

The colors of the Hylian Shield resembles the Royal Guard's Shield.īased on the Hero of Twilight's clothes from Twilight Princess, which was the basis of his Brawl and 3DS/Wii U appearances. Resembles the Hylian Tunic from Breath of the Wild.īased on Fierce Deity Link from The Legend of Zelda: Majora's Mask.īased on the Royal Guard Uniform from Breath of the Wild. This also gives Link his more traditional appearance from throughout The Legend of Zelda series. Wears the Hero of the Wild set from Breath of the Wild. Both are from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild.īased on Link's incarnation as the Champion of the Wild from The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Link's clothing design is based on his Champion's Tunic for half of his costumes, and based on the Hero of the Wild set for the other half. Resembles Donkey Kong under the effects of Banana Juice from Donkey Kong Country Returns, a recolor from Mario Golf, and an alternate costume from Jungle Jam mode in DK: King of Swing.īased on Junior (II) from Donkey Kong Jr. Also resembles Super Kong from the Donkey Kong Country games developed by Retro Studios and Eddie the Mean Old Yeti from the Donkey Kong Country animated series. Donkey Kong series, and a recolor from Mario Golf. Referred to as "Yeti DK" on the Brawl DOJO!! Resembles the mythical yeti, The Fire Mini Donkey Kong from the Mario vs. Resembles an alternate color scheme from DK: King of Swing. It also resembles one of his alternate costumes from Mario Golf. Resembles an alternate color scheme from Donkey Kong 64's Multiplayer Mode. Cranky Kong) from the original arcade game. Resembles the original Donkey Kong (A.K.A. The tie is reminiscent of Donkey Kong's appearance in Donkey Kong Country's Two-Player Contest Mode. Resembles a real life rainforest gorilla. Replaces his Fire Flower costume.īased on his current appearance since the original Donkey Kong Country. Wedding Mario from Super Mario Odyssey, wearing the Top Hat and Tuxedo amiibo set. Replaces his previous yellow costume which was based on Wario. It also resembles Mario's Waluigi Cap and Suit in Super Mario Odyssey (though with his "M" on the cap instead of the upside-down "L").īuilder Mario from Super Mario Maker and Super Mario Odyssey. It also resembles Luigi's appearance on the arcade version of Mario Bros., as well as bearing a resemblance to Jinbe from Mole Mania (another game produced by Shigeru Miyamoto).īased on Waluigi. Resembles Mario's appearance on Japanese and European box arts for Wrecking Crew. It may also resemble his more monochromatic appearance in the Super Mario Land games for the Game Boy. Originally based on Foreman Spike from Wrecking Crew '98 according to the original SSB Japanese site, though the costume has updated from the Original version of this swap to be more black and white than brown and yellow. Replaces the inverted blue costume that was previously in all the other games. Unlike 3DS/Wii U, The Color of his shirt is a darker blue.īased on his appearance on the Japanese box art for Mario Bros., and the cover of the e-Reader game Mario Bros.-e. Mario wears his Golf Cap and Golf Outfit from Super Mario Odyssey, itself based on his outfit in Family Computer Golf: U.S. N/A: Color that is Original to Smash and doesn't have any particular reference.īased on his current appearance since Super Mario Odyssey. will have their palettes shown earlier than characters that are DLC. Palette swaps are loaded up by order of the character's placement in the roster (except for the Pokémon Trainer's Pokémon and Pyra/Mythra, who will be loaded first), meaning the characters from the original Super Smash Bros. In addition, by selecting the character on the character slot, an additional menu can be brought up to display all the colors immediately, though the traditional method of selecting a palette swap with the left and right shoulder buttons is still retained. Unlike previous installments, palette swaps are now notated by Color number. Hero's costumes represent different protagonists across the Dragon Quest series, while characters such as Pikachu, Pokémon Trainer, Villager, Wii Fit Trainer, Robin, Corrin, Inkling, and Byleth have male and female variants, and characters such as Bowser Jr., Olimar, and Steve swap them into different characters that change their voice lines and name, though gameplay-wise they remain the same. However, characters such as Mario, Piranha Plant, Wario, Link, Zero Suit Samus, Ridley, Ike, Isabelle, Little Mac, Shulk, Cloud, Bayonetta, Joker, Sephiroth, Kazuya and Sora have different outfits available. Ultimate remain the same for the majority of the cast returning from the previous title, with each character receiving eight total.
