in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
On December 17th, 2020, Geno was revealed as a Mii Costume, confirming that this rumor was false.
Activision 5 Year Crash Bandicoot Plan rumor
On October 5, 2020, Twitter user @TheNintendata posted about a supposed leaked document from Activision that contained a five-year plan for the Crash Bandicoot franchise. Following plans to see the Crash Bandicoot N. Sane Trilogy on other platforms; Crash Team Racing Nitro-Fueled; its Grand Prix service; Crash Bandicoot: On The Run!; and Crash Bandicoot 4: It's About Time released, this document is rumored to include the addition of Crash Bandicoot to Super Smash Bros. Ultimate in 2021 as downloadable content.
The five-year Crash Bandicoot plan had first been mentioned on January 19, 2018, by the European publication Licensing Source Book, which "covers the entire licensing industry." Although specific details were not revealed at the time, on page 97 the publication revealed a statement from Max Arguile, Licensing Manager of GB Eye saying, "Looking ahead to 2018 Max picks out Crash Bandicoot as one to watch: "The new game has had a huge success at retail with no marketing spend. Next, it will be going broader (Switch and PC), and there will be another game in 2019. Activision have a five-year plan for this and GB eye is delighted to be fully on board for all products." Destructoid corroborated the story from Licensing Source Book on February 5, 2018.
This rumor was eventually disconfirmed after the confirmation of Sora as the last fighter for Ultimate.
URL String Theory
On the official Nintendo of Australia website, the individual webpages for Challenger Pack content contain a long string of numbers in its URL that are numbered in order. For Fighters Pass Vol. 1, the string goes 700500000085xx, with the last two digits changing for each individual page. Piranha Plant (who is not part of the Fighters Pass) has 01, Joker has 02, Hero has 03, Banjo & Kazooie have 04, Terry has 05, and Byleth has 06. The Rex Mii Fighter costume, which is a bonus for downloading the Fighters Pass, has its own page with the numbers 07 at the end. Similarly, Fighters Pass Vol. 2 has the string 700500000189xx. The last two digits for each individual webpage are 67 for Min Min, 68 for Steve/Alex, 69 for Sephiroth, 70 for Pyra/Mythra, 71 for Kazuya, and 72 for Sora (who was not revealed at the time, but still has his own page).
The Ancient Soldier Helm + Gear, which is a bonus for downloading Fighters Pass Vol. 2, has 74 as its last two digits, leaving 73 empty. Should 73 be entered into the URL, the website brings up a different error page than if a random assortment of numbers is entered, which would say the page could not be found. This has led to rumors that Nintendo inadvertently leaked extra content alongside the standard challenger packs. However, what the content would be, whether it is an entire Challenger Pack, a sole fighter (like Piranha Plant), stage, Mii Fighter costume, or bundle is unknown.[31] It was later discovered that the putting any number from 75 through 99 gave the exact same error message, though, as 73 is still an outlier, it is unknown if the other error messages disconfirm the theory or not.
In Mr. Sakurai Presents "Kazuya", Sakurai stated that the character in Challenger Pack 11 will be the last DLC fighter, which indicates that should the URL string point towards additional DLC for Ultimate instead of being an error, the DLC would not involve a character. However, it is very unlikely that any additional content will be added to the game following the conclusion of Fighters Pass Vol. 2, which indicates that slot 73 being left empty was merely a mistake.
Crash Bandicoot voice actor rumor
On May 14, 2021, Scott Whyte, the voice actor for Crash Bandicoot in Crash Bandicoot 4: It's About Time, posted a picture on Instagram, which shows him doing voice work with Lex Lang, the voice actor for Dr. Neo Cortex. Within the post Whyte wrote, "It's #neocortex and #CrashBandicoot working together on a fun new project... no, this one is not another Crash game (or is it?? Haha!)". In the comments section, one user asked if he is doing his lines for a Smash trailer, to which Whyte simply replies with a shrugging emoji. Being the only comment that he directly replied to, this led some to believe that Crash might potentially be added as a DLC fighter in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, with Whyte and Lang reprising their roles as Crash and Neo Cortex either in-game or a reveal trailer.
On May 20, 2021, Lex Lang made a post with a similar teaser to Whyte's, and in the comments section, one user asked if it was for Crash in Smash, to which Lang replied, "I wish," confirming that the tease was not for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate.
This rumor was eventually debunked as Sora was revealed as the last DLC fighter of Ultimate. Some have since theorized these recording sessions were instead for Crash Team Rumble, which released on June 20, 2023.
No Ubisoft Characters Rumor
On May 16, 2021, an anonymous Discord user contacted YouTuber PapaGenos with supposed leaked footage from upcoming DLC for the Ubisoft-published fighting game Brawlhalla. In the post, the user claimed to work at Ubisoft with knowledge of various crossovers planned at the company, stating that no Ubisoft characters were planned to be playable in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. Indeed, after the Rabbid Mii Fighter hat that released in January 2020, the game's DLC featured no further Ubisoft representation. Also predicted by the user were Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Street Fighter DLC for Brawlhalla, the former of which was officially unveiled during Ubisoft Forward on June 13, 2021.
Post-update Rumors
Sora amiibo rumor
On July 4, 2023, Twitter user ARTSWIFT explained that Sora amiibo will be released in the near future.[32] Since the last presentation for Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Battling with Sora on October 5, 2021, there have been no official confirmation of this happening, nor has there been support of said amiibo in the latest update, version 13.0.1 on December 1st, 2021. In the following weeks, new rumors were reported by numerous news outlets where restocks of amiibo will happen after August 2023 and will be released in waves,[33] while restocks of Ultimate themed Nintendo GameCube controllers would later occur on August 6 in Japan.[34] These rumors have calmed down until the Nintendo Live 2023, where reports of new rumors included an announcement ready for an upcoming Nintendo Direct in September 2023; Nintendo tend to have one ready for September every year since its inauguration.[35] These rumors tied with the ones discussed earlier in July. While a direct dedicated to Super Mario Bros. Wonder was published by Nintendo on August 31, 2023, a general direct where a Sora amiibo could realistically appear in has yet to be officially announced.
Throughout the first week of September, Nintendo hosted Nintendo Live 2023 in Seattle, Washington, which included Super Smash Bros. Ultimate-centric events with Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Squad Strike Challenge 2023 on September 1 and Super Smash Bros. Ultimate amiibo + me Exhibition 2023 on September 3. The latter tournament featured amiibo, but there were no announcement for Sora receiving one throughout the event. Props that were present during the game's demo at E3 2018 were displayed during the Nintendo Live event alongside new props,[36] though this does not necessarily confirm new content for any franchise these props represent.
References
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- ^ Source Gaming: "Sakurai Interview: Fire Emblem 25th Anniversary"
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- ^ https://www.neogaf.com/threads/next-super-smash-bros-discussion-thread-community-edition.448761/page-151#post-37915502
- ^ Miyamoto Requested Pac-Man in Smash Bros. Brawl
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20130527174817/https://tgdaily.com/games-and-entertainment-brief/58593-wii-u-game-super-smash-bros-universe-leaked
- ^ http://www.gamefaqs.com/boards/633202-super-smash-bros-for-wii-u/66442330
- ^ PushDustIn (2014-06-04). Chrom Almost Had His Day. Source Gaming. Retrieved on 2018-04-19.
- ^ http://mynintendonews.com/2014/04/03/voice-actor-says-he-voiced-raiden-in-super-smash-bros/
- ^ http://mynintendonews.com/2014/08/03/nintendo-canada-confirms-rayman-wont-be-playable-in-smash-bros-but-will-appear-as-a-trophy/
- ^ https://www.twitter.com/Toadsanime/status/978650176847056897
- ^ https://sourcegaming.info/2018/07/03/bayo106/
- ^ https://sourcegaming.info/2018/08/22/more-information-about-the-smash-direct-sakurais-famitsu-column-vol-561/
- ^ https://twitter.com/PushDustIn/status/1087124989239734272
- ^ https://twitter.com/PushDustIn/status/1450855087337717760
- ^ "Switch is Getting 2 Smash Bros. Games – Rumour!" - Source Gaming
- ^ Ryan Craddock (2018-06-14). Nintendo Confirms Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Is A "Brand New Game", Not A Wii U Port. Nintendo Life. Retrieved on 2020-09-13.
- ^ https://web.archive.org/web/20180902043003/https://twitter.com/LepyPepy/status/1036067694389485568
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- ^ https://smashboards.com/threads/smash-ultimate-discussion-warning-possible-spoilers-leaks.434391/page-5979#post-22581992
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- ^ https://www.facebook.com/MarinaPLV/posts/1070378256464354
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- ^ [1]
- ^ https://twitter.com/niconico_test_1/status/1140993082432749568
- ^ https://twitter.com/niconico_test_1/status/1141278892281307137
- ^ https://twitter.com/niconico_test_1/status/1140584584477679616
- ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zjUP-IbJxf8
- ^ ARTSWIFT (July 4, 2023). ARTSWIFT on Twitter. Twitter. Retrieved on September 3, 2023.
- ^ Jason Ganos (July 25, 2023). Report: Massive amiibo restock on the way according to retailer. Nintendo Wire. Retrieved on September 4, 2023.
- ^ rawmeatcowboy (July 24, 2023). Japan sees restock on the Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Edition GameCube controller. gonintendo. Retrieved on September 4, 2023.
- ^ Dennis Patrick (September 1, 2023). Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Getting An Update?. Gameranx. Retrieved on September 2, 2023.
- ^ Nintendo of America (September 2, 2023). Nintendo of America on Twitter. Twitter. Retrieved on September 3, 2023.