Editing Poison Mushroom
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*Although being mini reduces one's ability to recover, certain up specials which are affected by a fighter's gravity stat will actually go higher as a result of the reduced gravity applied by the mushroom. | *Although being mini reduces one's ability to recover, certain up specials which are affected by a fighter's gravity stat will actually go higher as a result of the reduced gravity applied by the mushroom. | ||
*While other items are usually designed to visually stay true to their home series in subsequent ''Smash'' titles, the Poison Mushroom is the only item from another series's [[universe]] that is deliberately given an original design for the ''Smash'' series. Here, it is visually similar to the [[Super Mushroom]] instead of the purple hue it is known for in recent ''Mario'' games. This is done as an attempt to confuse fighters, similarly to its original appearance in ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'' in which it was a different color but does not look overtly threatening, disguising its deadly nature. | *While other items are usually designed to visually stay true to their home series in subsequent ''Smash'' titles, the Poison Mushroom is the only item from another series's [[universe]] that is deliberately given an original design for the ''Smash'' series. Here, it is visually similar to the [[Super Mushroom]] instead of the purple hue it is known for in recent ''Mario'' games. This is done as an attempt to confuse fighters, similarly to its original appearance in ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'' in which it was a different color but does not look overtly threatening, disguising its deadly nature. | ||
*The ''Melee'' trophy of the Poison Mushroom states that the Poison Mushroom made its debut in ''Super Mario All-Stars'', but its first appearance actually was in the Japanese version of ''Super Mario Bros. 2''; this could be because ''Super Mario-All-Stars'' was technically the first game in the west to include the Poison Mushroom. This was later corrected in ''Brawl'', using the western title of ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels''. Conversely, ''Smash Wii U'' also lists ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'', however, like in ''Melee'', it tracks its western appearance on "08/93", the release date for ''Super Mario All-Stars'', rather than the original Japanese release date. | *The ''Melee'' trophy of the Poison Mushroom states that the Poison Mushroom made its debut in ''Super Mario All-Stars'', but its first appearance actually was in the Japanese version of ''Super Mario Bros. 2''; this could be because ''Super Mario-All-Stars'' was technically the first game in the west to include the Poison Mushroom. This was later corrected in ''Brawl'', using the western title of ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels''. Conversely, ''Smash Wii U'' also lists ''Super Mario Bros.: The Lost Levels'', however, like in ''Melee'', it tracks its western appearance on "08/93", the release date for ''Super Mario All-Stars'', rather than the original Japanese release date. | ||
*In ''Brawl'', if {{SSBB|Pikachu}} uses [[Quick Attack]] on a falling Poison Mushroom or Super Mushroom, it will perform the [[size change super jump]]. | *In ''Brawl'', if {{SSBB|Pikachu}} uses [[Quick Attack]] on a falling Poison Mushroom or Super Mushroom, it will perform the [[size change super jump]]. | ||
*In ''Brawl'', [[Pikmin Throw]] uniquely won't change pitch upon growing or shrinking. | *In ''Brawl'', [[Pikmin Throw]] uniquely won't change pitch upon growing or shrinking. | ||