SSB64-Jel
Smash Lord
I got this info from Ign.com. Anyway use this to talk about what you think of this coming to 3DS or if its just better off where its at.
Super Smash Bros.
Will it finally go portable?
It's been over 10 years since Nintendo's off-the-wall mascot brawler series first appeared on the N64, and you'd think that the game's legacy, by now, would have included a portable installment. Not so much. Though Super Smash Bros. has continued with two console sequels, we've still never had the chance to pit Mario against Kirby, Link against Samus or Donkey Kong against Fox McCloud on a handheld.
The 3DS could be the perfect place to right that wrong. The Super Smash Bros. series' signature floating, self-contained battlefields could be beautifully rendered and appear to be floating up off the screen thanks to the system's stereoscopic display, and when characters get smashed out of the arena they could fly either at the player's face or far off into the distance.
A 3DS edition of Super Smash Bros. would almost certainly be a new sequel rather than a direct remake of the N64 original. At the same time, though, the original's no-frills focus on just the fighting could be a refreshing change of pace. Just tight, addictive fighting and support for multiplayer battling with other 3DS owners through local wireless and Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection.
Super Smash Bros.
Will it finally go portable?
It's been over 10 years since Nintendo's off-the-wall mascot brawler series first appeared on the N64, and you'd think that the game's legacy, by now, would have included a portable installment. Not so much. Though Super Smash Bros. has continued with two console sequels, we've still never had the chance to pit Mario against Kirby, Link against Samus or Donkey Kong against Fox McCloud on a handheld.
The 3DS could be the perfect place to right that wrong. The Super Smash Bros. series' signature floating, self-contained battlefields could be beautifully rendered and appear to be floating up off the screen thanks to the system's stereoscopic display, and when characters get smashed out of the arena they could fly either at the player's face or far off into the distance.
A 3DS edition of Super Smash Bros. would almost certainly be a new sequel rather than a direct remake of the N64 original. At the same time, though, the original's no-frills focus on just the fighting could be a refreshing change of pace. Just tight, addictive fighting and support for multiplayer battling with other 3DS owners through local wireless and Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection.