Hero (SSBU)


 * The Hero Draws Near!

Hero (, Hero) is a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate and the second fighter from Square Enix after. He was announced during the E3 Nintendo Direct alongside on June 11th, 2019 as the second downloadable fighter from.

The default Hero is the Luminary from Dragon Quest XI, while Erdrick from Dragon Quest III, Solo from Dragon Quest IV and Eight from Dragon Quest VIII also appear as alternate costume characters like the Koopalings and Alph. Unlike the Koopalings and Alph, however, they are all listed simply as "Hero". Hero was released as part of Challenger Pack 2 on July 30th, 2019 and is classified as Fighter #72.

The Luminary is voiced by, who also voices him in the Japanese version of Dragon Quest XI S. , and  also debut as the voices of Erdrick, Solo and Eight, respectively, in all versions of the game.

Hero is ranked 44th out of 82 on the current tier list, placing him in the B+ tier. Hero is one of the most unique characters in the game, boasting the single most amount of moves on a single character thanks to his down special in Command Selection and variances of the rest of his special moves. Hero has amazing strengths in having a lot of disjointed range in his aerials, such as forward air, neutral air, and back air. He also has good ground speed and drift to aid his mobility. In addition, his smash attacks are notorious as they have a 1 in 8 chance to critical hit, with devastating KO power and damage. Hero's special moves are arguably his biggest asset. His side special, Zap, most notably its 2nd form in Zapple, is a solid long-range poking tool to attack opponents at bay. His down special Command Selection gives him an extensive and dynamic amount of options, with some spells ranging from buffing his normals or speed (Oomph, Psyche Up, Acceleratle), an active reflector (Bounce), the easiest recovery back to the stage (Zoom), powerful KO tools (Hatchet Man, Flame Slash, Kaboom, etc), or instant KO moves that have a chance to KO extremely early (Whack and Thwack). All in all, this makes Hero one of the scariest characters to fight if he has the right options for the right situations.

Despite these strengths, Hero has several weaknesses. His spells rely on his MP Gauge, which can only be reliably replenished by hitting opponents with non-special moves: if he is very low on MP, he has a lot of trouble in neutral since he is unable to use most of his beneficial spells. Hero also has below average frame data overall, making most of his attacks easy to parry or hold shield against. His disadvantage state is pretty mediocre as his recovery is easy to intercept since it lacks a hitbox in the ascent, and he also has trouble landing or getting back on the ground due to his limited options. Finally, the sheer unpredictability of Command Selection means that Hero cannot reliably roll for his strongest spells, with some being devastating to use by accident (eg. Kamikazee, Kaclang).

Overall, Hero remains to be one of the most unpredictable characters in the game and a contentious character to debate on, with a lot of X factor and upset potential due to how much he relies on RNG. While his normals offset his specials, Hero is a force to be reckoned with in the right hands. Hero's representation in competitive play is fairly limited and rare but he has seen success from players, such as and, taking him far in tournaments with the right luck and bracket.

Attributes
Hero is a tall, middleweight swordsman. As a result, he has long range and his overall damage output is fittingly above-average, but he is prone to being hit easily and is very susceptible to combos. Hero has respectable overall mobility: he has a slow walking speed, slightly below-average air speed and poor air acceleration, but his dashing speed, initial dash, traction, falling speed, and fast falling speed are all either average or above-average.

Hero has a good defensive game. Similar to the three Links, Hero actually sports two shields: the standard shield action that every fighter has, and another equipped on his left arm most of the time. Hero's shield can block projectiles while he is standing idle, walking, or crouching. The wearable shield also affects the first hit of Hero's forward tilt by granting invincibility to his left arm, head and left leg because of this shield's position, similarly to 's dash attack and back aerial.

Hero possesses a unique fighter ability called the MP Gauge, which has a maximum of 100 Magic Points (MP) and will deplete whenever he uses a special move. MP is restored whenever he hits opponents with attacks, and also restores gradually over time. Although his special moves completely rely on the MP Gauge, they possess tremendous utility. His neutral special, Frizz, is a fireball that travels fast, far and deals decent damage, allowing Hero to disrupt enemy approaches. In addition, unlike other Frizz spells, Frizz has low vertical knockback, making it possible to start juggles or even true combos. Frizz can be charged into Frizzle, which can beat other projectiles and KO near the ledge at reasonable percentages, or Kafrizz for even more damage, knockback and traveling distance, turning it into a viable KO move even at mid percentages.

Hero's side special, Zap, has good range for its start-up, deals respectable damage and KOs at very high percentages. Zap can be charged into Zapple, which grants even more range and damage while being a vertical KO move at high percentages, or Kazap, which results in a attack that sacrifices speed and range for power, being able to KO most opponents center stage at a mere 50%. Additionally, Kazap has damage-based armor that withstands up to 15%, allowing it to resist oncoming attacks. Zap and its variants are disjointed melee attacks, giving them excellent range and, contrary to their appearances, they are also immune to reflection and even absorption.

Hero's up special, Woosh, is a quick recovery move and is also Hero's fastest and most reliable out of shield punish. Woosh can be charged into Swoosh, granting more vertical distance and horizontal mobility, or Kaswoosh, which provides tremendous vertical distance. Additionally, all Woosh spells leave behind tornadoes, which serve as lingering hitboxes that can damage opponents and gimp opposing recoveries or setup into devastating setups from below the ledge. Finally, his down special, Command Selection, gives Hero a list of four random spells which offer a wide variety of effects. Most of these spells have significant advantages and little disadvantages, which can be seen here. The Command Selection can be canceled by inputting the shield button or by jumping, allowing Hero to repeatedly switch the menu of spells until he has an ideal set of them.

Hero's smash attacks all share a unique perk: they have a 1/8 chance of striking with a critical hit, doubling their damage output and significantly increasing their knockback, allowing them to KO at extremely early percentages. In addition, they cause the smash attacks to cause more shieldstun, making them slightly safer on shield. Even without this perk, Hero's smash attacks have some utility: his forward smash is his strongest smash attack in both damage and knockback, having large range to boot, making it terrific for hard reads or punishes, his up smash has high vertical range, being a reliable anti-air option, good for halting aerial opponents' approaches while remaining a good KOing tool (though it suffers from nonexistent horizontal range, being unable to hit grounded opponents), and his down smash is his weakest smash attack, though it is also his fastest and can be used to punish rolls or spot dodges. Thus, it is a reliable edge-guarding attack in its own right.

Hero's other grounded attacks still possess utility, even if they are less overwhelming than his smash attacks and special moves. Neutral attack has a respectable start-up, damage output and good range, making it good for both damage-racking at low percentages, spacing and for warding off immediate pressure. As stated earlier, forward tilt's first hit has blocking capabilities, making it a defensive option that can beat other moves or projectiles and then be followed up with a second hit—a sword slash—which offers better range, identical speed, and more power, allowing for setting up edge-guards or outright KOs near the edge.

Up tilt has wide range, a respectable damage output and decent start-up lag; these traits make it a fantastic anti-air option, a serviceable KO option at high percentages, and a much more consistent alternative to up smash. Down tilt has good range—superseding Hero's neutral attack—while offering the same speed and launching vertically; it can be used to hit opponents hanging on the edge and start set-ups. Dash attack boasts high power for an attack of its type at the cost of its high overall lag, being able to KO at 80% from the edge. Lastly, Hero's up and down throws sport some utility. Up throw is his strongest throw and has situational utility as both a combo starter and KO option, being able to KO before 200%, unlike his other throws. Conversely, down throw is a good combo starter at low to medium percentages, and can lead into dangerous set-ups.

Hero's aerial moveset, while not as good as that of many other swordfighters, is impressive nonetheless. Neutral aerial has wide range around him and launches at a diagonal angle, being a situational combo starter and useful shield poking option. Forward and especially back aerials are both slow (with back aerial being among the slowest of its kind), but they are respectably strong and KO middleweights beginning around 100% and 85%, respectively. Up aerial has the lowest lag out of any of Hero's aerials and deals very low damage and knockback, enabling it to effectively initiate combos into itself or other moves, or even set up KO confirms at varying percentages. Lastly, down aerial is Hero's most damaging aerial, but also one of his slowest. Its clean hit is capable of meteor smashing opponents, leading to KOs as low as 20% on offstage foes.

But for all the strengths that Hero has, they do come with a price. His access to his special moves is restricted by their reliance on MP. Without enough MP, he is unable to cast any spells, which may put him in great danger offstage as Woosh will only give him a very small boost without MP. While his Command Selection is very versatile, its random nature means that a desired spell is unlikely to be available. Command Selection also renders Hero unable to move when the menu is open, with his only options being to jump or shield, both of which cancel the move and creates a new set of spells when he uses the move again.

While this often is not an issue due to most of the spells having quick startup and good range, as well as the Hero player being able to select the spell quickly, this can sometimes pose a problem if the opponent is in a prime position to punish Hero, which can force the player to sacrifice an ideal set of spells by canceling the move or potentially cause them to panic and use the wrong spell altogether. On top of this, some of his spells have very little utility (such as Metal Slash, which deals 1% and extremely low set knockback against non-metal opponents), while one of them, Hocus Pocus, grants any one of a slew of effects, albeit with detrimental ones outnumbering and outweighing the possible benefits.

Many of Hero's attacks suffer from slow start-up lag (dash attack), high ending lag (up tilt, down tilt, and the second hit of forward tilt), or both (forward and back aerials). Due to being a tall middleweight with slightly above-average falling speed and a lack of any fast or invincible attacks, Hero is also very susceptible to combos. This weakness may be exacerbated further through Hocus Pocus' giant effect, and Oomph applying a 1.2× damage multiplier to attacks that hit him.

Hero's below-average frame data, high raw damage output and attacks' high knockback values also collectively give him a limited combo game; only certain attacks (particularly neutral aerial, up aerial, up throw, and down throw) can successfully generate true combos. Even then, the fast start-up of Hero's grabs is offset by their very short ranges, while up and down throws' combo potentials wane noticeably past low and medium percentages, respectively. Up aerial suffers from poor range and down tilt suffers from aforementioned high ending lag, preventing it from performing any true combos.

Overall, Hero has many strengths and many weaknesses. While he does have a plethora of magic spells at his disposal, a high overall damage output, and a healthy number of strong KO options, he suffers from sluggish frame data, a susceptibility to combos, a reliance on random chance, a limited combo game, and finite resources that are slow to recharge. While there is some potential and strategy in Hero's normal moveset, victory or defeat will frequently come down to resource management and luck. While players such as and  have shown Hero's potential at tournaments, his representation has been below-average overall. As such, his viability remains up for debate.

Update history
Hero received a mix of buffs, glitch fixes and a single nerf via game updates, but was buffed slightly overall. Kaboom and Magic Burst's linking hits became more consistent thanks to gaining more more hitstun, while Gigaslash's ending lag was decreased significantly. The only nerf Hero received was to Kafrizz: its final hit can now be reflected, absorbed or blocked by passive shields.

Overall, Hero fares mildly better than he did when he was first released. Due to the other changes he received being strictly quality-of-life adjustments, Hero's competitive reception has remained virtually unchanged since his release.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Moveset
For a gallery of Hero's hitboxes, see here.
 * Hero has a unique fighter ability called the MP Gauge. His Magic Points (MP) are depleted whenever he uses his special moves, with the amount varying on the spell used. The MP Gauge has a maximum of 100 MP, and it is restored over time (at a rate of 1 point per second) or when damaging opponents with normal attacks.
 * If Hero attempts to use a spell without the required MP, he will still perform the animation, but without the actual spell being performed. In the case of Zap, it still possesses a hitbox that deals 2%. Additionally, the "failed" sound effect from Dragon Quest will play when this occurs.
 * If Hero hits an opponent or a shield with a normal attack, he will gain MP equal to 0.8× of the hitbox's or throw's base damage output; aside from shield damage, no other mechanics (such as the extra damage from charging smashes) will be applied. As shields receive 1.19× more damage from attacks, hitting shields will generally restore more MP unless the attack has reduced shield damage, such as his Critical Hit smash attacks. A resource for how much is gained can be found here.
 * While Hero is standing still, walking, or crouching, any incoming projectiles that hit his equipped shield will simply push him back slightly instead of inflicting damage. It can block any amount of projectiles, regardless of their power.
 * Hero's smash attacks have a 1/8 chance of inflicting a Critical Hit, which triggers a Special Zoom and deals twice as much damage. This subsequently increases their knockback by a significant amount, although forward smash and down smash have lower base knockback values as a slight compensation. Against shields, Critical Hits have negative shield damage outputs equal to the moves' base damage; this causes them to deal the same damage to shields as the standard versions and thus prevents them from easily breaking shields. However, Critical Hits still inflict more shieldstun due to their higher base damage outputs, making them safer on shield.
 * The negative shield damage does not necessarily make a Critical Hit and a standard hit inflict the same amount of damage to a shield. This is due to the formula for damage to shields adding the shield damage after applying the stale-move negation/freshness multiplier, but before applying the 1.19× shield multiplier. The damage variation between a Critical Hit and a standard hit is roughly equal to the stale/fresh multiplier; thus, a fresh Critical Hit will inflict more damage, but a stale Critical Hit will inflict less damage.
 * Hero cannot inflict a Critical Hit in the Home-Run Contest.
 * A Critical Hit's sound effect varies depending on the Hero who inflicts it, although Erdrick and Solo share the same one. These sound effects are sourced directly from their respective Dragon Quest games.

Command Selection spells
Approximations were done with the equation (X/S), with X being the relative odds of the move and S being the sum of all moves' relative odds, including the selected move's odds.

Announcer call
While Hero's name is the same in Japanese, it is pronounced "Yuusha".

On-screen appearance

 * Flies onto the stage using Zoom, and raises his sword vertically, similarly to his side taunt.

Taunts

 * Up taunt: Puts away his sword and shield, then performs Psyche Up as it appears in Dragon Quest VIII.
 * Side taunt: Raises his sword vertically into the air.
 * Down taunt: Fumbles in place as a Slime meanders in front of him.

Idle poses

 * Lifts his sword in front of himself while smiling.
 * Assumes an attack stance similar to one of 's idle animations.

Crowd cheer
 

Victory poses

 * Left: Hero raises his sword in the air, slashes twice and finishes in a pose.
 * Up: Hero performs Kazap and strikes a pose.
 * Right: Hero walks up to three Slimes, kneels down and looks at them with a smile. The camera angle before Hero appears also references the first-person battle screens of most Dragon Quest games.

Tier placement and history
Hero's place in competitive play has been controversial even before his introduction into the game; players were immediately divided due to the sheer amount of randomness in his toolkit, which some argued as too unpredictable for him to work as a competitively fair character. Despite the controversy, Hero initially had little impact on the metagame; while it was common to see him in pools and small-scale tournaments, he has not gone far in high-level tournaments, with his most notable national placements coming from and, who either used him as a co-main or eventually dropped him. This can be attributed to Hero's slow frame data, lack of reliable combo breaking options, and his reliance on MP, all of which can be exploited by opponents. Hero's randomness also plays a part in his unreliability, as it can be just as common to roll an undesired move as it is to get the best option. As a result, most players initially considered him a mid tier character at best.

More recently, however, had made waves with Hero by placing top 8 at several Japanese nationals, and even defeating several top Japanese players. These placements, despite being during the pandemic, were nonetheless more impressive than anyone else up to that point, leading some players to believe that Hero is better than what the general consensus is, currently ranked 44th on the first tier list.

Most historically significant players
See also: Category:Hero players (SSBU)


 * - The best Hero player in the world. He is the only Hero player to have made multiple major top 8s with and 7th at, the latter being the first top 8 a Hero player has made in a supermajor and also the only instance to this date. He is currently ranked at 80th on the OrionRank 2022, marking him as the second Hero player to be ranked globally.
 * - The best Hero player in the United States. He has made multiple supermajor placements of 17th at both and, grabbing a hot streak of wins at the latter tournament, beating , , and . These two tournaments also mark the best Hero results at North American majors post-pandemic.
 * - The best Hero player in Europe. He is known to be a regional threat, being the best player in Denmark, and making results outside of his country with 9th at and 13th at  and  with wins over players such as  and . He is currently ranked 67th on the OrionRank 2022 Europe.
 * - Co-mained Hero and, and was considered the best Hero player in the world prior to his ban. He used both characters to win , and also made 4th at and 7th at , taking sets over  and  with Hero. His 25th place at  was also considered the best solo Hero supermajor result pre-pandemic. He is the only Hero player to be ranked top 50 in the world with 30th on the Fall 2019 PGRU.

Ban controversy
Hero's moveset, specifically Command Selection, has been controversial due to its randomness. Comparisons have been drawn between Command Selection and items, with the argument being that the unpredictable nature of both of them result in a less competitive environment, in which skill alone is not sufficient to win matches (coincidentally so as certain spells like Hocus Pocus grant abilities otherwise only found with items such as the Super Star and Timer). Furthermore, specific spells have also been the subject of controversy, such as Zoom invalidating any attempts at edge-guarding, Whack and Thwack being able to KO at any percentage, or Magic Burst's blast radius easily covering the edge and preventing a large portion of the cast from recovering without taking significant damage in the process. Hero's Critical Hits from his smash attacks have also stirred conversation regarding Hero's skill factor, though not quite to the degree as Command Selection.

Finally, issues regarding language barriers have also been raised, as it is not uncommon for players to compete in countries they do not know the language of. Therefore, a player who does not speak the language of the country in question will be at a large disadvantage, regardless of whether they are playing as or against Hero. Players against this point mention how most of the spells in languages that use the Latin alphabet are easy to figure out from first glance, rendering them easily guessable, learnable and reactionary and some suggest hosting games on two separate switches using Arenas and changing the language of each system's game to match that of the players.

Conversely, supporters bring up languages that do not use the Latin alphabet, such as Japanese and Russian, saying that these are much harder to learn and react to in such a short amount of time, and they argue against hosting games over arenas by bringing up factors such as input lag, midmatch slowdowns and crashes. To alleviate the effects of language barriers, most tournaments in countries will usually play in English instead of the regional language due to English being the standard language used in major tournaments, especially since countries such as Portugal, Denmark and Sweden do not have their language available in Ultimate and Hero's spells in Dutch are not translated.

Many prominent smashers, such as and, have advocated banning Hero, while others such as  and  have come out against a ban, arguing that the character has significant counter-play and has not achieved overwhelmingly high results at tournaments to the same degrees as a top tier character. The first region to ban Hero from tournaments was South Australia, where the ban was put into effect on August 15th, 2019. This was met with criticism, with players in the community (such as and ) stating that it was too early to declare whether Hero should be banned or not.

Notably, Nintendo France also banned Hero and DLC fighters released after September 23rd, 2019 from future tournaments in their area, making Hero the first instance a character has been banned in Nintendo-sanctioned tournaments. No official reason was given for the ban by Nintendo France at the time. However, as of September 26th, 2019, Nintendo France announced on Twitter that they have overturned the ban, making Hero and DLC fighters released after the aforementioned date legal in Nintendo-sanctioned tournaments for the area. The controversy has died down in the years since, and Hero is currently legal in all regions with no major flare-ups.

: A History of Heroism
In reference to the series, Hero's opponents are his fellow playable Heroes and/or fighters who are analogous to various characters featured in his home series. This theme is further reinforced by Rounds 1 through 6 being Stamina Mode battles (in reference to the Dragon Quest series' hit points system) and each Round playing a song from the Dragon Quest series (regardless of what universe the stage originates from). When fighting against each of the Heroes, they will use their respective default appearances instead of their respective alternate costumes, even if the player is also playing as one of the default Heroes (which was unique to Hero until 's release).

Credits roll after completing Classic Mode. Unlike other fighters, the music that plays differs depending on the hero selected.
 * The Luminary uses .
 * Erdrick uses .
 * Solo uses .
 * Eight uses .

Role in World of Light
Due to his status as downloadable content, Hero does not have a legitimate role in World of Light. Instead, he is unlocked for use in the mode after freeing 10 fighters from Galeem's control. If loading an existing save file that meets this condition prior to downloading Hero, he is immediately unlocked.

However, in his reveal trailer, all four Heroes are shown fighting against puppet fighters alongside Link, which suggests he too is fighting against Galeem and Dharkon. Erdrick, in particular, also appears in 's trailer alongside several fighters who have been warded off by Galeem and his legion of Master Hands.

Spirits
The Luminary's fighter spirit can be obtained by completing. It is also available periodically for purchase in the shop for 300 Gold, but only after Hero has been downloaded. Unlocking Hero in World of Light allows the player to preview the first spirit below in the Spirit List under the name "???". As a fighter spirit, it cannot be used in Spirit Battles and is purely aesthetic. The other three Heroes have their own fighter spirits, which can only be obtained by purchase in the shop. Each fighter spirit has an alternate version that replaces them with their artwork in Ultimate.

Trivia

 * Hero is referred to within Super Smash Bros. Ultimate's game files with the codename "brave", a rather direct translation of his Japanese name, Yūsha. Notably, the codename was discovered as early as December 2018 after update 1.1.0 was released, although the discovery had only been made public in January. The mysterious codename raised much speculation and debate in the community, with the most common hypothesis on the mysterious character's identity being a Dragon Quest protagonist. Specifically, the protagonist was assumed to be Erdrick, which turned out to be partially correct due to him being an alternate character.
 * Hero's reveal trailer contains multiple references to the Dragon Quest franchise:
 * The segment where the Luminary rides on Gogoat is a reference to the ridable mounts featured in Dragon Quest XI.
 * The segment where the Luminary picks up a barrel and breaks it to reveal a Franklin Badge is a reference to the mini medals that can be found in every Dragon Quest game from Dragon Quest III onwards, which can often be found by breaking barrels and pots.
 * The segment where the Luminary is seen sitting by a fire at night at Gaur Plain with and  is a reference to the campsite feature in Dragon Quest XI. Zero Suit Samus represents Jade and Zelda represents Serena, given their similar appearances.
 * The segment where Eight is seen walking through a poison pathway to obtain a Beam Sword is a reference to the poison bogs seen in the very first Dragon Quest game that would surround treasure and damage the player.
 * Erdrick using Gigaslash against is a reference to the Dragonlord from Dragon Quest's first installment.
 * Hero shares his heavy carry, battering item, home run swing, and special flag animations with . This suggests Link was the basis for creating Hero, and they were imported over due to being minor animations of low priority.
 * Additionally, he also shares his dash attack and passive shield ability with him, with the latter making him the only character who is not a variant of Link to have that ability.
 * Hero is the only character from Square Enix whose dash does not involve him hovering above the ground.
 * Hero's trailer is the first of any DLC trailer to have completely original 3D CGI animation. All of the previous DLC trailers either used the in-game engine, animation meant to replicate the source game, or (in the case of ) pre-existing CGI animation.
 * It is also the second time an alternate character appears as part of any CGI animation for the game. The first instance was Inkling Girl and Inkling Boy appearing in the opening of World of Light.
 * The trailer features a slight rendering issue: when the Luminary falls on the ground, causing some Slimes to scatter, one of them appears in transparency through his hair for a few frames, even though it is behind him.
 * Hero's artwork pose in the panoramic banner is similar to 's pose in his official render, albeit mirrored.
 * Similarly, the Luminary's artwork greatly resembles Young Link's artwork from , which is used for his fighter spirit. However, the positions of the sword and shield are flipped due to the Luminary being right-handed.
 * In Japanese, Hero has a chance of calling out a spell's name, excluding the Command Selection spells. This makes him the fifth character in the series to have specific lines in the Japanese language track of a game replaced by generic grunts from the same voice actor outside of Japan after, , and in Super Smash Bros. Melee and Mewtwo in all of its playable appearances.
 * Kirby also follows this trait as well, making it the first Copy Ability of his to have such a distinction.
 * Hero is the third playable character to be featured alongside a non-playable character in Ultimate's panoramic artwork; in his case, he is featured alongside a Slime. The first two are and, who is featured alongside Mr. Saturn and Morgana, respectively.
 * In German, Spanish, French, and Italian, the name tag and voice clip from the announcer on the victory screen is slightly different from the one used on the character select screen, instead featuring a noticeable translation of "the" ("der Held", "el Héroe", "le Héros", and "l'Eroe"). Hero shares this trait with, , , , the , Zombie, Enderman, and the s.
 * In the Japanese version, Hero is named "勇者 Yūsha" and his respective announcer voice clip reads it that way, but his name on the character select screen icon, versus splash screen and results screen is still written as "Hero". He and Young Link are the only characters with this trait, as all others have the respective romanization of their Japanese name, instead of a direct translation to English.
 * Furthermore, Hero is the only character to have his name entirely formatted in kanji in the Japanese version. The other fighter to have a common noun as their name, Villager, has his name written in hiragana instead.
 * In the Korean version, Hero is named "용사 Yongsa", but the Announcer announces his English name, Hero. He shares this distinction with.
 * Depending on which version of the Hero is being played, the Critical Hit sound effect from that Hero's respective game will play when they land a Critical Hit via a smash attack or Hatchet Man. Additionally, when a Hero lands a Critical Hit on another Hero, the sound effect from the target's respective game will play, even if the attacker is a Hero from a different game.
 * Hero has additional sound effects while performing certain actions. However, these sounds can be difficult to notice due to the overall volume of Ultimate's sound effects.
 * While charging a smash attack, the "player attacks" sound effect from the Dragon Quest series will play.
 * When KO'd, the "enemy critical hit" sound effect from Dragon Quest XI plays alongside the standard KO sound effect.
 * Hero,, and  are the only characters whose Classic Mode routes feature a fight against a boss outside of the Final Round; in Hero's case, it is against Rathalos. Hero is also one of the few fighters whose Final Round involves fighting characters who are otherwise playable (in his case,  and ) instead of a designated boss.
 * Hero,, Corrin, and Steve are the only characters who fight the same fighter multiple times in their respective Classic Mode routes. In Hero's case, he fights himself and the other three Heroes in four different Rounds, and fights female and male in Round 2 and the Final Round, respectively.
 * Hero is the only one out of those to fight two different fighters twice.
 * Hero and Steve are the only characters who fight tiny opponents in their Classic Mode routes.
 * When KO'd by reaching 0 HP during his final stock in Stamina Mode, Hero uses one of his heavy knockback voice clips instead of his standard KO voice clip. This trait is shared with, and all vocal DLC fighters except for Joker, , and 's Japanese voice.
 * Unusually, Erdrick's stamina KO voice clip does not begin with a slight pause. This oddity is shared with.
 * Because of controversy regarding Hero as anti-competitive in Ultimate due to the large amount of randomness in his moveset, he is the seventh character to have been officially banned from any tournament matches. The first six were in Super Smash Bros. Brawl, and the s,  and  in Super Smash Bros. 4.
 * A special battle card was released for the arcade game  that references both Gigaslash as it appears in Ultimate and Hero's reveal trailer.
 * Interestingly, Hero's up and down taunts finish faster when facing right if uninterrupted. A similar situation occurs with both (up taunt) and  (up taunt).
 * Hero,, , Banjo & Kazooie, , , , and are the only characters who use their walking animations when navigating through the map in World of Light.
 * Apart from DLC characters who were not released at the time of their respective tourney, Hero is the only character who does not appear in a decade-related Event Tourney. He was excluded from Bringing Back the '80s, Hailing from the '90s, and The Year Is 200X despite Erdrick, Solo, and Eight debuting in those respective decades, due to the Luminary (the default Hero) debuting in 2017. However, when Born in the 2010s was held, Hero was still not present, due to update 8.0.0 changing Hero's debut year in All-Star Smash to be based on Erdrick's instead of the Luminary's.
 * Hero is the only character that can perform an instant KO without an item or Final Smash.
 * Hero has the most reflectable attacks in the Super Smash Bros. series at 14. Specifically, Frizz/Frizzle/Kafrizz, Kazap (first half), Woosh/Swoosh/Kaswoosh, Bang, Kaboom, Sizz, Sizzle, Snooze, Whack, and Thwack can all be reflected, as well as Hocus Pocus if any of the aforementioned attacks are randomly summoned.
 * Hero has the most absorbable attacks in the Super Smash Bros. series at 10. Specifically, Frizz/Frizzle/Kafrizz, Sizz, Sizzle, Bang, Kaboom, Snooze, Whack, and Thwack can all be absorbed, as well as Hocus Pocus if any of the aforementioned attacks are randomly summoned.
 * The text on some of Hero's weapons are, and can be translated as follows:
 * Erdrick's sword blade reads "Dragon Kuest", or Dragon Quest.
 * Erdrick and Luminary's shields both read "Roto", Erdrick's Japanese name.
 * Solo's sword hilt reads "mitibikaresi mono", an approximate romanization of "導かれし者 michibikareshi mono", meaning "the guided one". This resembles the Japanese subtitle for Dragon Quest IV, "導かれし者たち michibikareshi monotachi", literally "the people who are shown the way".
 * Luminary and Eight's swords also have text inscribed on them, but they are not Anglo-Saxon runes, and seem to have no known translations.
 * The scabbard the Luminary uses for the Sword of Light did not appear in the original game, but was instead taken from a key visual used for Dragon Quest XI.