Cross-platform comparison of Super Smash Bros. 4: Difference between revisions

→‎Stages: nobody ever seems to remember this stage exists
m (Though I guess, with that, it's more the Style Switch: Ground Theme that's being applied, but still.)
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A majority of the stages are exclusive to one version or the other. The 3DS version features more stages from handheld games, while the Wii U version features more stages from console games as well as more stages in general. Even the two games' versions of Battlefield, while identical in physics, are different in aesthetics.<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQD1yJinzeQ</ref> The Wii U version also has larger stages such as Big Battlefield to allow for 8-Player Smash.
A majority of the stages are exclusive to one version or the other. The 3DS version features more stages from handheld games, while the Wii U version features more stages from console games as well as more stages in general. Even the two games' versions of Battlefield, while identical in physics, are different in aesthetics.<ref>http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vQD1yJinzeQ</ref> The Wii U version also has larger stages such as Big Battlefield to allow for 8-Player Smash.


In the 3DS version, much like in ''Melee'', no stage has more than two songs tied to it, with the exception of [[Super Mario Maker]]; on the Wii U, this number is higher, and the music on each stage can be set through [[My Music]], a returning feature from ''Brawl''.
In the 3DS version, much like in ''Melee'', no stage has more than two songs tied to it, with the exceptions of {{SSB4|Dream Land}} and [[Super Mario Maker]]; on the Wii U, this number is higher, and the music on each stage can be set through [[My Music]], a returning feature from ''Brawl''.


===Graphics===
===Graphics===