Zelda (SSBU)/Down aerial
Overview[edit]
Zelda performs a slow, powerful stomp packed with magic. Dubbed the Meteor Heel, it’s a less extreme version of a Lightning Kick. In comparison, the strong hit is not as ludicrous in power, and is slow to come out at frame 14. However, it is relatively large, covering both her lower leg and some space past her foot.
The strong hit is among the highest damaging meteor smashes. With its relatively low landing lag, it can be safe on shield with good timing and spacing. Its knockback scaling is relatively low, which makes it weaker than many lower-damage moves of its kind, but allows it to combo on grounded opponents for quite a large window, even when rising. It can lead into massive damage from platform tech chases, and is the go-to punish against laggy moves. It can combo into practically her entire moveset, but up tilt is the most common extension for damage racking, and Lightning Kick, up aerial, or Farore’s Wind are the most common follow-ups for KOs. In comparison, as a combo finisher, down aerial is situational due to its slow startup, but can end a Phantom combo for a meteor smash KO if well-timed.
The late hits also launch directly downward, are fairly large and last for 10 frames. They can gimp opponents with weak recoveries, and they can cover jumps in ledge traps by knocking opponents downward into a Phantom. However, like the Lightning Kicks' sourspots, they are very weak and usually punishable on hit until high percentages, and since the clean hit can miss rather easily due to its single-frame duration, this makes the move inherently risky in any case. In disadvantage, down air should be carefully used as only one option among many other defensive options for landing.
At high percents, especially with rage, a late hit can similarly start combos. Interestingly, the leg hitbox is stronger than the foot hitbox by a significant margin, but due to its higher position, it is unlikely to connect unless Zelda is approaching from the side (rather than from above). However, if it does land, it will start combos and send into tumble much earlier, forcing hard-to-react techs on aerial opponents with its minimal hitlag.
Down air is notably her fastest aerial to execute, which is useful for canceling tumble. It also auto-cancels in a short hop. While down aerial has limited use in neutral due to similar weaknesses to her Lightning Kicks, it is a very potent tool in Zelda’s punish game.
Update history[edit]
- Down aerial's clean hit has a larger hitbox (3.2u/3u → 4.2u/4u).
Hitboxes[edit]
Timing[edit]
Attack[edit]
Initial autocancel | 1-3 |
---|---|
Clean hit | 14 |
Late hit | 15-24 |
Ending autocancel | 40- |
Interruptible | 45 |
Animation length | 60 |
Landing lag[edit]
Interruptible | 13 |
---|---|
Animation length | 26 |
Lag time |
Hitbox |
Hitbox change |
Autocancel |
Interruptible |
Trivia[edit]
- Between the clean and late hits, the ID 0 hitbox changes from the bottom hitbox to the top hitbox, and vice versa for ID 1. This results in an unusual hitbox interpolation, notably making the late hit's sweetspot significantly larger and easier to land on frame 15.
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