Super Smash Bros. Brawl
This is a featured article. Click for more information.

Super Smash Bros. Brawl

From SmashWiki, the Super Smash Bros. wiki
Revision as of 00:08, March 12, 2023 by CanvasK (talk | contribs) (Undid edit by The Pro Gamer 2: )
Jump to navigationJump to search
They're back. Stronger than ever. And they've brought friends. Lots of them.
—North American commercial
"Brawl" redirects here. For the game mode, see Versus Mode.
Super Smash Bros. Brawl
{{{content1}}}
{{{content2}}}
{{{content3}}}
Developer(s) Sora
HAL Laboratory
Game Arts
Monolith Soft
Paon
Intelligent Systems
Publisher(s) Nintendo
Designer(s) Masahiro Sakurai (director) Kazushige Nojima (scenario writer)[1]
Engine Havok
Released Japan January 31, 2008
North America March 9, 2008
Australia June 26, 2008[2]
Europe June 27, 2008[3][4]
South Korea April 29, 2010
Genre(s) Fighting, Platform
Mode(s) Single player, Multiplayer, Online multiplayer[5]
Ratings CERO: A
ESRB: T
OFLC: PG
PEGI: 12+
Platform(s) Wii
Media Wii Optical Disc (Double-layer)
System requirements 128 free blocks of memory in the Wii System Memory
Input methods Wii Remote, Nunchuk, Classic Controller, GameCube controller[6]

Super Smash Bros. Brawl (大乱闘スマッシュブラザーズX, Great Fray Smash Brothers X), often shortened to "SSBB" or "Brawl" (スマブラX), is the third installment in the Super Smash Bros. series published by Nintendo. The game was designed by Masahiro Sakurai, who also created the two preceding Super Smash Bros. games, and was developed by an ad hoc development team consisting of Sora, Game Arts, and staff from other developers, beginning in October 2005. The game uses an engine called Havok provided by an Irish company of the same name.[7]

The game was released on January 31st, 2008 in Japan, March 9th, 2008 in North America, June 26th, 2008 in Australia, and June 27th, 2008 in Europe. Brawl supports four types of controllers[6] - the Wii Remote alone held horizontally, the Wii Remote and Nunchuk together, the Classic Controller/Classic Controller Pro, and the GameCube controller. Up to four players can engage in local multiplayer battles at any given time with any combination of controllers, while Brawl also supported online play through the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, the first game in the series to do so.[8]

While Brawl continues to include the tournament-like "Classic" and "All-Star" single-player modes, Melee's Adventure Mode has been replaced with The Subspace Emissary; a much more extensive side-scrolling beat-'em-up mode featuring both the playable characters and many enemies specifically created for the game. The resulting mode includes an involved plot and numerous pre-rendered cutscenes, as well as some platform game elements during gameplay.

Following the trend set by earlier games in the series, Brawl showcases a wide selection of characters from Nintendo and its second parties, setting them to fight in several different types of matches. Unlike its predecessors, however, Brawl also includes two third-party characters in Solid Snake and Sonic the Hedgehog. In total, the number of playable characters was increased from Melee's 25[9] to 35 (or 39, if counting Sheik and Zero Suit Samus separately from Zelda and Samus, and counting Squirtle, Ivysaur, and Charizard individually rather than grouped with the Pokémon Trainer).

Most of the game's musical score is made up of newly-arranged versions of pieces that originated in earlier video games starring the characters featured in Brawl, with the remainder taken directly from the original games. The new arrangements were composed in a collaboration between 38 renowned video game composers[10] and has been critically acclaimed for its representation of different generations in gaming history.[11]

The limited edition release of Super Smash Bros. Brawl came inside an extra cardboard sleeve depicting all of the characters available by default, and came with two postcards, providing a biopic on Zero Suit Samus and Zelda, giving a short summary of them, and showing images of their special moves.

Following the release of the game in Japan, a bug was discovered in the game. This bug causes the game to display an error message when it starts, however, players can close the error message and play the game as usual. There has since been a replacement program.

The game requires 128 free blocks of memory in the Wii System Memory. No data, except some vault data, can be copied to an SD Card or transferred onto another Wii. If the player does not create a save file when they start, they were unable to play via Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection and vault data will not be saved. As of May 20, 2014, the Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection has been shut down therefore making it impossible for anyone to play Brawl online without hacking.

Brawl received universal acclaim, with praise centered on its entertainment value despite issues relating to its content loading times, and its musical score was lauded for its representation of different generations in gaming history. The game has sold 13.32 million units as of March 31, 2020, making it the eighth best-selling Wii game of all time.

Opening movie

The CGI opening movie of Super Smash Bros. Brawl utilizes scenes from The Subspace Emissary, along with lots of selections of Versus Mode matches, as opposed to featuring unique footage in the manner of the game's predecessor, Super Smash Bros. (Super Smash Bros. Melee used footage from its E3 trailer).

Fighters

The character selection screen of Super Smash Bros. Brawl with all characters unlocked.
The entire cast, as they appear in the ending; excluding Zero Suit Samus and Sheik, the transformations of Samus and Zelda, respectively.
A back view of all the fighters in the previous image during the Opening Movie.

The cast of 35 playable characters (39 if Zelda, Sheik, Samus, Zero Suit Samus, Squirtle, Ivysaur and Charizard are all treated as separate without counting the trainer himself) includes 20 (21 including Sheik) returning veterans from Melee and 15 newcomers (18 including transformations). Of these, 21 are starter characters (25 if the seven transformation characters above are all treated as seperate) and the other 14 need to be unlocked. Many of the returning characters have been updated or refined since their last appearance, either in terms of appearance, fighting capabilities, or both. For example, Link and Fox have taken on new designs from more recent titles, while Samus Aran has gained the ability to change into a new form, Zero Suit Samus, by using her Final Smash or by the player pressing a certain button after picking Samus and before picking a stage.

Five characters do not return from Melee: Super Mario's Dr. Mario, The Legend of Zelda's Young Link, Pokémon's Mewtwo and Pichu, and Fire Emblem's Roy. Of these, only Mewtwo was not a moveset clone; and it is assumed to have been the furthest into development of the cut characters due to having the most unused code out of the cut veterans. Except for the Mario series, each of these series' gained new characters added to the roster: Toon Link for The Legend of Zelda, Pokémon Trainer (who controls Squirtle, Ivysaur, and Charizard) and Lucario for Pokémon, and Ike for Fire Emblem.

Several franchises already represented in the Super Smash Bros. series gain additional character slots, with the Kirby universe the biggest gainer, as both King Dedede and Meta Knight make their playable Super Smash Bros. debuts. Otherwise, EarthBound sees Lucas join, the Star Fox franchise adds Wolf, and the Donkey Kong universe adds Diddy Kong, while Metroid has Samus's aforementioned "Zero Suit" form, which originally debuted in Metroid: Zero Mission, added as a transformation for its sole character.

New character slots which go to Nintendo series previously unrepresented include Pit, the first appearance of the Kid Icarus series since the 1991 Game Boy game Kid Icarus: Of Myths and Monsters; Wario, originally a Mario spin-off but long launched into a franchise of his own; Captain Olimar from the Pikmin series; and the NES accessory R.O.B..

Finally, main protagonist Solid Snake of the Metal Gear franchise, and Sonic the Hedgehog from his eponymous series become the first third-party characters to appear in a Super Smash Bros. game.

Veterans (21)
Mario (SSBB)
Mario
Mario (universe)
Luigi (SSBB)
Luigi
Mario (universe)
Peach (SSBB)
Peach
Mario (universe)
Bowser (SSBB)
Bowser
Mario (universe)
Yoshi (SSBB)
Yoshi
Yoshi (universe)
Donkey Kong (SSBB)
Donkey Kong
Donkey Kong (universe)
Link (SSBB)
Link
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Zelda (SSBB)Sheik (SSBB)
Zelda/Sheik
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Ganondorf (SSBB)
Ganondorf
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Samus (SSBB)
Samus
Metroid (universe)
Kirby (SSBB)
Kirby
Kirby (universe)
Fox (SSBB)
Fox
Star Fox (universe)
Falco (SSBB)
Falco
Star Fox (universe)
Pikachu (SSBB)
Pikachu
Pokémon (universe)
Jigglypuff (SSBB)
Jigglypuff
Pokémon (universe)
Captain Falcon (SSBB)
Captain Falcon
F-Zero (universe)
Ness (SSBB)
Ness
EarthBound (universe)
Ice Climbers (SSBB)
Ice Climbers
Ice Climber (universe)
Marth (SSBB)
Marth
Fire Emblem (universe)
Mr. Game & Watch (SSBB)
Mr. Game & Watch
Game & Watch (universe)
Newcomers (18)
Diddy Kong (SSBB)
Diddy Kong
Donkey Kong (universe)
Toon Link (SSBB)
Toon Link
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Zero Suit Samus (SSBB)
Zero Suit Samus
Metroid (universe)
Meta Knight (SSBB)
Meta Knight
Kirby (universe)
King Dedede (SSBB)
King Dedede
Kirby (universe)
Wolf (SSBB)
Wolf
Star Fox (universe)
Pokémon Trainer (SSBB)Squirtle (SSBB)Ivysaur (SSBB)Charizard (SSBB)
Pokémon Trainer (Squirtle, Ivysaur, Charizard)
Pokémon (universe)
Lucario (SSBB)
Lucario
Pokémon (universe)
Lucas (SSBB)
Lucas
EarthBound (universe)
Ike (SSBB)
Ike
Fire Emblem (universe)
Pit (SSBB)
Pit
Kid Icarus (universe)
Wario (SSBB)
Wario
Wario (universe)
Olimar (SSBB)
Olimar
Pikmin (universe)
R.O.B. (SSBB)
R.O.B.
R.O.B. (universe)
Snake (SSBB)
Snake
Metal Gear (universe)
Sonic (SSBB)
Sonic
Sonic the Hedgehog (universe)

Bold denotes unlockable characters.

Collectibles

The number of Trophies, statuettes of Nintendo characters and objects which can be collected in-game, was almost doubled from Melee.[12] A related feature was the introduction of stickers, small pieces of Nintendo artwork which can be picked up from offline and online matches, along with the Smash Service's "Spectator Mode." Stickers also make an appearance in the single-player and multiplayer modes, such as the Stadium mode. Stickers also act as a sort of enhancement to the characters' abilities when using attacks in Adventure Mode: The Subspace Emissary.[13]. Through the Trophy Hoard and Sticker Album, players can place trophies and stickers onto virtual backgrounds and take snapshots, all of which is recorded into the Wii's internal hard drive or onto SD cards depending on the player's choosing. From this point, these virtual items can be sent to other players via Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection, "WiiConnect24".[12][13]

The inclusion of a new Super Smash Bros. element, collectable CDs, which, when obtained, offer new music selections for playable stages. Although this can add more variety to the music played on a stage, the music selection will always be at random. However, the player can adjust how often a track can be played from the options menu. [14]

By completing stages in Classic Mode[15], All-Star Mode and The Subspace Emissary, coins can be earned. The coins can be used to play the Coin Launcher to win more stickers or trophies, to "pay" for Continues in Classic and All-Star Mode, to bet on the outcome of Spectator Mode matches and to choose stages in online play.

Masterpieces

Main article: Masterpieces

Brawl introduces "Masterpieces", time-limited Virtual Console game demonstrations, to the Super Smash Bros. series. The international release has twelve such games available, each of which features one or more of the playable characters from Brawl. Seven games are available for play to begin with, with five more unlockable by completing Challenges, which range from Mario's debut in Donkey Kong to the critically acclaimed late Nintendo 64 title The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. The time-limits on each individual play last between 30 seconds (Donkey Kong), to five minutes (Ocarina of Time).

The Japanese release has two additional Masterpieces not included in the international releases — the SNES games Mother 2 (known as EarthBound in its US release) and Fire Emblem: Monsho no Nazo.

Music

On May 22, 2007, Sakurai revealed a list of 38 composers providing the musical score for the game. In his accompanying statement, Sakurai said that he had asked the composers, who come from a variety of companies and have written music for first, second, and third-party games, "to listen to an elite selection of Nintendo music and arrange several of their favorite songs."[10]

Each of the game stages have multiple musical tracks which players can listen to using the new "My Music" feature, including some songs that were taken directly from other games without any modification or special arrangement. This feature also allows the player to adjust the frequency of how often a music track is played on a given stage. Collecting CDs expands the range of music available.[14]

Stages

Main article: Stage
The stage selection screen in Brawl.
The Melee Stages screen in Brawl.

Brawl features many stages that can be fought on. Most of them are new, but a few return from Melee. On some stages, such as Shadow Moses Island, Smash Taunts can be performed. Brawl also has an option to create custom stages with the Stage Builder.

Brawl stages (31)
Battlefield (SSBB)
Battlefield
Super Smash Bros. (universe)
Final Destination (SSBB)
Final Destination
Super Smash Bros. (universe)
Delfino Plaza
Delfino Plaza
Mario (universe)
Mushroomy Kingdom
Mushroomy Kingdom
Mario (universe)
Mario Circuit (SSBB)
Mario Circuit
Mario (universe)
Luigi's Mansion
Luigi's Mansion
Mario (universe)
Mario Bros.
Mario Bros.
Mario (universe)
Yoshi's Island (SSBB)
Yoshi's Island
Yoshi (universe)
Rumble Falls
Rumble Falls
Donkey Kong (universe)
75m
75m
Donkey Kong (universe)
Bridge of Eldin
Bridge of Eldin
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Pirate Ship
Pirate Ship
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Norfair
Norfair
Metroid (universe)
Frigate Orpheon
Frigate Orpheon
Metroid (universe)
Halberd
Halberd
Kirby (universe)
Lylat Cruise
Lylat Cruise
Star Fox (universe)
Pokémon Stadium 2
Pokémon Stadium 2
Pokémon (universe)
Spear Pillar
Spear Pillar
Pokémon (universe)
Port Town Aero Dive
Port Town Aero Dive
F-Zero (universe)
New Pork City
New Pork City
EarthBound (universe)
Summit
Summit
Ice Climber (universe)
Castle Siege
Castle Siege
Fire Emblem (universe)
Flat Zone 2
Flat Zone 2
Game & Watch (universe)
Skyworld
Skyworld
Kid Icarus (universe)
WarioWare, Inc.
WarioWare, Inc.
Wario (universe)
Distant Planet
Distant Planet
Pikmin (universe)
Shadow Moses Island
Shadow Moses Island
Metal Gear (universe)
Green Hill Zone
Green Hill Zone
Sonic the Hedgehog (universe)
Smashville
Smashville
Animal Crossing (universe)
PictoChat
PictoChat
Nintendo DS (universe)
Hanenbow
Hanenbow
Electroplankton (universe)
Super Smash Bros. Melee Melee stages (10)
Rainbow Cruise
Rainbow Cruise
Mario (universe)
Yoshi's Island (SSBM)
Yoshi's Island
Yoshi (universe)
Jungle Japes
Jungle Japes
Donkey Kong (universe)
Temple
Temple
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Brinstar
Brinstar
Metroid (universe)
Green Greens
Green Greens
Kirby (universe)
Corneria
Corneria
Star Fox (universe)
Pokémon Stadium
Pokémon Stadium
Pokémon (universe)
Big Blue
Big Blue
F-Zero (universe)
Onett
Onett
EarthBound (universe)

Bold denotes unlockable stages.

Development

At the pre-E3 2005 press conference, the president of Nintendo, Satoru Iwata, announced the next installment of Super Smash Bros. was not only already in development for their next gaming console, but would be a launch title with Wi-Fi compatibility for playing online.[16] The announcement was unexpected to the creator of the Super Smash Bros. series, Masahiro Sakurai. Back in 2003, he had left HAL Laboratory, the company that was in charge with the franchises' development and was never informed of this announcement despite the fact shortly after resigning from the company, Iwata said if a new game was to be made, he would be in charge. It was not until after the conference Sakurai was called to Satoru Iwata's room on the top floor of a Los Angeles hotel where he was told by Iwata, "We'd like you to be involved in the production of the new Smash Bros., if possible near the level of director".[17] Although originally announced to be a launch title, Sakurai stated "I decided to become director. And as of May, 2005, I was the only member of the new Smash Bros. development team". Iwata would later admit that, had Sakurai declined the role of director, he would have released a remastered version of Melee with added online capablilities. Development of the game did not actually start until late 2005, and just for its production, Nintendo opened a new office in Tokyo at the beginning of October 2005. Sakurai's new company, Sora Ltd., was put in charge of the project and Game Arts was chosen as a lead developer, with other companies like Monolith Soft and Paon having significant hands in production. Sakurai has stated that the teams he chose had spent excessive amounts of time playing Melee, and thus had a deep mechanical knowledge of the series. The team had access to all the original material and tools from the development of Melee, courtesy of HAL Laboratory.

Brawl was absent from Nintendo's Wii showing at its 2006 Pre-E3 press conference. The next day, on May 10, 2006, its first official trailer was unveiled at E3 and at the After-Hours Press Conference, Nintendo officially revealed the game under the name of Super Smash Bros. Brawl. In an interview with IGN, Sakurai said the Wii's motion sensing features might not be included because, "we found that trying to implement too much motion-sensory functionality can get in the way of the game."[18] As far as Wi-Fi play is concerned, Sakurai stated his plan was to include Wi-Fi connection compatibility and online functionality, he goes on to say "one of the primary reasons Super Smash Bros. Brawl was created was that Nintendo, when taking Wii online, wanted to have Smash Bros. to do that".[18] However, as stated on the Japanese version of the Smash Bros. website, "there would be many hurdles to cross," and an online ranking system is unlikely to be implemented.[19] During a test play between Sakurai and Hideo Kojima, creator of the Metal Gear series, Kojima stated that the game felt complete and that Nintendo "could put it out right now and it would sell millions of copies."[20] Starting May 22, 2007, the site had updates every weekday until shortly after Brawl's release. Throughout October 18-22, 2007 at the first Entertainment for All Expo show in Los Angeles, California, Nintendo hosted a Super Smash Bros. Brawl tournament.[21]

At the Nintendo Media Conference at E3 2007, it was announced by Nintendo of America president Reggie Fils-Aime that Brawl would be released on December 3, 2007 in the Americas.[22] However, just two months before its anticipated December release, the development team asked for more time to work on the game. During the Nintendo Conference on October 10, 2007, Nintendo of Japan president Iwata announced the delay, saying:

In order to fine tune Smash Bros., with this unprecedented game depth, we have decided that we have to take a little more time to complete the game than we announced before. We are sorry for the fans that are already anxiously waiting for the launch, but we would like to launch this game on January 24th, 2008 in Japan. As for the North American launch, we will review that too, and our local subsidiaries will make their own announcements.[23]

On October 11, 2007, George Harrison of Nintendo of America announced that Brawl would be released on February 10, 2008 in North America.[24] The North American version of the game was later delayed a second time to March 9th.[25] Nintendo issued a warning statement regarding Brawl causing issues with some Wii systems. Due to the sheer size of the game files, double-layer discs were used to fit the entire game physically. This would cause the disc to be unreadable if the lens of the disc drive became contaminated. Nintendo offered a free repair service to those that experienced this issue.[26]

Inclusion of characters

Sakurai stated that he did not want to emphasize Japan-only characters;[27] in Brawl's cast, only Lucas had not appeared outside of Japan (although Marth had only previously only appeared internationally in Super Smash Bros. Melee, rather than his home franchise). Sakurai also stated there would be no more than three third-party characters;[27] these characters were Solid Snake and Sonic the Hedgehog. The inclusion of Konami-created character Solid Snake may seem to conflict with the Super Smash Bros. paradigm — to only include characters from games made by Nintendo and its second parties — but Sakurai said Hideo Kojima "practically begged" for Snake to be included in Melee, which did not happen because the game was too far in development. This in turn led to his appearance in the following game instead.[28] Similarly, Lucas was intended to be used in Melee, but was left out due to the constant delay and eventual cancellation of Mother 3 on the Nintendo 64 at the time.[29]

Japanese fans were asked to submit their desired characters and musical themes via a forum on the game's official Japanese site, with some possibly appearing in the game. Likewise, fans from other countries were asked to submit ideas on Nintendo's official forums.[30]

Suggestions were no longer being taken as of June 9, 2006. In August 2006, Sakurai and Miyamoto stated that Nintendo was negotiating rights to other third-party characters.[31] The most requested third-party character, Sega's Sonic the Hedgehog, was announced to be in the game on October 10, 2007.[32]

Trailers

Several different trailers for Brawl were released before the game came out. The original trailer was shown at E3 2006 on May 11, 2006 and revealed Pit, Meta Knight, Zero Suit Samus, Wario and Solid Snake as new playable characters, alongside the return of Mario, Link, Samus, Pikachu and Kirby. A second trailer was shown at the Nintendo World 2006 convention in December, and revealed Fox's return as a playable character. A third trailer was shown at the October 10, 2007 Nintendo Press Conference, which revealed Sonic as a playable character. A final trailer showcasing Brawl's adventure mode, the Subspace Emissary, was released on Friday, December 21, 2007. This trailer revealed that Ike and the Ice Climbers would appear in this mode, among other things.

Reception

Brawl reviews
Publication Score
1UP.com A[33]
Edge Magazine 9 of 10[34]
Eurogamer 9 of 10[35]
Famitsu 40 of 40[36]
Gametrailers 9.4 of 10[37]
IGN 9.5 of 10[38]
NGamer 93[39]
Nintendo Power 10 of 10[40]
Official Nintendo Magazine 95%[41]
Compilations of multiple reviews
Metacritic 93/100 (81 reviews)[42]
Game Rankings 92.84% (78 reviews)[43]
TopTenReviews 3.85/4 (56 reviews)[44]
Awards
Best Fighting Game[45]

Super Smash Bros. Brawl received critically positive reviews and sold successfully. In the United States, the game sold 874,000 units on launch day and 1.4 million units in its first week to become the fastest-selling video game in Nintendo of America's history, according to Nintendo. The game has sold 10.79 million units worldwide as of March 2012 according to Nintendo, which made it the best selling game in the series and best selling fighting game at the time. Super Smash Bros. Brawl is currently the 8th best selling game for the Wii and sold 13.29 million units worldwide as of September 30, 2018, and was only surpassed as the best selling in the series and best selling fighting game by its own sequel, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, in 2019. Brawl currently holds an aggregate review score of 92.84% on Gamerankings and a score of 93/100 on Metacritic. Despite this, British publication NGamer received criticism for awarding a 93% rating to Brawl, with readers deeming the score too low, especially in comparison to Official Nintendo Magazine's 95% rating. Brawl has reviews with ratings equal or slightly better than Melee. The game's multiplayer was received excellently, but single player, while noted as superior to Melee's, was still only average.

However, since 2013 (five years since its release), Brawl's representation in tournament play has decreased. This is because many changes from Melee likely intended to make Brawl more beginner-friendly have resulted in a less dynamic metagame that gradually became less successful with players and spectators. Arguably the most controversial change is the added ability to act during hitstun, which reduces combo potential for characters; other factors include the generally slower pace of gameplay, the decreased falling speeds, the removal of mechanics such as L-canceling and wavedashing, introduction of random tripping, and very polarized character balance (attempts to universally ban overcentralizing characters such as Meta Knight have proven unsuccessful). Because of these changes, Brawl has a smaller tournament scene than both its predecessor and successor games, although it still appears in some major cross-game tournaments.

Changes from Melee to Brawl

Gameplay

  • Generally, Brawl's gameplay engine functions much like Super Smash Bros. as the game plays slower: every veteran has a slower falling speed and gravity, L-canceling has been removed, dashing barely increases forward momentum in midair, and characters must wait a slightly longer amount of time before being able to meteor cancel.
    • As a result, many veterans were generally heavily nerfed due to the decreased or removed abilities while a few, particularly the low and bottom tiers of Melee at the time of Brawl's release, generally benefited from the new physics and were buffed.
  • The air dodge no longer involves characters shifting in a direction; instead, characters continue on whatever path they were moving before the air dodge without inducing the helpless state. This gives characters more options in the air, but makes wavedashing impossible.
  • The amount of time a launched character is forced to stay in hitstun is significantly decreased; it can be cancelled with an air dodge or an aerial after a short amount of time, making true combos less common, and can even be done to the point of slowing down or even cancelling their momentum while still suffering from knockback, allowing characters to survive for much longer than before.
  • Some characters now have unique meteor cancel windows: while the universal meteor cancel window is 25 frames for most characters, those with tether recoveries only (such as Ivysaur) have a smaller delay in meteor canceling, while characters that use wings for multiple jumps (such as Meta Knight) must wait for longer. The only exception to this rule is Wolf, who oddly has a 60 frame delay before being able to meteor cancel despite not having multiple jumps. Additionally, attempting to meteor cancel with a jump before this window of time will result in a 40-frame penalty where the character cannot meteor cancel.
  • The knockback formula has been changed to include a character's gravity. This results in a character's falling speed having a much smaller effect on their vertical endurance. An example can be seen in Fox: despite having the highest accelerated falling speed, he has the 5th worst vertical endurance out of the cast, unlike in Melee, where his vertical endurance was the 6th best, as his high gravity now causes him to sustain more knockback.
  • The calculation of knockback no longer ignores stale move negation, resulting in moves losing significantly more knockback the more they are staled. This requires players to preserve their KO options more carefully, but makes certain moves able to combo into themselves more effectively.
  • The window for dash-dancing is so small it loses almost all its usefulness.
  • Tether recoveries are generally less useful than the wall-grappling they replaced; they only aim for ledges as opposed to walls, and can be very easily edgehogged, however they do not render the user helpless barring a few special move tethers.
  • Characters must wait a short amount of time before being able to move after grabbing a ledge.
  • Shieldstun has been drastically decreased, with an increased perfect shield window.
  • It only takes 7 frames to drop shield, making the game more defensively-focused.
  • Some characters have the dash attack canceled up smash that improves their approach.
  • All characters now have a Final Smash.
  • There is a landing lag glitch on not all but several characters that causes the character when they land to be inflicted with the landing lag of a helplessness-inducing special move, if they grabbed the edge during the move, or after using the move before landing.
  • Characters can grab a ledge with their back facing it, and most recovery moves (though not all of them) also cancel for the character to grab the edge, making recovery easier and more flexible, as well as lowering the effectiveness of attacks that turn the opponent around, such as Mario's Cape. Additionally, using any up special move (with two exceptions) no longer expends the character's double jump, allowing characters to use it after an up special move if they are hit out of it in the air without having used the double jump prior.
  • Edge teching is no longer possible, as well as ledge canceling attacks. Characters can now air dodge while tumbling, so teching itself is harder to perform, and has become generally less useful due to the reduced hitstun and momentum canceling.
  • Knockback that doesn't cause tumbling can no longer be directional influenced.
  • Characters can now randomly trip, and they have a floor attack for when they do so.
  • Buffering implemented: characters can now perform actions by inputting them at least 10 frames before they can actually be executed.
  • Spikes no longer exist, as the trajectory range for a meteor smash has been increased, and all attacks with a downwards angle fall into this range.
  • The footstool jump allows characters to bounce off of other characters' heads while sending the opponent downward; it acts like a meteor smash, though the footstool jump is not a true meteor smash.
  • Perfect Shielding no longer reflects projectiles during the first 2 frames of activation, instead the projectiles either disappear or redirect at an angle depending on the projectile.
  • Fighters no longer experience a period of intangibility between the period of their shield is broken and them hitting the ground and entering their stunned animation. This slightly increases the window in which a fighter can be attacked when their shield is broken, as well as making it possible to use windboxes to push opponents offstage while falling to the ground to be stunned. However, it also enables players to save teammates who are tumbling to their death due to being forced over the ledge after their shield broke.
  • Characters knocked down on the floor now enter a flopping animation upon hit by a weak attack, which does not give them any invincibility frames until they can get up, enabling locks.
  • Crouching cannot cancel dashes, and crouch canceling no longer reduces knockback.
  • Smash attacks are easier to angle, as the player can now just hold up or down during the forward smash to angle it.
  • Characters now conserve forward momentum when dash grabbing opponents.
  • Pummels now deal variable damage from 1% to 3% depending on the character, rather than all dealing 3%, and have variable speeds depending on their strength: while characters like Mario pummel as slow as in the previous game while dealing more damage per pummel, others like Kirby can pummel very quickly, dealing less damage per pummel.
  • Some characters can crawl, while others can glide or wall cling, and every character can swim in water instead of falling through it.
  • Some characters can grab release-combo other characters.
  • Moonwalking has been removed.
  • CPUs, while still having exploitable flaws, have gained an AI increase in general, choosing more alternatives with attacks and having quick dodging techniques of 1 frame reaction, among other improved behaviors.
  • Grabbing a character does not restore their midair jump(s).
  • Short hopping is at least 1 frame easier for all characters compared to Melee.
  • Smash Taunts do not end if the user flinches; they have to be KO'd to end it early.
  • Up smashes can be performed while running without needing to jump cancel, known as a slide smash.
  • Characters can now pivot grab.
  • Glancing blows no longer deal damage, and a few sparks will show up to indicate one.
  • All characters now have three taunts instead of one, have unique on-screen appearances, and the announcer counting down before the match begins which return from the original Super Smash Bros..
  • Items can now be grabbed during dash attacks, aerial attacks and air dodges.
  • Shrinking and growing animations have been added for every character.
  • The C-stick no longer throws battering items, enabling smash attacks.

Game modes

  • Bonuses have been removed, with only a few being awarded at the end of Classic and All-Star modes depending on the player's progress.
  • Outside of the main game, players can build custom stages and save snapshots and replays.
  • The Sound Test is now available at the start. However, certain sounds and music have to be unlocked.
  • Melee's Adventure Mode has been replaced by The Subspace Emissary.
  • Event matches have selectable difficulties.
  • All fighters now have a trophy based on their Final Smashes, which can be obtained by clearing All-Star mode in their respective users, replacing the "Smash" fighter trophies from Melee.
  • The Race to the Finish bonus game has been removed, with the repeat of the bonus game Target Smash being revamped.
  • Target Test is now known as "Target Smash!!", and it now has selectable difficulties, though there are now only five stages for all characters, rather than every character having their own stage, like in the previous two games.
  • The Home-Run Contest puts a temporary shield around the platform.
    • All of the four modes above can also be played in co-op, and players could also play online in various modes.
  • Special Brawls' effects can now be combined rather than all appearing in different modes. Other special effects have also been added.
  • Collectible stickers have been added, which can be collected on matches to then be used in the Subspace Emissary. The Lottery for trophies has also been replaced with the Coin Launcher. Players can now take snapshots of both trophies and stickers.
  • In one-player game modes, the C-stick acts the same as in multiplayer modes: instead of zooming, it is used as how the player has configured it, the default function being uncharged smash attacks.
  • Any wins, losses, KOs, and other things performed by CPU characters do not count in the records.
  • Players can now configure personalised controls for names.

Aesthetic

  • The menus are significantly reorganized and color-coded.
  • Along with the new opening, the announcer no longer announces the game's title, though there are unused sound files suggesting they originally would've.
  • Character noises have been mostly overhauled:
    • "Pain yells" are reliant on how long a character is in stun (instead of being reliant on how much knockback the character receives), and each character has two (or one in Ness's and Lucas's case) or none at all.
    • Characters no longer have a single noise for being KO'd horizontally or falling; each character now has two (this is most notable with Pit and Ivysaur) or again, none at all. Additionally, most characters have multiple noises for their aerial attacks and tilts (all of them are shared; Donkey Kong, for example, can make the same noises when executing his down tilt as when executing his up aerial).
    • Characters only make one sound when doing smash attacks (Mario's "Yeeha!" heard when he does his up smash is among the easiest to notice).
    • Star KO screams now play simultaneously with tumbling animations, consistent with Blast KOs. Previously, screams played much earlier than tumbling animations in Smash 64 and slightly earlier in Melee.
  • Visually, most characters appear much less saturated and have more realistic, detailed textures, even if it doesn't match with their appearances in other games. This is easily noticeable in Mario, Luigi, Peach, Yoshi, Kirby, Pikachu, Ness and the Ice Climbers.

Staff

Main article: List of staff (SSBB)

Gallery

Trivia

  • Brawl introduced the most new base-game fighters (18) and stages (31).
    • Before Super Smash Bros. Ultimate, Brawl had the most unlockable fighters out of any other Smash Bros. game, with 14. It also has the most unlockable stages, with 12.
  • The Brawl menu was designed to be very similar to the menu in Kirby Air Ride, including the Challenges Checklist. Additionally, Air Ride's menu uses deeper versions of the confirm and toggle sound effects from Melee's menu.
  • Unlike most Wii games, Super Smash Bros. Brawl comes in a dual-layer disc due to the large amount of data used for the game. Some older Wii consoles have trouble reading the disc, so various Nintendo branches around the world offer a free cleaning program for affected Wii consoles.
  • Brawl was the first Wii appearance for Zero Suit Samus, Kirby, Meta Knight, King Dedede, and Olimar.
  • Brawl is one of two games in the series where unlockable fighters can be unlocked without battling them first (via joining them in the Subspace Emissary in this game, and doing the same in World of Light in Ultimate)
  • If each of the Pokémon Trainer's Pokémon are counted as individual fighters, Pokémon features more newcomers than any other universe in Brawl, with four.
  • Coincidentally, the Nintendo Direct on March 8, 2018, which announced Ultimate, aired one day before the 10th anniversary of Brawl's release in the US.
  • Brawl is the only Smash game to:
    • Have none of its newcomers receive an Echo Fighter in Ultimate (Dark Pit had already been introduced in Super Smash Bros. 4).
    • Neither introduce nor have any playable full clones.
    • Feature a native Korean announcer, Choi Han; the Korean versions of Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Ultimate use Xander Mobus, the English announcer.
    • Have Charles Martinet recorded new voice clips for Mario, Luigi, Wario, and Waluigi. These voice clips are reused in later Smash installments.
    • Have Fox possess a higher jump than Falco.
    • Have Wario possess faster air acceleration than Jigglypuff.
    • Have no gameplay differences between different versions of the game. Smash 64 and Melee had gameplay changes between regional releases, Melee was re-released with gameplay changes between NTSC versions, and Smash 4 and Ultimate had gameplay changes between patch updates.
    • Not feature any stages that debuted in Smash 64 and, by extension, the Smash 64 version of Dream Land.
    • Not introduce a new Mario fighter (not counting spinoff characters), and also be the only game in the series to cut a fighter from said universe.
    • Not introduce a new playable RPG universe (64 has Pokémon and EarthBound, Melee has Fire Emblem, Smash 4 has Xenoblade Chronicles and Final Fantasy, and Ultimate also had this honor before Persona, Dragon Quest, and Kingdom Hearts via DLC).
    • Not introduce multiple Fire Emblem characters, although Ultimate also had this honor before Byleth released as DLC.
    • Not introduce a new Generation I Poké Ball Pokémon. It does, however, bring back Meowth who was absent from Melee.
  • This is the first Super Smash Bros. game to:
    • Be rated by CERO, which was established in June 2002, the year after Melee's release.
    • Not feature the involvement of Hiroshi Yamauchi, who left Nintendo on May 24th, 2002.
    • Cut fighters that were featured in prior games.
    • Feature native Spanish and Italian announcers.
    • Introduce a fighter created outside of Japan (Diddy Kong).
    • Introduce fighters not owned by Nintendo (Snake and Sonic).
      • Introduce a fighter from an M-rated series (Snake).
    • Promote previously-featured minor universes to major ones (Pikmin and Kid Icarus).
    • Not to have the announcer shout the title of the game in any capacity.
    • Have Battlefield and Final Destination available from the beginning as starter stages.
    • Introduce a stage from the Fire Emblem series.
    • Introduce fighters that have played non-playable roles in previous games.
  • Every voiced newcomer introduced in Brawl have two voice clips when KO'd.

References

  1. ^ Sakurai, Masahiro. Iwata Asks: Super Smash Bros. Brawl (Transcript). Retrieved on 2008-04-11.
  2. ^ Super Smash Bros. Brawl at Nintendo Australia. Nintendo (2006-05-12). Retrieved on 2007-06-20.
  3. ^ Upcoming Nintendo titles for Wii and Nintendo DS across Europe. Nintendo-Europe. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  4. ^ "Look who is attending the Brawl!", Nintendo, 2007-10-10. Retrieved on 2007-10-10. 
  5. ^ Wi-Fi Play. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-09-18). Retrieved on 2007-09-18.
  6. ^ a b Four Kinds of Control. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-06-08). Retrieved on 2007-06-08.
  7. ^ Sakurai, Masahiro. Foreword. Smash Bros. DOJO!! (Internet Archive). Retrieved on 2007-11-11.
  8. ^ Sakurai, Masahiro (2007-11-16). Wi-Fi Play. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Retrieved on 2008-04-22.
  9. ^ 26 including Sheik as a separate character from Princess Zelda
  10. ^ a b Sakurai, Masahiro ("May 22 Tue. 2007"). The Musicians. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Retrieved on 2011-01-16.
  11. ^ Hudak, Chris. Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review at Game Revolution .. Game Revolution. Retrieved on 2008-04-21.
  12. ^ a b Trophies. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-09-24). Retrieved on 2007-10-24.
  13. ^ a b Stickers. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-08-15). Retrieved on 2007-10-24.
  14. ^ a b My Music. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-09-07). Retrieved on 2007-10-28.
  15. ^ Classic. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-10-30). Retrieved on 2007-10-30.
  16. ^ Casamassina, Matt (2005-05-17). E3 2005: Smash Bros. For Revolution. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-05-03.
  17. ^ IGN Staff (2005-11-16). Smash Bros. Revolution Director Revealed. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
  18. ^ a b Casamassina, Matt; Peer Schneider (2006-05-10). E3 2006: Super Smash Bros. Brawl. IGN. Retrieved on 2006-08-01.
  19. ^ Miller, Ross (2006-06-05). Sakurai reveals new Smash Bros. Brawl details. Joystiq. Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
  20. ^ Dormer, Dan (2007-04-27). Kojima's Played Super Smash Bros. Brawl. 1up.com. Retrieved on 2007-06-21.
  21. ^ Wirgler, Matthew (2007-10-09). Super Smash Bros. Brawl and Mario Galaxy Playable at E for All. Advance Media Network. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  22. ^ Casamassina, Matt (2007-07-11). Nintendo E3 2007 Press Conference. IGN. Retrieved on 2007-07-11.
  23. ^ Nintendo Conference Fall 2007 (mpg). E-news.co.jp (2007-10-10). Retrieved on 2007-10-11.
  24. ^ Smash Release Date Confirmed. Retrieved on 2007-10-14.
  25. ^ Brawl Delayed Again (2008-01-15).
  26. ^ Wii disc drive lens repair request form. Retrieved on 2022-7-1.
  27. ^ a b Klepek, Patrick (2006-06-05). Super Smash Bros. Brawl Details. 1UP. Retrieved on 2007-09-13.
  28. ^ Mcwhertor, Michael (2006-05-11). E306: Super Smash Bros. Brawl Q&A. Kotaku. Retrieved on 2007-09-18.
  29. ^ 速報スマブラ拳: Ness (Japanese). Nintendo. Retrieved on 2007-10-21.
  30. ^ E3 2006: Fans Asked to Fill Smash Bros. Roster. IGN (2006-05-11). Retrieved on 2006-05-11.
  31. ^ Rushan S. (2006-08-17). Sakurai and Miyamoto Comment on Sonic's Popularity. Nintendo Wii News. QJ.NET. Retrieved on 2007-08-04. “Nintendo hopes that Snake's appearance in Super Smash Bros. Brawl will encourage other publishers to allow their characters to join the Smash Bros. line-up, and is already actively negotiating for the rights to include at least one other non-Nintendo character.”
  32. ^ Sonic The Hedgehog. Smash Bros. DOJO!!. Smashbros.com (2007-10-10). Retrieved on 2007-10-10.
  33. ^ Mielke, James (2008-03-07). Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review. 1UP.com. Retrieved on 2008-05-16.
  34. ^ Edge staff (April 2008). http://www.next-gen.biz/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=9575&Itemid=51 Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review, 84–85.
  35. ^ Bramwell, Tom. Eurogamer Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review. Eurogamer. Retrieved on 2008-03-27.
  36. ^ Gray, Brian. "Famitsu Gives Smash Bros. Brawl a Perfect Score", 1up.com, 2008-01-16. Retrieved on 2008-04-27. 
  37. ^ GameTrailers Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review. GameTrailers. Retrieved on 2008-03-09.
  38. ^ Casamassina, Matt. IGN Super Smash Bros. Brawl Review. IGN. Retrieved on 2008-03-04.
  39. ^ Castle, Matthew. Ngamer — Review: Super Smash Bros. Brawl. NGamer. Retrieved on 2008-02-26.
  40. ^ Slate, Chris. "Simply Smashing", Nintendo Power, Future US, March 2008, pp. 82–83. 
  41. ^ Mathers, Martin (2008-06-26). Wii Review: Super Smash Bros.. Official Nintendo Magazine. Retrieved on 2008-10-02.
  42. ^ Super Smash Bros. Brawl (wii: 2008): Reviews. Metacritic. Retrieved on 2008-04-23.
  43. ^ Super Smash Bros. Brawl Reviews. Game Rankings. Retrieved on 2010-10-25.
  44. ^ TopTenReviews – Super Smash Bros. Brawl. TopTenReviews. Retrieved on 2008-07-09.
  45. ^ Gamespot: Best Fighting Game of the Year. GameSpot. Retrieved on 2009-02-23.

External links