Fan game: Difference between revisions

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'''Fan games''' are unofficial games based on the ''Super Smash Bros.'' series, but created by fans with low or non-existent budgets. While they are unofficial, they are sometimes considered an important part of the [[Super Smash Bros. (universe)|Smash Bros.]] community. Multiple fan games have been created, each with its own fanbase. As a difference to retail products, fan games are free and require a simple internet download. Fan games often add [[character]]s many fans want in the official Smash Bros. games (such as Mega Man or Ryu), and are made with completely 2D sprites and backgrounds, compared to the 2.5D of the official Smash Bros. games. Many fan games also tend to have considerably simpler mechanics than retail games; ''Super Smash Flash'', for instance, only gives roughly five moves to a character, while ''MultiHero'' characters have around seven.
A '''fan game''' is a game created by the fans of a work that is explicitly based on said work. In terms of the ''{{b| Super Smash Bros.|series}}'' series, this results in low-budget, non-profit games that imitate the gameplay of the series, while simultaneously allowing fans to create and use characters and stages without having to [[hack]] an existing game. Fan games tend to be created in environments such as Flash, Game Maker, or Clickteam Fusion, and as a result, are almost exclusively sprite-based. Although the games often feature trademarked characters, settings, music, and other such aspects, their lower production values and presentation causes fan games to be considered legal under parody or fair use laws.


While there are many popular fan games, the most popular fan games include ''Super Smash Flash'' and its sequel,  ''Super Smash Flash 2''. Numerous others exist, such as ''Super Smash Bros. Crusade'', ''Super Smash Bros. NES'', ''Super Smash X'', ''Super Nuke Bros.'', ''Smash Bros. Duel'', ''MultiHero'', and ''Super Smash Bros. Engine Demo''.
Projects that involve [[Gameplay modification|modification of the actual games in the series]] can be considered a type of fan game. Such projects, however, are often considered separate from typical fan games, due to their differing development; fan games are generally created from scratch, whereas mods involve modifying an existing game.
<!--DO NOT add examples of any sort for any reason. This article is to acknowledge they exist, not make a list of them.-->
<center><gallery>
File:MultiHero1.png|An example of a fan game. ''MultiHero'' has mechanics similar to ''Super Smash Bros.'', such as four player action, items and a stock mode, among other similarities.
File:Multihero.png|Fan games, however, can have their own properties. ''MultiHero'', for instance, has the concept of "Super Specials", which predated the concept of [[Final Smashes]] in ''Brawl''.
File:SuperSmashFlash.png|''Super Smash Flash'', by Mcleodgaming, is another fan game that is based off of ''Melee'', but adds new characters and stages.
File:New SSF2 Screenshot41.png| Mario in the sequel to Super Smash Flash, ''Super Smash Flash 2'', a fan game based off of ''Brawl''.
</gallery></center>


 
[[Category:Games]]
==External links==
[http://www.mcleodgaming.com/viewflash.php?id=5&type=game Super Smash Flash]
 
[http://www.mcleodgaming.com/viewflash.php?id=6&type=game Super Smash Flash 2]
 
[http://www.mcleodgaming.com Mcleodgaming]

Latest revision as of 21:41, January 5, 2021

A fan game is a game created by the fans of a work that is explicitly based on said work. In terms of the Super Smash Bros. series, this results in low-budget, non-profit games that imitate the gameplay of the series, while simultaneously allowing fans to create and use characters and stages without having to hack an existing game. Fan games tend to be created in environments such as Flash, Game Maker, or Clickteam Fusion, and as a result, are almost exclusively sprite-based. Although the games often feature trademarked characters, settings, music, and other such aspects, their lower production values and presentation causes fan games to be considered legal under parody or fair use laws.

Projects that involve modification of the actual games in the series can be considered a type of fan game. Such projects, however, are often considered separate from typical fan games, due to their differing development; fan games are generally created from scratch, whereas mods involve modifying an existing game.