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KO: Difference between revisions

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*In a [[Stock]] match, the KO'd player loses a stock. If a players loses all their stock they will receive the following:
*In a [[Stock]] match, the KO'd player loses a stock. If a players loses all their stock they will receive the following:
**Single-player: A [[Continue]] or a Game Over (the latter if the player doesn't have enough [[coins (lottery)|coins]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' or chooses not to continue).
**Single-player: A [[Continue]] or a Game Over (the latter if the player doesn't have enough [[coins (lottery)|coins]] in ''[[Super Smash Bros. Melee]]'' and ''[[Super Smash Bros. Brawl]]'' or chooses not to continue).
**Multiplayer: Removal from the rest of the match. In a team match, the player can [[Share Stock|"borrow" a life from an ally]].
**Multiplayer: Removal from the rest of the match. In a team match, the player can [[Share Stock|"borrow" a stock from an ally]].
*In a [[Coin Battle]], KO'd players lose half their [[Smash Coins and Bills|smash coins]], rounded down. [[Super Smash Bros. Brawl|''Brawl'']] prevents a player from losing more than 100 smash coins at once. The lost coinage flies into play if the KO was made off the side.
*In a [[Coin Battle]], KO'd players lose half their [[Smash Coins and Bills|smash coins]], rounded down. [[Super Smash Bros. Brawl|''Brawl'']] prevents a player from losing more than 100 smash coins at once. The lost coinage flies into play if the KO was made off the side.
*In the [[Subspace Emissary]], the next character in the lineup is loaded and teleported into play without a revival platform. One stock is also lost.
*In the [[Subspace Emissary]], the next character in the lineup is loaded and teleported into play without a revival platform. One stock is also lost.

Revision as of 23:35, February 27, 2012

File:KO.jpg
As shown in the picture above, Link has KO'd Mario

A KO, short for knock-out or knock-off, is the term used to describe the situation where a player is knocked back beyond the stage's blast lines by the opponent's actions. The KO'd player is sent to a revival platform to re-enter the match. The following may then happen depending on the type of match:

  • In a Time match, the KO'd player loses a point, while the player who made the KO gains a point.
  • In a Stock match, the KO'd player loses a stock. If a players loses all their stock they will receive the following:
  • In a Coin Battle, KO'd players lose half their smash coins, rounded down. Brawl prevents a player from losing more than 100 smash coins at once. The lost coinage flies into play if the KO was made off the side.
  • In the Subspace Emissary, the next character in the lineup is loaded and teleported into play without a revival platform. One stock is also lost.
    • Characters can also be KO'd in the Subspace Emissary if they are crushed by moving walls, ceilings, or floors.

KO property

In Super Smash Bros. and Melee, each character has a "KO property" which starts out empty. When characters are hit by any attack (be it a physical attack, a projectile, an item, etc.), their KO property is set to match whoever made the hit. Stage elements do not change the KO property. The KO property is reset once a character lands on the ground and is no longer moving as a result of the attack's knockback. When the character is KO'd, the KO goes to whoever matches the KO property. If the property is null, the KO counts as a self-destruct. In simple terms, it goes to whoever made the last hit.

However, this format was altered for Super Smash Bros. Brawl. In Brawl, a character's KO property is never reset during a stock. If a character is hit at any time during a stock, it becomes impossible to self-destruct; a KO will be given to whoever make the last hit. Which means if a character is hit by an attack and jumps off the edge, it will count as a KO, not an SD. This can give other players a free KO if the target character dies on their own. This was possibly implemented to prevent SDing so an opponent couldn't KO players.

There are exceptions, however, particularly during most final smashes. If players jump off the stage during a final smash, such as Zero Laser, then, unless someone else hit them before landing, it will count towards the user of the final smash, instead of the last one to hit them (Samus in this case). More over, dying during certain final smashes, such as Giga Bowser will result in a self-destruct instead of a KO, even if players have been damaged by opponents, previously. Characters with invincibility from a Starman will also self-destruct instead of being KO'd.

See also