A Screen KO (手前やられ, Forefront hurting) is a special type of KO which has a chance of occurring when characters are sent off the top blast line. Instead of being Star KO'd as usual, the character instead falls into the foreground and appears to crash into the screen before being KO'd. Whether a character is Star KO'd or Screen KO'd is random, though Screen KOs are considerably rarer than Star KOs; as a result, Screen KOs rarely involve two or more characters at once.
In Melee and Brawl, Screen KOs complete faster than Star KOs, which can, at times, affect gameplay. For example, when a character is KO'd by Jigglypuff's Rest, getting a Star KO means that the character will not respawn fast enough to punish the sleeping Jigglypuff, due to the length of the Star KO animation. However, if a character is instead Screen KO'd, this provides them with significantly more time to potentially get a solid hit on the vulnerable Jigglypuff. The Screen KO's shorter duration can also influence the outcome of matches that have gone to a last stock situation. If both characters are KO'd off of the top at around the same time and one is Screen KO'd instead of Star KO'd, the Star KO'd player will win the match due to random chance and the lengthier animation. This time difference was fixed in Super Smash Bros. 4 to reduce randomness, although Screen KOs are slightly longer than Star KOs in said game.
Differences between games
In Smash 64
In Smash 64, characters yell out their Star KO scream and fall down between the front of the stage and the camera, getting KO'd by the bottom blast line afterwards. Depending on the camera angle, this may not always be visible. The distance from the camera is chosen randomly - sometimes doomed characters appear to be falling normally, while at other times they are just a quick flash of color going down the screen. Regardless, it has the same duration as the Star KO.
In Melee
In Melee, all characters have a unique tumbling animation for when they crash into the screen; upon striking the camera, the character also yells out one of their strong knockback groans, then gets KO'd by the bottom blast line without making any sounds. Screen KOs in Melee are significantly faster than Star KOs. All these traits would carry over to Brawl.
There is a bonus for getting Screen KO'd, Foresight, which grants the receiver 500 points for every time they are KO'd this way.
How close a character being KO'd is to the camera is no longer determined by randomness, but by the stage being played on. On Mushroom Kingdom II, for example, Screen KO'd characters are very close to the camera and thus appear much larger.
In Brawl
In Brawl, characters still have unique tumbling animations for the screen, though the animations for the actual impact are not as nuanced as in Melee. With the removal of strong knockback yells, characters now instead use their regular pain yells from when they are stunned from an attack for long when hitting the screen.
In SSB4
In SSB4, the character hits the screen, then stays in place briefly before sliding down. As a direct result of this "pause", Screen KOs in SSB4 take longer to complete than in previous games, making it so that Screen KOs and Star KOs take almost equally as long to resolve. Additionally, Screen KOs and Star KOs are both disabled during the final seconds of a match - characters will simply create the usual colorful blast after crossing the blast line. Blast KOs over the upper blast line also occur more often than Star and Screen KOs, even if the match has no time limit or if it is in an early part of a timed match. Screen KO'd characters in SSB4 no longer make any vocal sounds when they hit the screen, though there is now a comical "thud" upon impact. The maximum amount of characters that can be Screen KO'd at one time is three.
Trivia
- In Melee, if a player is Screen KO'd on Flat Zone, a different animation plays instead of the usual animation, in which characters hit the screen in their tumbling animation.
- Mr. Game and Watch is the only character to always hit the screen as if it were a Star KO. He also keeps this trait in Brawl.
- In early gameplay videos of Brawl, characters would sometimes hit the upper blast line with the standard colorful blast generally seen only by certain single-player mode enemies; this characteristic would later return for Super Smash Bros. 4.
- In Coin Battles, Smash Coins appear along with the character falling in front of the screen when characters are Screen KO'd; if the game is paused, then they will disappear if the camera is moved.
- In SSB4, Shulk is the only character to hit the screen with his back facing the screen, showing any currently active Monado Art.
- In SSB4, some characters have different Screen KOs between the 3DS and Wii U versions, namely Mario, Dr. Mario, Pit, Kirby, Pikachu and Pac-Man.
- In Brawl, it is possible to see a character about to hit the screen right before they are KO'd by pausing and then zooming out. This can be seen particularly on larger stages such as New Pork City and 75m.
- Similarly, In the Wii U version of SSB4, it's possible to see the white lines just when a character impacts the screen when pausing (though the character can't actually be seen). Unlike the trivia point above, this can be seen even on small stages.
Gallery
Yoshi gets Screen KO'd on Kongo Jungle.
Samus hits the screen in her tumbling animation—this Screen KO animation is specific to Flat Zone in Melee.
Ganondorf about to hit the screen in Yoshi's Story.
Ness being Screen KO'd on Shadow Moses Island.
Luigi getting Screen KO'd in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS.
- SSBU Toon Link Screen KO.jpg
Toon Link being Screen KO'd in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
- SSB4 Screen KO Kirby.jpg
Kirby getting Screen KO'd in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
- Ness Screen KO SSB4.jpeg
Ness getting Screen KO'd in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Ryu being Screen KO'd in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.