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Super Smash Bros. 4

Alternate costume (SSB4)

An icon used in notice templates. NOTE: Every claimed source needs a cross-reference link; claimed sources need to be plausible, not awfully obscure; default costumes usually don't need descriptions since they are not alternate costumes; returning costumes original to Smash do not need references to their appearances in previous Smash games.
Mario and Greninja with alternate costumes

Each character in Super Smash Bros. 4 has a set of alternate costumes. Due to the presence of 8-Player Smash, all characters now have eight costumes (except for Little Mac, who has 16) for a total of 448 costumes in the game. Some costumes have slight visual differences between the 3DS and Wii U versions.

Some characters possess certain alternate costumes with more drastic design differences, and are not merely recolors of their standard outfits. Wario, Zero Suit Samus, Little Mac, Shulk, Cloud and Bayonetta have different outfits available; Villager, Wii Fit Trainer, Robin and Corrin all have male and female variants; Olimar and Bowser Jr. have model swaps that change them into new characters, complete with corresponding voice and Announcer clips, though like all other alternate costumes, they bear no gameplay differences.

Pac-Man, Peach, and Pikachu using outlines in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS's Team Battles

Team Battles no longer confine characters to using their respective team color schemes, as teams are now indicated by colored outlines around the characters, giving players the freedom to pick whichever alternate costume they want to use in Team Battles.

On the Find Mii stage in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS, the Dark Emperor uses magic that affects all players of the same color. Each alternate costume is allocated to one of the twelve Mii colors: black, brown, red, orange, yellow, light green, green, light blue, blue, purple, pink, and white. These colors are noted in the below lists as a bar underneath the corresponding portrait; as several characters have multiple costumes that share this color, the main color names as used on this page do not conform to this system.

Bayonetta

 
               

Half of Bayonetta's costumes are based on her design from Bayonetta 2, while the other half are based on her design from Bayonetta. For the former half, she wields Love is Blue, which has blue attack trails. For the latter half, she wields Scarborough Fair, which has red attack trails, and speaks English even in the Japanese version.

Black
Yellow Resembles her yellow alternate costume from Anarchy Reigns.
Red Based on Jeanne, Bayonetta's friendly rival.[1] The hair visible in her Wicked Weaves and on Gomorrah is also colored white.
White Resembles the platinum and pure platinum trophies in Bayonetta 2, which depict her in a silvery color scheme.
Original
Green Resembles her green alternate color in Anarchy Reigns.
Pink Resembles her time-displaced, younger self whom she watches over in Bayonetta.
Blue Resembles her blue alternate color in Anarchy Reigns.

Bowser

 
               

Giga Bowser is always treated as yellow in Find Mii.

Default Based on his appearance in Super Mario 3D Land.
Black Combines elements of his black and brown costumes from Brawl.
Yellow
Green Resembles his in-game sprite from Super Mario World.
Grey
Orange
Red
Blue Based on his impostor's in-game sprite in Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels.[2]

Bowser Jr.

 
               

Bowser Jr.'s alternate costumes replace him with each of the seven Koopalings. Bowser Jr. rides the Junior Clown Car[3] which was introduced in New Super Mario Bros. Wii, whereas the Koopalings ride in a mass-produced Koopa Clown Car[4] with a design unique to Super Smash Bros..

Junior
Larry Replaced with Larry Koopa.
Roy Replaced with Roy Koopa.
Wendy Replaced with Wendy O. Koopa.
Iggy Replaced with Iggy Koopa.
Morton Replaced with Morton Koopa Jr.
Lemmy Replaced with Lemmy Koopa.
Ludwig Replaced with Ludwig von Koopa.

Captain Falcon

 
               
Indigo
Black Based on his appearance in the Japanese commercial for F-Zero X.[5]
Red Based on Blood Falcon, Captain Falcon's evil clone and rival.[5] The logo on his back changes to a skull with "Blood Hawk" (the name of Blood Falcon's vehicle) written underneath.
Green Reminiscent of Wild Goose's color scheme.
Blue Resembles his appearance in the original F-Zero and his appearance in F-Zero: GP Legend.
White Resembles Jody Summer's original design in F-Zero X.
Yellow Possibly based on Dr. Stewart and the Golden Fox's color scheme.
Cyan Reminiscent of Rick Wheeler from the anime F-Zero: GP Legend.

Charizard

 
               
Orange
Red Resembles the Pokémon Charmeleon, the pre-evolved form of Charizard.
Green
Pink
Yellow Resembles the Shiny colorations of Charmander and Charmeleon, the other members of Charizard's evolutionary family.
White Resembles the Pokémon Aerodactyl.
Blue Based on the Pokémon Zubat and its evolved form Golbat.
Purple Based on its original Shiny coloration from Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal.

Cloud

 
               

Half of Cloud's costumes are based on his appearance in Final Fantasy VII, while the other half are based on his "Cloudy Wolf" design from the movie Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children.[6] In two of his Advent Childen costumes, his Geostigma-infected arm is covered by a sleeve, while it is exposed in the other two, revealing the red ribbon he wrapped around it in memory of Aerith Gainsborough. His costumes with the exposed arm are based on his appearance in Advent Children after his fight with Bahamut SIN, during which his sleeve is torn off.

He wields the Buster Sword in the former outfits and the Fusion Swords in the latter outfits.

Purple Based on his appearance in Dissidia Final Fantasy.[7]
Advent Based on his appearance in the movie Final Fantasy VII: Advent Children
Blue Resembles the 3rd-Class SOLDIER uniform from Final Fantasy VII.
Advent Blue Resembles the 3rd-Class SOLDIER uniform from Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII.
Red Resembles the 2nd-Class SOLDIER uniform from Final Fantasy VII.
Advent Teal Based on his appearance in Advent Children after his fight with Bahamut SIN, during which his sleeve is torn off, revealing a pink ribbon commemorating Aerith.
Black Resembles the SOLDIER 1st Class uniforms from Crisis Core.
Advent Purple Resembles the 2nd-Class SOLDIER uniform from Crisis Core: Final Fantasy VII.

Corrin

 
               

Half of Corrin's costumes are male, while the other half are female.

Male
Female
Red Resembles Saizo, the elder twin of their retainer Kaze from Fire Emblem Fates.
Orange
Blue
Pink Resembles the overworld sprites of Valla-aligned units from Fire Emblem Fates as well as the flames emitted by Omega Yato.
Green Resembles the overworld sprites of allied units in the Fire Emblem games.
Black Resembles her appearance as a Nohr Noble in Fire Emblem Fates.

Dark Pit

 
               
Black
Green
Brown
Yellow
Red
Blue
White Resembles Pit. Dark Pit retains his black wings and gains a red scarf, likely to better differentiate the two. It is complementary to Pit's "fallen angel" costume.
Purple Bears a slight resemblance to the Eggplant Wizard enemies from the Kid Icarus games.

Diddy Kong

 
               
Red
White His vest is reminiscent of his alternate outfit in Donkey Kong Country's Two-Player Contest mode.
Pink Based on Dixie Kong, Diddy Kong's girlfriend, with her blonde ponytail represented by his yellow fur.
Purple Resembles his appearance in Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest's Two-Player Contest mode.
Green
Blue Resembles Kiddy Kong, Dixie's partner in Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble.
Yellow Resembles a real-life chimpanzee.
Cyan Resembles Donkey Kong Jr. as he appears in Donkey Kong Jr. Math.

Donkey Kong

 
               
Brown
Black Fur color resembles a real-life gorilla. The tie is reminiscent of Donkey Kong's appearance in Donkey Kong Country's Two-Player Contest Mode.
Red Fur color resembles the in-game sprite of Donkey Kong from the original Donkey Kong.
Blue
Green Fur color resembles one of his alternate colors in DK: King of Swing's Jungle Jam mode.
White Referred to as "Yeti DK" on the Brawl DOJO!![8] Resembles the mythical yeti. It also resembles the Fire Mini Donkey Kongs from Mario vs. Donkey Kong, and Eddie the Mean Old Yeti from the Donkey Kong Country TV series.
Yellow Resembles one of his alternate colors in DK: King of Swing's Jungle Jam mode.
Pink Fur color resembles Junior (II) from Donkey Kong Jr. Math.

Dr. Mario

 
               
White Resembles his appearance in Dr. Mario 64, but with navy jeans instead of white trousers.
Red
Blue
Green Resembles his appearance in Dr. Mario for the original Game Boy.
Black Referred to as the "Unlicensed Doctor" on the Melee website.[9] Also invokes the coats worn by earlier doctors before the shift to white coats.
Yellow
Purple
Pink Resembles the color of the scrubs worn by Nurse Toadstool.

Duck Hunt

 
               

Duck Hunt's alternate costumes change the dog and/or the duck's colors to resemble real variants of the respective animals.

Default The duck is one of the three possible ducks from Duck Hunt.
Black The dog somewhat resembles a Bernese Mountain Dog. The duck resembles a male Saxony duck.
Blue The dog has the bicolor coat pattern of a Border Collie. The duck resembles an American black duck.
Brown The duck resembles a female Orpington duck.
White The dog based on a Dalmatian. The duck resembles a ruddy shelduck, an orange species with green wings.
Tan The dog resembles a Beagle. The duck resembles a male blue-headed mallard, an uncommon variant.
Yellow The duck is one of the three possible ducks that appear in Duck Hunt. It resembles a male mallard.
Red The dog resembles a black Labrador Retriever. The duck is one of the three possible ducks from Duck Hunt. Collectively, the costume bears a resemblance to Banjo and Kazooie.

Falco

 
               
Default
Orange
Blue
Red Resembles his appearance in Star Fox: Assault.
Green
Black Resembles a red-throated caracara, black pheasant or raven.
White
Pink Resembles Katt Monroe, Falco's love interest, as she appears in Star Fox 64 and Star Fox 64 3D.

Fox

 
               
Default
Black Referred to as the "Dark Fox" on the Brawl DOJO!!.[8]
Red
Green
Orange Possibly based on Peppy Hare's color scheme in Star Fox: Assault.
White The reticle is orange in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U instead of green.
Yellow Resembles Slippy Toad's appearance in Star Fox: Assault.
Purple Resembles a silver fox.

Ganondorf

 
               
Black Besides reusing his Twilight Princess design, Ganondorf now has the glowing chest wound from his attempted execution.
White Complementary to Link's "Dark Link" costume.
Purple
Green
Red
Yellow Resembles his appearance in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.
Grey
Blue Resembles his appearance as the monster Ganon in the original The Legend of Zelda, A Link to the Past, and A Link Between Worlds.

Greninja

 
               
Blue
Red
Pink Resembles Lickitung and Lickilicky, two other Pokémon with long tongues.
Black Resembles Shiny Greninja, only with its fins remaining light-yellow instead of black, its tongue scarf being orange instead of red, and its head webbing being light brown instead of blue.
Lavender
Green
Grey
Purple

Ike

 
               
Default Based on his appearance as a Hero in Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.[10]
Yellow
Red Resembles the color scheme of a armored enemy unit in Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.
Blue Resembles Sigurd, one of the protagonists in Fire Emblem: Genealogy of the Holy War.
Green Resembles Geoffrey, one of Ike's comrades, as he appears in Fire Emblem: Path of Radiance.
Brown
Black Based on the Black Knight, Ike's rival, as he appears in Radiant Dawn.
White Based on Chrom, one of the protagonists in Fire Emblem Awakening.

Jigglypuff

 
               

Unlike previous games, none of Jigglypuff's alternate costumes change it to its Shiny coloration.

Default
Red
White Its hat is reminiscent of Leaf, the female protagonist of Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen.
Blue Resembles one of the possible colors for a nicknamed Jigglypuff in Pokémon Stadium. Its hat is reminiscent of the Bug Catcher Trainer class.
Green Resembles one of the possible colors for a nicknamed Jigglypuff in Pokémon Stadium. Its cap is reminiscent of Kirby with the Sleep Copy Ability.
Pink Revived from its alternate costumes from the original Super Smash Bros., as well as its blue costume from Melee.
Nurse Its hat is reminiscent of the Pokémon Center Nurse from Pokémon X and Y.
Glasses Its cap and glasses respectively are reminiscent of Serena's Red Felt Hat and White Wide-Frame Glasses from X and Y.

King Dedede

 
               
Red
Pink Resembles his "Player 2" color in Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards' Multiplayer mode, but his skin is blue.
Green Resembles his green color in Kirby Air Ride. The obi features embroidered Waddle Dees, using their sprites from Kirby Super Star Ultra.
Purple Resembles his purple color in Kirby Air Ride. The obi is reminiscent of formal Japanese kimonos.
Cyan
Grey Resembles his monochromatic in-game sprite in Kirby's Dream Land when played on a Game Boy.
Blue Resembles his "Player 4" color in Kirby 64: The Crystal Shards' Multiplayer mode. The obi includes a traditional Japanese seigaiha pattern.
Black Resembles his black color in Kirby Air Ride, with his skin resembling a great penguin.

Kirby

 
               

Kirby's palette swaps are based on his alternate colors that regularly appear in his own series.

Pink
Yellow Based on and directly referred to as "Keeby", the yellow Kirby from Kirby's Dream Course.[5] It also resembles Yellow Kirby from various Kirby titles and Beam Kirby in Kirby Super Star. Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Keeby Yellow".
Blue Based on Ice Kirby in Kirby Super Star.[5] In addition, Blue Kirby in Kirby's Return to Dream Land and later titles also has the same color. Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Ice Blue".
Red Based on Fire Kirby in Kirby Super Star.[5] In this game, it more closely resembles Red Kirby from the various Kirby titles for Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS. Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Fire Red".
Green Resembles Green Kirby from the Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS Kirby titles, starting with Kirby: Nightmare in Dream Land. Officially referred to as "kusa mochi Kirby"[5] in Japanese. Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Tea Green".
White Based on his monochromatic in-game sprite from Kirby's Dream Land.[11] Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Retro Tone".
Orange Resembles Kirby's appearance after using Orange Spray Paint in Kirby & The Amazing Mirror and Kirby: Squeak Squad, with a more orangish body and dark red feet.
Purple Resembles an unmasked Meta Knight, with glowing yellow eyes and no blush marks. This design was originally unique to this game, as previous Kirby games depicted him with white eyes and blush marks, but it has been integrated into the main Kirby series starting with Kirby: Planet Robobot. Kirby's Dream Buffet calls this color "Meta Navy".

Link

 
               
Green Based on his appearance in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess, with some design tweaks to also resemble his appearance in The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword.
Red Based on the Goron Tunic from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.[5]
Blue Based on the Zora Tunic from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.[5]
Purple Resembles Purple Link from The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords and The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures. It also resembles Link's purple-colored Blue Ring Tunic from Soulcalibur II.
Yellow Resembles his appearance after utilizing the Great Fairy's Tears in The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess.
Black Based on Dark Link.[8]
White Based on his appearance as a resident of Skyloft from the beginning of The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword.[12]
Grey Based on Fierce Deity Link from The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask.[13] The chain mail is more golden and the scabbard is darker in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS.

Little Mac

 
 
               
               

Little Mac is the only character with 16 different costumes, having a wireframe variant of each of his eight standard costumes. The wireframe variants are based on the player's appearance in the original arcade Punch-Out!![14] His wireframe palette swaps have slightly brighter cel-shaded colors than their non-wireframe counterparts.

Giga Mac is always treated as green in Find Mii.

Default His appearance when fighting in the Minor Circuit in Punch-Out!! (Wii).
Yellow His appearance in Punch-Out!! (Wii)'s Title Defense Mode.
White Reminiscent of the colors his in-game sprite after defeating opposing boxers in Punch-Out!! (1987), but the colors of the tank top and shorts swapped.
Red His appearance when fighting in the World Circuit in Punch-Out!! (Wii).
Blue His appearance when fighting in the Major Circuit in Punch-Out!! (Wii).
Orange Resembles his appearance as Player 2 in Punch-Out!! (Wii)'s Head-to-Head Mode, but the colors of the tank top and shorts swapped.
Green Resembles the protagonist of Super Punch-Out!! (SNES).
Pink Wears his pink, hooded sweatshirt from the training montages in the Punch-Out!! series. The colors are inverted in the wireframe variant.

Lucario

 
               

Mega Lucario is always treated as blue in Find Mii.

Blue           
Red
White
Grey
Teal
Navy
Green
Purple

Lucas

 
               
Yellow
Orange Based on Claus, Lucas's twin brother from Mother 3.
Blue
Red
Grey Based on the Masked Man from Mother 3. The shirt features a sprite of the Masked Man's head.
Cyan Based on Duster from Mother 3.
Green Based on Boney's human disguise from Mother 3. The shirt's design features a sprite of Boney's head.
Purple The shirt's design features a sprite of a baby Drago from Mother 3.

Lucina

 
               

Lucina's alternate costumes are based on female characters from Fire Emblem Awakening.[15]

Blue
Green Based on Nowi.
Black Based on Cherche.
White Based on Cordelia.
Red Based on Tiki from Fire Emblem Awakening. The back of her cape features the crest of the Divine Dragon Naga, Tiki's mother.
Yellow Based on Lissa, Lucina's aunt.
Navy Based on Tharja. The back of her cape features the Brand of the Fell Dragon, a prominent symbol in Tharja's home country.
Purple Based on Sumia.

Luigi

 
               
Green Based on his appearance in Super Mario 3D Land.
Orange
Pink The original Super Smash Bros. website referred to this costume as "Strawberry Luigi".[5]
Cyan
White Based on Fire Luigi.
Purple Based on Waluigi, although the "L" on his cap is purple instead of yellow. This was not the case in Brawl.
Blue Resembles Mario's appearance on the Game & Watch boxart for Donkey Kong Jr. and one of the ScareScraper colors in Luigi’s Mansion: Dark Moon
Yellow Resembles the appearance of a boy on the boxart of the Widescreen rereleased for the Game & Watch game Manhole, but with brown shoes instead of red ones.

Mario

 
               
Red Based on his appearance in Super Mario 3D Land.
White Based on Fire Mario.[8]
Blue Based on his appearance on the Japanese (resale version) and European covers of the NES version of Mario Bros.
Yellow Based on Wario's classic design,[5] although the "M" on his cap is green instead of blue. This was not the case in Melee and Brawl.
Black Originally based on Foreman Spike from Wrecking Crew,[5] though the palette has become more blue than red compared to previous Smash titles. Also resembles the Hammer Suit’s sprite in Super Mario Bros. 3.
Green Resembles Luigi's appearance from promotional artwork for the arcade version of Mario Bros., with the colors of the overalls and shirt swapped. It also resembles Jinbe from Mole Mania, another game developed by Shigeru Miyamoto.
Striped Based on his appearance in Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course and NES Open Tournament Golf.[16]
Purple Based on Waluigi.

Marth

 
               
Navy Based on his appearance as a Lord in Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and New Mystery of the Emblem: Heroes of Light and Shadow.[17][18] The Falchion retains its design from Fire Emblem: Mystery of the Emblem.
Red Resembles Minerva's design in the Fire Emblem: The Complete art book.
Green
Black Resembles Camus, one of Marth's allies, as he appears starting with Mystery of the Emblem.
White Originally based on Leif, the protagonist of Fire Emblem: Thracia 776,[19] though the palette has become more monochromatic compared to previous Smash titles.
Blue Resembles his appearance in Mystery of the Emblem. This replaces his previous blue alternate costume in Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
Yellow
Purple Based on Roy's appearance in Super Smash Bros. Melee.

Mega Man

 
               

All of Mega Man's alternate costumes were derived from those of the Mega Man titles when he was using weapons or items.

Blue
Red His color scheme for using various utility items throughout the Mega Man titles, most notably Rush.
Green His color scheme for using Hyper Bomb in the original Mega Man, Leaf Shield in Mega Man 2, and several other weapons.
Brown His color scheme for using Metal Blade in Mega Man 2, and several other weapons.
Cyan His color scheme for using Air Shooter in Mega Man 2, and several other weapons.
Chartreuse His color scheme for using Slash Claw in Mega Man 7, and several other weapons.
Orange His color scheme used for the artwork of Flame Blast in Mega Man 6, and several other weapons.
Grey His color scheme for using Top Spin in Mega Man 3, and several other weapons.

Meta Knight

 
               
Blue This design has been carried over to the later Kirby titles.
White Resembles one of his alternate costumes in Kirby Air Ride.
Red Resembles his red color in Kirby Air Ride.
Green Resembles his "yellow" color in Kirby Air Ride, although his feet are purple instead of brown. This was not the case in Brawl.
Navy Resembles his original appearance in Kirby's Adventure, but with red eyes.
Pink Resembles his "green" color in Kirby Air Ride, as well as Kirby.
Purple Based on Galacta Knight.[20]
Grey Based on Dark Meta Knight.[21]

Mewtwo

 
               
Default
Orange Resembles one of the possible colors for Mewtwo in the Pokémon Stadium titles.
Blue Resembles one of the possible colors for Mewtwo in the Pokémon Stadium titles.
Brown
Pink Resembles its original artwork from Pokémon Red and Green, which was presented as pink rather than purple later on.
Yellow Resembles its original Shiny coloration from Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal.
Cyan
Purple Reminiscent of Shadow Lugia from Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness.

Mii Fighter

Main article: Mii Costume

The Mii Fighters' various costume options are distinct from how other characters' alternate costumes work. The colors of these costumes match the Mii's original color from the Mii Maker. In addition, the Mii's original color is used in Find Mii. To view the Mii Fighters' alternate costumes, see here.

Mr. Game & Watch

 
               
Black Reminiscent of the lit LCD cells and frames from the Game & Watch units.
Red Reminiscent of characters and objects as depicted on the Virtual Boy.
Yellow Reminiscent of characters and objects as depicted on the original Game Boy.
Blue
Teal Reminiscent of the two shades commonly used by the Game Boy for the background and foreground.
Cyan Reminiscent of the backlit display of the Game Boy Light.
Green Reminiscent on the green dot-matrix display of the Game Boy.
White Reminiscent of the monochromatic LCD screen of the Game & Watch games.

Ness

 
               
Red
White Resembles Fuel from Mother 3, but with a cap.
Yellow Based on the uniforms of the Hanshin Tigers, a Japanese baseball team.[5] The shirt's pattern is reminiscent of the Gigantic Ant enemy from EarthBound.
Green His clothes resemble the color scheme of Everdred’s outfit in EarthBound.
Blue Resembles his younger self.
Black The shirt features a sprite of Mr. Saturn on the front.
Cyan The shirt features Master Belch from EarthBound.
Purple The shirt features the tile pattern on the file select and character naming screens in EarthBound.

Olimar

 
               

Four of Olimar's costumes replace him with Alph, one of the protagonists of Pikmin 3.

Tan
Red
Green
Blue Combines elements of his white and blue costumes from Brawl.
Alph Replaced with Alph.
Alph Green Based on Charlie, Alph's captain in Pikmin 3.
Alph Pink Based on Brittany, Alph's co-worker in Pikmin 3.
Alph Red Based on Olimar's appearance from the original Pikmin.

Pac-Man

 
               
               

Most of Pac-Man's alternate costumes change his model to give him colored armbands and/or the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.

Default
Blue Resembles his in-game sprite with the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.
Yellow
Black
Purple
White Resembles promotional artwork of his appearance with the Wing Shoes power-up from Pac-Land.
Red The armbands are noticeably thinner, which makes them resemble compression sleeves, and he wears red leggings instead of Wing Shoes.
Plaid His gloves and boots are reminiscent of oven mitts.

Palutena

 
               
White
Pink Resembles her in-game sprite from the original Kid Icarus.
Cyan Based on Amazon Pandora from Kid Icarus: Uprising.
Green Resembles her appearance in Kid Icarus's instruction booklet.
Blue
Red Based on Viridi.
Black Based on Dark Pit.
Purple Based on Medusa as she appears in Kid Icarus: Uprising.

Peach

 
               
Pink Based on her appearance in Super Mario 3D Land.
Yellow Based on Daisy's current appearance since Mario Party 4.
Red Resembles the Lady's original appearance in artwork for Donkey Kong.
Blue
Green
White Based on a wedding gown.[22]
Fire Based on Fire Peach from Super Mario 3D World.
Black

Pikachu

 
               
Default
Red Resembles one of the possible colors for a nicknamed Pikachu in Pokémon Stadium and its Shiny coloration. Its cap is reminiscent of Red's appearance in Pokémon Red and Blue.
Green Resembles one of the possible colors for a nicknamed Pikachu in Pokémon Stadium. Its headband is reminiscent of Brendan's appearance in Pokémon Emerald.
Cyan Its goggles are reminiscent of the Swimmer Trainer class and Pichu's Blue Team costume from Super Smash Bros. Melee.
Yellow Its cap is reminiscent of Ethan's appearance in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver.
Blue Revived from its alternate costumes from the original Super Smash Bros., as well as its blue costume from Melee.
White Resembles its original Shiny coloration. Its headband is reminiscent of the Choice Band.
Purple Resembles its appearance in Pokémon X and Y and its official artwork for the Pokémon series. Its cap and glasses respectively are reminiscent of Calem's Red Outdoors Cap and Wide-Frame Glasses from X and Y.

Pit

 
               
White
Yellow
Red Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Gold Arrow and reaching Level 4 strength in the original Kid Icarus.
Green Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Bronze Arrow and reaching Level 2 strength in Kid Icarus.
Blue Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Sacred Arrow and reaching Level 5 strength in Kid Icarus.
Black Referred to as a "fallen angel" on the Brawl DOJO!!.[8] Unlike in Brawl, Pit retains his white wings and gains a purple scarf, likely to better differentiate him from Dark Pit.
Cyan Resembles his chiton after obtaining the Silver Arrow and reaching Level 3 strength in Kid Icarus .
Pink

R.O.B.

R.O.B.’s default costume switches between the first and second ones listed depending on if the game is the Japanese version or not.

 
               
Tan Based on the Japanese version of R.O.B., the "Family Computer Robot", which was released as a peripheral for the Famicom.[23] It is the default color for Japanese releases of Super Smash Bros. 4.
Grey Based on the Western version of R.O.B. released for the NES. The text on his base reads "R.O.B. - Robotic Operating Buddy" instead of "Family Computer Robot". It is the default color for American and PAL releases of Super Smash Bros. 4, though some visual elements retain the Famicom color as primary.
Yellow Resembles Spike, a glitch enemy from Stack-Up.
Purple Resembles Flipper, a glitch enemy from Stack-Up. Also resembles the North American color scheme for the SNES.
Blue
Green Resembles the R.O.B. Launcher enemy from Super Smash Bros. Brawl's Subspace Emissary.
White
Red Resembles the Virtual Boy.

Robin

 
               

Half of Robin's costumes are male, while the other half are female.

Male
Female
Green Resembles the overworld sprite for Mark, the customizable tactician from Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade.
Red Resembles Anna, a recurring shopkeeper in the Fire Emblem series, as she appeared in Fire Emblem Awakening.
Blue
Orange Resembles Eyvel from Fire Emblem: Thracia 776.
White Resembles the White Mage class from Square Enix's Final Fantasy series.
Pink Resembles Serra from The Blazing Blade.

Rosalina & Luma

 
               
Cyan Her design is from Super Mario Galaxy and Super Mario 3D World, but her dress has some unique stars on it.
Pink
Yellow
Green
Red Resembles Fire Rosalina from Super Mario 3D World.
Purple
Black
White Almost the same as Peach's "Fire Peach" costume.

Roy

 
               

Most of Roy's alternate costumes seem to be based on characters from Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade.

Blue Combines elements of his appearance in Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade and his appearance in artwork for Fire Emblem Awakening as an Einherjar.[18]
Red Resembles Alen, the red cavalier and Roy's color scheme in The Binding Blade's Link Arena mode if he is on the player 3 team.
Green Resembles Lance, the green cavalier and Roy's color scheme in The Binding Blade's Link Arena mode if he is on the player 2 team.
Violet Resembles Marcus, Roy's guardian, as he appears in Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade.
Cyan Resembles Eliwood, Roy's father, as he appears in Fire Emblem: The Blazing Blade.
Purple Resembles Zephiel, the main antagonist of Fire Emblem: The Binding Blade.
Pink Resembles Cecilia, Roy's tutor.
Yellow Resembles Bors, an armor knight.

Ryu

 
               

Most of Ryu's alternate costumes appear to derive from his alternate colors in Street Fighter II titles.

White
Grey His alternate color from Street Fighter II': Champion Edition when playing in a Mirror Match.
Cyan His default color from Street Fighter II': Hyper Fighting.
Black His default color from Super Street Fighter II Turbo.
Orange His "Light Kick" color ("Short" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
Blue His "Medium Kick" color ("Forward" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
Green His "Heavy Kick" color ("Roundhouse" in reference source) from Super Street Fighter II.
Red Resembles his "Start" color in Super Street Fighter II, but with a purple headband instead of a black one. It also resembles Dan Hibiki, another fighter from the Street Fighter series.

Samus

 
               
Orange Based on the Varia Suit[24] as it appears in Metroid: Other M.[25]
Blue Based on the Fusion Suit[24] from Metroid Fusion.
Pink Based on the Gravity Suit's in-game sprite from Super Metroid,[5][24] but more closely resembles the color scheme of the Varia Suit of the original Metroid when missiles are selected.
Brown Based on the Dark Suit[24] from Metroid Prime 2: Echoes.
Purple Based on the Gravity Suit's appearance in Metroid Prime.[26]
Green Referred to as "Green Samus" by Masahiro Sakurai.[26] The original Super Smash Bros. website referred to this alternate costume as "mass-produced Samus",[5] a reference to the MS-06 Zaku II from the Gundam franchise.
White Based on the Light Suit[26] from Metroid Prime 2: Echoes.
Black Based on Dark Samus.[26]

Sheik

 
               
Blue
Red
Purple Resembles her appearance in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.
Pink
Green
Black Complementary to Link's "Dark Link" costume.
Yellow
White

Shulk

 
               

With the exception of his first and last alternate costumes, all of Shulk's costumes are based on the color schemes of his party members from Xenoblade Chronicles.[15]

Red
White Based on Mecha-Fiora.
Black Based on Dunban.
Orange Based on Reyn.
Blue Based on Sharla.
Lavender Based on Melia.
Yellow Based on Riki.
Trunks Based on his "Swimsuit" armor set and his appearance with weapons unequipped in Xenoblade Chronicles. His skin is slightly tanned when wearing this costume. Officially dubbed "Ecru Type" as of Xenoblade Chronicles: Definitive Edition.

Sonic

 
               
Blue Based on his modern appearance in Sonic Adventure onwards.
Purple Resembles NiGHTS, a character from Sega's NiGHTS into Dreams. The cuffs are reminiscent of the purple Chaos Emerald.
Cyan Resembles Classic Sonic. The cuffs are reminiscent of the Crystal Ring powerup from Sonic Adventure.
White Resembles Silver the Hedgehog. The cuffs are reminiscent of the blue Ark of the Cosmos from Sonic Riders: Zero Gravity.
Black The color scheme resembles his 2P costume from Sonic the Fighters (albeit with his muzzle, arms and stomach remaining peach) and the mid-transformation appearance of Dark Sonic from Sonic X.
Yellow The cuffs somewhat resemble Silver's bracelets, and are reminiscent of a yellow Chaos Emerald.
Green The cuffs resemble the hand sprite from Knuckles the Echidna in Sonic the Hedgehog 2's Special Stage checkpoints.
Red The cuffs are reminiscent of the hand sprite that appears when the player passes through one of Sonic the Hedgehog 2's Special Stage checkpoints, although the cuffs here are orange.

Toon Link

 
               
Green
Red Red Link from The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords and The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures.
Blue Blue Link from The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords and The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures.
Purple Purple Link from The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords and The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords Adventures.
Brown Based on Link's appearance in the original The Legend of Zelda.
Black Complementary to Link's "Dark Link" costume.
Grey Resembles Link's tunic with the Blue Ring equipped in the original The Legend of Zelda.
Teal Based on Link's appearance in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past and its sequel The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds.

Villager

 
               

Villager's appearance varies greatly between costumes, with differing eyes, hair, gender and clothing. All of Villager's alternate costumes, with the exception of the yellow costume, are based on how the player may look at the start of a new game depending on how they answer questions asked by Kapp'n or Rover in Animal Crossing: Wild World and Animal Crossing: City Folk respectively.

Red Male villager wearing a "No. 1 Shirt" as he appears in artwork for City Folk.
Pink Female villager wearing a "Daisy Shirt" as she appears in artwork for Wild World.
Yellow Male villager wearing a "Racer 6 Tee". The corresponding starting appearance in Wild World and City Folk instead sports the "Paw Tee" and a different hairstyle.
Green Female villager wearing a "Turnip Top".
Cyan Male villager wearing a "Blue Tie-Dye Tee" as he appears in artwork for City Folk.
Blue Female villager wearing a "Rugby Tee".
Purple Male villager wearing a "Four-Ball Tee".
Chartreuse Female villager wearing a "Yellow Bolero".

Wario

 
               

Half of Wario's costumes use his biker outfit from the WarioWare series, while the other half use his classic outfit.

Wario-Man is always treated as pink in Find Mii.

Wario is the only character to have their number of costumes decrease from Brawl, going from 12 in Brawl to 8 in SSB4.

Blue
Red Combines elements of his red and black costumes from Brawl, which makes it resembles his Player 1 appearance in WarioWare, Inc.: Mega Party Game$!, albeit with blue gloves, gray pants, and a red belt.
Yellow Combines elements of his yellow and green costumes from Brawl.
Cyan
Classic
Classic Red Based on Mario's appearance from Donkey Kong, Super Mario Bros., and various titles.
Classic Cyan Resembles Mario's blue costume, but it was prepared earlier from Brawl.
Classic Green Almost the same as Mario's green costume.

Wii Fit Trainer

 
               

Half of the Wii Fit Trainer's costumes are female, while the other half are male.

Female Her color scheme in Wii Fit.
Male His color scheme in Wii Fit.
Green Her color scheme in Wii Fit Plus and Wii Fit U.
Male Green His color scheme in Wii Fit Plus and Wii Fit U.
Red Complementary to the color scheme of the Aerobics category in Wii Fit titles.
Male Red Complementary to the color scheme of the Aerobics category in Wii Fit titles.
Yellow Her color scheme in Wii Fit Plus that appears during Yoga or Strength Training activity in My Wii Fit Plus mode.
Male Yellow His color scheme in Wii Fit Plus that appears during Yoga or Strength Training activity in My Wii Fit Plus mode.

Yoshi

 
               

Unlike in previous installments, the spots on Yoshi's Egg now match those of the selected costume.

Green Green Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Red Red Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Blue Blue Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Yellow Yellow Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Pink Pink Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Cyan Light Blue Yoshi's color scheme.[5]
Purple Purple Yoshi's color scheme.
Black Black Yoshi's color scheme.

Zelda

 
               
Default
Red Resembles her in-game sprite when Link rescues her with the Red Ring equipped in The Legend of Zelda.
Blue
Purple Resembles Adult Zelda in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time. Unlike in Melee and Brawl, the dress is bluish.
Green Resembles her in-game sprite when Link rescues her with no ring equipped in The Legend of Zelda.
Black Complementary to Link's "Dark Link" costume.
Pink Resembles her appearance in The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past and its sequel The Legend of Zelda: A Link Between Worlds.
White Resembles her overworld sprite from The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past and her appearance as the goddess Hylia in The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword.

Zero Suit Samus

 
               
Cyan
Blue Resembles her Zero Suit at the end of Metroid Prime 2: Echoes.
Red Resembles her leotard at the end of the original Metroid.
Black Resembles her outfit at the end of Super Metroid.
Green Complementary to Samus's "Green Samus" costume.
White Resembles the Gunship Mii's Zero Suit from Nintendo Land, albeit with pink Chozo marks instead of green.
Shorts Orange Based on her Casual Outfit at the end of Metroid: Zero Mission.[27][28]
Shorts Blue Based on her Casual Outfit at the end of Fusion.

References

  1. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U - Final Video Presentation. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2015-12-15). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “There's also a color variation inspired by Jeanne.”
  2. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "A Bowser Impostor?! – In Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels, Mario fights a blue fake Bowser before the real thing. That blue fake is his eighth color in this game!"
  3. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Palutena's Guidance: "I wonder if his father bought him that Junior Clown Car. It's decked out with all sorts of bells and whistles."
  4. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Palutena's Guidance: "That Koopa Clown Car is the mass-produced type."
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t 色ちがいのひみつ
  6. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS and Wii U - Final Video Presentation. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2015-12-15). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “There's also a color variation inspired by Jeanne.”
  7. ^ https://www.sourcegaming.info/2016/01/20/sakurai-x-nomura-creator-interview-2016-part-one/
  8. ^ a b c d e Smash Bros. DOJO!! - Color Changes
  9. ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! :ドクターマリオ (Japanese)
  10. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-05-23). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2018-04-28. “For this game, Ike's design is based on the hero that appears in Fire Emblem: Radiant Dawn.”
  11. ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! : アンケート集計拳!! - Page 82 in post-launch.
  12. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-06-24). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Here's Link in an outfit based on his ordinary clothes in Skyward Sword! The art style looks a little different, but the actual clothing model is still his usual tunic.”
  13. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-11-10). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-11-08. Retrieved on 2021-05-01. “The one large change we made to this stage is this Hylian text. I wonder what it says? Also featured in this pic is Link in Fierce Deity colors.”
  14. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-05-12). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Here's wire frame Little Mac--re-envisioned from the original Punch-Out!! game. The man that actually drew the pixel art wire frame in the original was none other than Shigeru Miyamoto. He said he drew the pixels for the wire frame on graph paper.”
  15. ^ a b Masahiro Sakurai (2014-10-27). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. The color variations for Shulk are all based off outfit colors of his travel companions…excluding one of them. Lucina's color variations are also based off the female characters in Fire Emblem Awakening.”
  16. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-07-10). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. The character farther in the back isn't from the Imperial forces, and the character in the front is not the infamous drum-playing puppet in Osaka. No, Mario is actually wearing an outfit from Family Computer Golf: U.S. Course! NES Open Tournament Golf might be a more familiar title.”
  17. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-09. Retrieved on 2018-04-28. “We gave Marth a full makeover, giving him design elements from Fire Emblem: Shadow Dragon and newer games.”
  18. ^ a b Masked Man (translator) (2016-02-23). Nintendo Dream Interview with Sakurai: Part 2. SourceGaming. Retrieved on 2018-04-18.
  19. ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! : アンケート集計拳!! - Page 11 in post-launch.
  20. ^ Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (North America) - Tip: "Galacta Knight – Meta Knight's seventh color variation is based on Galacta Knight, who makes an appearance in Kirby Super Star Ultra and is said to be the strongest warrior in the galaxy."
  21. ^ Super Smash Bros. Ultimate (North America) - Tip: "Dark Meta Knight – Meta Knight's eighth color variation is based on a shadow version of Meta Knight, Dark Meta Knight, who appears in Kirby & The Amazing Mirror."
  22. ^ 速報スマブラ拳!! : アンケート集計拳!! - Page 31 in post-launch.
  23. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "R.O.B.: Color Variations – R.O.B.'s red-and-white second color is based on the Japan version of R.O.B. In fact, it's even his default color in the Japanese version of this game!"
  24. ^ a b c d Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Until now, you were only able to choose from four, or sometimes five or six colors for each character. This time, though, all characters have eight colors to choose from! The first four color schemes for Samus are based off her Varia Suit, Fusion Suit, Gravity Suit from Super Metroid, and the Dark Suit.”
  25. ^ Wii U & Nintendo 3DS Developer Direct. Official Nintendo YouTube channel (2014-07-11). Retrieved on 2016-02-06. “Until now Samus was based off the design from Super Metroid, but she's been given a major makeover. Her design is now closer to that of Metroid: Other M.”
  26. ^ a b c d Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “…And here she is in the color schemes of the Gravity Suit from Metroid Prime, Green Samus (a regular in the Smash series), the Light Suit, and Dark Samus. A total of eight colors.”
  27. ^ Masahiro Sakurai (2014-09-03). Director's Room. Miiverse. Archived from the original on 2017-10-17. Retrieved on 2016-02-05. “Pic of the day. Looking at the number of days we have left for development, it would be an impossible task to create this… That's what I told my staff. But thanks to the determination of her female designer, these Zero Suit outfits got completed in time. From the ending of Metroid: Zero Mission, here's Samus in shorts!”
  28. ^ Super Smash Bros. for Wii U (North America) - Tip: "Zero Suit Samus's 7th Color – Zero Suit Samus's seventh color variation is a unique orange outfit. This outfit first appeared in certain endings of Metroid: Zero Mission."