In the games, Mario would navigate through galaxies by going from planet to planet, with each planet having its own gravitational pull, to reach the Power and Grand Stars. This stage is based on both Super Mario Galaxy games. Gateway Galaxy as it originally appeared in Super Mario Galaxy. Star bits may occasionally rain down on the stage, though this has no effect on the fight.ĭespite the game's attempt to emulate curved gravity, the ground on the sides of the stage still behaves like a downwards slope of increasing intensity, and as such fighters who land on the ground will slide backwards a distance depending on their fall speed and traction, and fighters who are meteor smashed into it will bounce off at a wider angle. The stage also features walk-off blast lines. Two static soft platforms are present, one on the right and one, higher, at the left.
Most projectiles are also affected by gravity and move according to the planet's curvature, with a few exceptions, notably Fox's Blaster and Robin's Thoron. The background features a few trees and a house on the ground and, except in 8-Player mode, several spaceships in the sky.ĭue to the planet's small size, the stage has a noticeable curvature to it: the center of gravity is the center of the planet, so jumping or getting launched upwards from the edge will cause the character to move diagonally. The characters fight on a small, grassy planet in deep space. In Ultimate, Rosalina & Luma are fought here for their unlock battle.Ī demonstration of gravity's effect on projectiles: Robin's Thoron goes straight, while R.O.B.'s Super Robo Beam follows the planet's curvature. This stage is available as one of the stages in 8-Player Smash. It was officially confirmed on November 15, 2013, though one of the daily pics on the site teased it as much as two months prior. Mario Galaxy ( マリオギャラクシー, Mario Galaxy) is a stage that appears in Super Smash Bros. The planetary gravity is tightly bound to the core, so jumps straight off platforms or directly upward will tend to send fighters in a diagonal direction. Rosalina in the Observatory / Luma's Theme