Super Smash Bros. Ultimate

Fake Smash Ball

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Revision as of 21:56, January 20, 2019 by 216.154.0.75 (talk) (→‎Trivia)
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Fake Smash Ball
Fake Smash Ball
The Fake Smash Ball item as it appears in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Universe Super Smash Bros.
Appears in Ultimate
Item class Special
This dangerous item looks like a Smash Ball, but it explodes when you break it. Take a closer look and you can see that the symbol is the exact opposite of a real Smash Ball, and the horizontal line is thicker...
Super Smash Blog, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Official Site

The Fake Smash Ball (スマッシュボーム, Smash Bomb) is a new item in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate for the Nintendo Switch. It was revealed at E3 2018.

Overview

Like a true Smash Ball, the Fake Smash Ball slowly floats through the air, although it tends to drift towards fighters and action instead. Also unlike the Smash Ball, it will occasionally zip by very quickly, usually to interfere with an attack, making it quite devious to deal with. It can be distinguished from a true Smash Ball by carefully looking at its black lines, whose thickness is switched around. When broken, it slows down time slightly and yields a colorful X-shaped explosion which deals very strong knockback to nearby players, likely including the player who broke it.

Origin

Although the Fake Smash Ball is an original Smash Bros. universe item, the inspiration for the item can be traced back to the Mario Kart series, which features Fake Item Boxes. These items made their debut in Mario Kart 64. As with the Fake Smash Ball, Fake Item Boxes are obstacles designed to look like the real thing, distinguishable only by an upside-down question mark, lack of spinning, reddish sheen, or some other mark.

The explosion also resembles that of X Bombs.

Gallery

Trivia

  • The Japanese name of the Fake Smash Ball of "Smash Bomb" is possibly also a pun on "Smash Ball" (スマッシュボーム and スマッシュボール , respectively), as they only differ by one sound/character.
  • For some unknown reason, the blog post for the Fake Smash Ball on the official Super Smash Bros. website was removed shortly after it got posted. This appeared to only happen in American and European regions, as the blog post remained on the Japanese site. The post was eventually restored the next day, along with two other new blog posts.