SSBU Icon.png

King K. Rool (SSBU)

From SmashWiki, the Super Smash Bros. wiki
Revision as of 01:08, October 19, 2018 by 67.80.28.74 (talk)
Jump to navigationJump to search
Future.png This page documents information about or related to a future release.
All information in this article must be verifiable, and adhere to SmashWiki's new game procedure.
Potentially contentious information should be discussed on the talk page before being added.
This article is about King K. Rool's appearance in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. For the character in other contexts, see King K. Rool.
King K. Rool
in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
King K. Rool
Symbol of the DK series.
Universe Donkey Kong
Availability Unlockable
Final Smash Blast-O-Matic
KingKRoolHeadSSBU.png
King K. Rool Comes Aboard!
—Introduction Tagline
With long-distance special moves like the Blunderbuss, and counter moves like Stomach Attack, he is a versatile fighter. His Final Smash, Blast-O-Matic, was apparently a weapon created to destroy DK Island...
Super Smash Blog, Super Smash Bros. Ultimate Official Site

King K. Rool (キングクルール, King K. Rool) is a playable character in Super Smash Bros. Ultimate. A long-running nemesis of Donkey Kong, Diddy Kong, and the rest of the Kong clan, he was the main antagonist of the original Donkey Kong Country trilogy and several subsequent games in the broader Donkey Kong series. He was announced as a newcomer alongside Simon, Richter, Chrom, and Dark Samus in the Ultimate-centric Nintendo Direct on August 8th, 2018.

Rather than being voiced by Toshihide Tsuchiya, who has voiced the character since 2007's Donkey Kong Barrel Blast, King K. Rool bellows like a real crocodile, similar to how Bowser, Donkey Kong, and Diddy Kong emit realistic animal sounds.

Attributes

An icon used in notice templates. NOTE: SmashWiki is not speculative. Please refrain from adding detailed data values derived from pre-release gameplay footage, such as the E3 demo. Such data (damage values, launch trajectories, frame data, etc.) are subject to change before the official release.
  • K. Rool's design is based on his appearance in the original Donkey Kong Country, with his cape going down to his waist instead of stopping at his middle back and his belly being plated in golden armor.[1] His scales are also more pronounced than in any other appearance. However, his smaller crown, shortened tail, blue gem at the front of his cape, lack of a vertical indentation on his stomach, and more expressive eyes come from Donkey Kong spinoff developer Paon's post-Donkey Kong 64 redesign of the character.
  • K. Rool's idle pose resembles his idle from Donkey Kong Country.
  • K. Rool dashes on all four limbs, akin to real-life alligators and crocodiles thus making him a lot more intimidating, though he performs his walk animation on two legs.
  • A taunt where K. Rool viciously snaps forward, similar to Bowser's side taunt.
  • A taunt where K. Rool does a sumo-esque stomp.
  • A taunt where K. Rool slaps his belly once in amusement.
  • An idle where K. Rool points at himself and smiles.
  • An on-screen appearance involving him dropping from the sky with his arms crossed before chuckling. His pose is based on how he appears in Donkey Konga.
  • A victory pose where he flips his cape around before ending in a pose similar to his official artwork.
  • King K. Rool's victory theme is a flourished orchestration of the first few bars of "Gang-Plank Galleon", his boss theme from the original Donkey Kong Country.[2]

Known moveset

  • He uses various moves from his appearances in the Donkey Kong Country games:
    • His crown throw from the original Donkey Kong Country, presumably his side special move. K. Rool can attack and move after the crown is thrown and it will attempt to return to him, similar to Link's Boomerang. If K. Rool does not catch the crown on its return, it will continue flying off-screen, where it will eventually return to his head. If left alone, it will disappear and reappear on his head. The crown acts as an item, so it can be picked up or pocketed for later use.
    • His Blunderbuss from Donkey Kong Country 2: Diddy's Kong Quest, presumably his neutral special move. K. Rool also puts on the pirate hat he wears under his "Kaptain K. Rool" persona in that game. After firing a Kannonball, the Blunderbuss can vacuum up either the Kannonball, other projectiles, or other opponents and shoot them back out at an angle.
    • His helicopter backpack from Donkey Kong Country 3: Dixie Kong's Double Trouble!, presumably his up special move. It is similar to Snake's Cypher.
    • One of his boxing gloves from Donkey Kong 64, which appears to be his forward smash. The boxing glove materializes on the hand that performs the punch.
  • Stomach Attack, which involves K. Rool inflating his belly as a counterattack, presumably his down special move. Based on certain enemies from the Donkey Kong Country series being invulnerable from certain attacks, most noticeably the Klump and Krusha-type enemies.
  • A sumo-esque palm strike followed by a claw swipe, similar to Bowser's neutral attack.
  • A quick uppercut, presumably his up tilt.
  • A burying stomp resembling a sumo stance, presumably his down tilt or down smash.
  • A belly-first lunge with armor, presumably his dash attack. Based on an attack from Donkey Kong Land.
  • A belly flop neutral aerial where K. Rool inflates his stomach, similar to King Dedede's.
  • An aerial dropkick forward aerial, similar to Bowser's back aerial.
  • An overhead punch back aerial, similar to if Ganondorf's forward aerial was performed while turning around.
  • A headbutt up aerial that goes straight upward.
  • A stomping down aerial, similar to Ganondorf's.
  • An up throw where K. Rool heaves the opponent over his head, leaps past the upper blast line, and performs an Argentine backbreaker upon landing, blasting the opponent upwards. Similar to Kirby's and Charizard's up throws.
  • A back throw where K. Rool drags the opponent on the ground and throws them upwards.
  • Blast-O-Matic: K. Rool's Final Smash, which is based on the game over screen from Donkey Kong 64. After stomping the ground and dashing into his foes, he uses his Blast-O-Matic to destroy Donkey Kong Island with his victims on it.

Reveal trailer

<youtube>0-gfC1upmoA</youtube>

Gallery

Character showcase video

<youtube>pKcXgSV8PTE</youtube>

Trivia

  • Outside of minor cameos, Ultimate marks King K. Rool's first physical appearance in a decade, as he last appeared in 2008's Mario Super Sluggers.
  • King K. Rool is the third playable Smash Bros. character to have been created outside Japan, following Diddy Kong, also created as part of the Donkey Kong Country series by the British developer Rare, and Dark Samus, who was created by the Texas-based Retro Studios.
  • King K. Rool is the third of four newcomers to be announced in Ultimate that was previously featured as a Mii Fighter costume in Super Smash Bros. 4. The other three are Inkling, Chrom, and Isabelle.
  • One of the poses King K. Rool strikes in his victory animations is the same one he poses in his official artwork.
  • According to Masahiro Sakurai, King K. Rool's inclusion in Ultimate was a result of his popularity in the Super Smash Bros. Fighter Ballot.[3]
  • Like King Dedede and Lucina, K. Rool's name is pronounced differently between the different international versions of Ultimate. It is pronounced "King Kay-Rool" in English and "King Kruel" in Japanese.
    • This is the first time that the English name is spoken verbally in a game. The first time it was spoken verbally was in the pilot episode of the Donkey Kong Country animated series, although it was alternated with the pronunciation "King Kuh-Rool" before the pronunciation of "King Kay-Rool" was dropped entirely.
  • In King K. Rool's trailer, King Dedede disguising himself as King K. Rool is similar to the Donkey Kong Country episode "Just Kidding", in which Diddy Kong and Candy Kong make Donkey Kong use a King K. Rool costume to pull a prank on Cranky on All Fool's Day, but backfire when they accidentally bring the real King K. Rool to Cranky's house and the Crystal Coconut.

References