From NintendoWiki, your source on Nintendo information. By fans, for fans.
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS
|
大乱闘スマッシュブラザーズ for Nintendo 3DS
|
|
|
N. America:
|
October 3, 2014[1]
|
Japan:
|
September 13, 2014[2]
|
Europe:
|
October 2, 2014 (Germany only)[3] October 3, 2014[4]
|
Australia:
|
October 4, 2014
|
S. Korea:
|
?
|
|
|
|
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS (Japanese: 大乱闘スマッシュブラザーズ for Nintendo 3DS, Dairantou Smash Brothers for Nintendo 3DS) is a Nintendo fighting game directed by Masahiro Sakurai for Nintendo 3DS. It is the fourth installment in the Super Smash Bros. series along with Super Smash Bros. for Wii U.
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS features the same playable characters as Super Smash Bros. for Wii U[6], however, the selection of stages between the two are different, with more stages based on handheld games than the Wii U version.[7] Additionally, the Nintendo 3DS and Wii U version feature a different selection of trophies.[8]
Blurb
Fight anytime, anywhere! An all-star lineup of Nintendo characters!
Guest fighters join the battle!
All new Smash Run mode
Create a fighter unique to you
Battle it out as Nintendo's greatest heroes—right in the palm of your hands! Power-up your combatant and face off against your friends in the new Smash Run mode, then in a series first, unlock new move variations to personalize your fighter. With new StreetPass features, mini-games, and trophies to collect, there's plenty to keep you smashing!
With modes and stages made for portable play, Super Smash Bros. makes its debut on the Nintendo 3DS system. Square off against Nintendo favorites such as Mario, Link, and Seamus, or take on newcomers like: Mega Man, Wii Fit Trainer, and Greninja just to name a few. For the first time in series history, traverse a huge maze and defeat enemies for power-ups in Smash Run, or go into Character Builder to tweak the special moves of your favorite hero! After you've triumphed over your friends in local multiplayer, go online and challenge the world!
Gameplay
Players fight each other and computer-controlled fighters on stages with the objective of knocking opponents off. There are several modes with specific rule sets as well as mini-games. Classic Mode has the player choosing a character and going through a string of fights with standard rules. All-Star Mode is a continuous fight against all of the playable characters. New to the series and exclusive for the 3DS version is Smash Run. In it, the player is given five minutes to explore a large map and battle enemies from various Nintendo games. Defeating enemies causes them to drop power-ups to increase the player's stats. After the five minutes, the player fights against other players.
Playable characters
Technical Details
The 30-use demo takes 1044 blocks.
Stages
Additional Content
Demo
A demo version was released that allowed 30 uses and a special version with unlimited number of uses. Players could choose from Mario, Link, Pikachu, Villager, or Mega Man and battle on Battlefield, either against computers or other players through local multiplayer. The 30-use demo required 1044 blocks of save data.
Updates
Version Number
|
Date Released
|
Description
|
1.0.0
|
Default
|
Initial release
|
1.0.1
|
September 12th 2014
|
Adds Conquest to the game. It requires 364 blocks of save data
|
1.0.2
|
September 19th 2014
|
Fixes an issue where Peach's down special would cause erroneous bans in the no-items For Glory online mode, as well as balancing the game
|
1.0.3
|
October 27th 2014
|
Hides the percentages in Conquest mode, as well as adjusting the interface
|
External Links
References
|
This article is a stub. You can help NintendoWiki by expanding it.
|