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Dispelling the myth about non video game characters in Smash

Jotari

Smash Journeyman
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Messages
438
Gearlt from the Witcher came up in the "Could they work for Smash" thread and I mentioned this general idea. I'm not sure how much this has been discussed on Smash Boards, but it's something I have got into debates about before. I'm sure it probably has been discussed, but I don't see it in any recent threads so...

It is my opinion that there is no hard rule against characters who originated from outside of video games from getting into Smash. Sakurai might have said that, but he's allegedly said stuff like non combat characters like Villagers and Nintendo only characters in the past. And, while I don't think there's a hard rule, I think there is a soft rule. Because if there's a hard rule, well, then it's already been violated by a number of characters.

First, we have the Pokemon characters. Yes, the series started out as a video game, but it is a multimedia franchise now. The anime makes a tonne of money and is one of the foremost elements of the intellectual properties. And there are Pokemon that have appeared in the anime and their movies before they made a debut in any video game material. Most noticeably Lucario who had a focus movie before his video game debut. Lucario is, technically, a movie character.

So that's what I mean by not a hard rule. But that's still within the confines of the more nebulous sphere of a soft rule. But we have more extreme examples than Lucario. My next character to talk about is Dracula. A literary character. First and foremost a literary character. Everyone knows who Dracula is and he is not primarily associated with video games, yet he is in Smash as a boss. Aha, but he is the Castlevannia version of Dracula you say!...but that doesn't actually help any arguments in this manner as pretty much every character has appeared in a video game at some point. That means a video game version of Mickey Mouse, like from Epic Mickey or Kingdom Hearts is not unprecedented, and Dracula as a character is not much older than Mickey Mouse. One is 94 years old and the other 125. And, you know, Mickey Mouse's image is in Smash already in the form of Sora's Keyblade chain. Obviously Nintendo and Disney didn't want to hash out the legal difficulties of putting a Mickey or Donald spirit in Smash, but it's not because of some kind of hard rule series bible for the game. If they wanted it to happen, it would have happened.

Next character to mention is a real person. Yeah, there is a real person in Smash. I'll give you a second to think who...Okay, I can't give you a second because it's like a video, just a bunch of text. But the answer is Dr Ruyta Kawashima who appears as an assist trophy. Again, a video game incarnation of a real person, but a character who very much did not originate in a video game. This means there is precedent for Mahatma Gandhi to be in Smash, based off of his appearance in Cid Meyr's Civilization. More realistically, that's precedent for Mike Tyson as another Punch Out character.

The last thing to mention is the Super Smash Bros. series that did originated outside of Smash. This is something only fans of the series would actually know, as it is for all practical intents and purposes a video game series. It has over 50 titles and has been released on practically every video game console around since it started in the late 80s. Yet it all started with a series of novels. A series of novels that kept on getting published alongside the games until 1996. If you haven't figured out which series I'm talking about yet, it's the MegaTen franchise, which Persona, the series Joker originates from, falls under. Joker is not a literary character, but he's not a literary character in the same way Lucario is not a video game character. Lucario is a character who technically originated in a movie, for a multimedia franchise that began in videogames. Joker is a character who technically originated in a video game, for a multimedia franchise that began in light novels.

So what is the unifying idea here? Joke and Lucario both, obviously, belong in Smash Bros. No one is going question their inclusion on the grounds of having insufficient credentials. And that's my main point, we are not going to see the likes of Iron Man or Shrek in Smash Bros, but it's not on a technicality. There is no technicality, as there is no rule that needs to be followed. The developers will do what they want. Any rule was broken in Brawl when they included characters outside of their legal scope. If they want to put a character in, the character's origin will not dissuade them. The only rule for Smash is "Would it be good in Smash?"

In 1999 Nintendo had a poll to see what characters would be popular to add to Melee. This was a write in poll similar to the Smash Ballot, only way less people participated. Number 6 on this poll, behind Bowser, Peach, Wario, King Dedede and Ganondorf; tied with Mewtwo and ahead of Marth, is the character of James Bond, originally created by Ian Fleming as a literary character and made massively popular by the film franchise. For people not around in the 90s this might seem super weird. Why did people want James Bond in Smash Bros.? That's because in 1997 the liscenced video game Golden Eye was released, and it was one hell of a game. One of the first Fires Person Shooters around and imo, still one of the best. But you know what's really weird? You know what makes it really normal to have voted for James Bond on that poll? Something from the 1995 James Bond movie Golden Eye was already in Smash Bros at the release of the first game. That being the Proximity Mine. I'm pretty sure they did not have the rights to use this item as it was quickly redesigned after the first game (though somehow still retaining the Smash 64 design outside of Japan in Melee with the origin of the item being labelled TOP SECRET), but the original design for this item is identical to the Proximity Mines used in the Golden Eye movie and made infamous by the game. Smash obviously has real world items like Baseball Bats and Fans in it, but this isn't the case of a real world item, it's a prop from a movie that, as far as I know, is not used for any actual real life weapons (and if it were, that would probably be under copyright they didn't use too). What matters is that the developers wanted to put this popular item into Smash, where it would function well, and they did, though they possibly shouldn't due to copy right, but no one ever noticed, or if it was noticed it was quietly taken care of. There was no rule, aside from possibly copyright, that prevented them from doing this.

So that brings me back to Gearalt. I have not played the Witcher. I have not read the books or seen the TV Show. I have no personal attachment to this character. But could he be in Smash? Hell, yeah, why not. He would fit the setting and his video games were super popular. I don't think popular enough to make it likely, and I don't know what his legal stance will be but the only question that matters is "Would it be good in Smash?"

Smash is not going to put some random character into the game that has a huge level of popularity. No matter how popular Game of Thrones is, they're not going to toss John Snow in. The demographic overlap for one has no certain basis of overlap and it just wouldn't work well on a stylistic level. But if a video game adaption is released and proves super possible like Golden Eye? If the adaption spawns sequels over the course of years that run parallel or even outstrip the original material like Shin Megami Tensei or Parasite Eve? If it's a multimedia franchise with games that are a popular arm of it, then really, why not? You can bet Pokemon would still be there even if Satoshii Tajiri had written a pokemon book five years before creating the games. There is tonnes of precedent for content originating outside of video games in Smash already. The only troubles are legal troubles and Smash has proven they can negotiate characters that seem impossible legally speaking before. Where the character originated from is not the issue. It's how popular the character is with a certain demograph overlap with Smash and how well they'd fit into Smash stylistically and mechanically that matters.
 
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Quillion

Smash Hero
Joined
Sep 17, 2014
Messages
5,937
To be honest, I don't really care about whether licensed game characters (seriously, what happened to calling them licensed games?) are allowed in Smash by Sakurai or Nintendo's rules.

What I say is that the pattern has worked well enough up to now that people are attached to it.

But also, licensed games from anywhere from The Witcher to Batman have come up in quality and recognition so much that if Sakurai makes an explicit statement that he doesn't want any of them in Smash in regards to their origins, it will come across as outdated and ignorant (and hypocritical given Jotari Jotari 's statements on either the "first appeared in video games" or "mean for video games" side).

But we'll see. We'll see if Shueisha will hear all the joking and non-joking requests to get Goku in and offer Sakurai and Nintendo the chance to use Goku plus a lot of money to sweeten the deal, and we'll see if Sakurai will reject it.
 

joemama267

Smash Rookie
Joined
Jun 29, 2024
Messages
1
Gearlt from the Witcher came up in the "Could they work for Smash" thread and I mentioned this general idea. I'm not sure how much this has been discussed on Smash Boards, but it's something I have got into debates about before. I'm sure it probably has been discussed, but I don't see it in any recent threads so...

It is my opinion that there is no hard rule against characters who originated from outside of video games from getting into Smash. Sakurai might have said that, but he's allegedly said stuff like non combat characters like Villagers and Nintendo only characters in the past. And, while I don't think there's a hard rule, I think there is a soft rule. Because if there's a hard rule, well, then it's already been violated by a number of characters.

First, we have the Pokemon characters. Yes, the series started out as a video game, but it is a multimedia franchise now. The anime makes a tonne of money and is one of the foremost elements of the intellectual properties. And there are Pokemon that have appeared in the anime and their movies before they made a debut in any video game material. Most noticeably Lucario who had a focus movie before his video game debut. Lucario is, technically, a movie character.

So that's what I mean by not a hard rule. But that's still within the confines of the more nebulous sphere of a soft rule. But we have more extreme examples than Lucario. My next character to talk about is Dracula. A literary character. First and foremost a literary character. Everyone knows who Dracula is and he is not primarily associated with video games, yet he is in Smash as a boss. Aha, but he is the Castlevannia version of Dracula you say!...but that doesn't actually help any arguments in this manner as pretty much every character has appeared in a video game at some point. That means a video game version of Mickey Mouse, like from Epic Mickey or Kingdom Hearts is not unprecedented, and Dracula as a character is not much older than Mickey Mouse. One is 94 years old and the other 125. And, you know, Mickey Mouse's image is in Smash already in the form of Sora's Keyblade chain. Obviously Nintendo and Disney didn't want to hash out the legal difficulties of putting a Mickey or Donald spirit in Smash, but it's not because of some kind of hard rule series bible for the game. If they wanted it to happen, it would have happened.

Next character to mention is a real person. Yeah, there is a real person in Smash. I'll give you a second to think who...Okay, I can't give you a second because it's like a video, just a bunch of text. But the answer is Dr Ruyta Kawashima who appears as an assist trophy. Again, a video game incarnation of a real person, but a character who very much did not originate in a video game. This means there is precedent for Mahatma Gandhi to be in Smash, based off of his appearance in Cid Meyr's Civilization. More realistically, that's precedent for Mike Tyson as another Punch Out character.

The last thing to mention is the Super Smash Bros. series that did originated outside of Smash. This is something only fans of the series would actually know, as it is for all practical intents and purposes a video game series. It has over 50 titles and has been released on practically every video game console around since it started in the late 80s. Yet it all started with a series of novels. A series of novels that kept on getting published alongside the games until 1996. If you haven't figured out which series I'm talking about yet, it's the MegaTen franchise, which Persona, the series Joker originates from, falls under. Joker is not a literary character, but he's not a literary character in the same way Lucario is not a video game character. Lucario is a character who technically originated in a movie, for a multimedia franchise that began in videogames. Joker is a character who technically originated in a video game, for a multimedia franchise that began in light novels.

So what is the unifying idea here? Joke and Lucario both, obviously, belong in Smash Bros. No one is going question their inclusion on the grounds of having insufficient credentials. And that's my main point, we are not going to see the likes of Iron Man or Shrek in Smash Bros, but it's not on a technicality. There is no technicality, as there is no rule that needs to be followed. The developers will do what they want. Any rule was broken in Brawl when they included characters outside of their legal scope. If they want to put a character in, the character's origin will not dissuade them. The only rule for Smash is "Would it be good in Smash?"

In 1999 Nintendo had a poll to see what characters would be popular to add to Melee. This was a write in poll similar to the Smash Ballot, only way less people participated. Number 6 on this poll, behind Bowser, Peach, Wario, King Dedede and Ganondorf; tied with Mewtwo and ahead of Marth, is the character of James Bond, originally created by Ian Fleming as a literary character and made massively popular by the film franchise. For people not around in the 90s this might seem super weird. Why did people want James Bond in Smash Bros.? That's because in 1997 the liscenced video game Golden Eye was released, and it was one hell of a game. One of the first Fires Person Shooters around and imo, still one of the best. But you know what's really weird? You know what makes it really normal to have voted for James Bond on that poll? Something from the 1995 James Bond movie Golden Eye was already in Smash Bros at the release of the first game. That being the Proximity Mine. I'm pretty sure they did not have the rights to use this item as it was quickly redesigned after the first game (though somehow still retaining the Smash 64 design outside of Japan in Melee with the origin of the item being labelled TOP SECRET), but the original design for this item is identical to the Proximity Mines used in the Golden Eye movie and made infamous by the game. Smash obviously has real world items like Baseball Bats and Fans in it, but this isn't the case of a real world item, it's a prop from a movie that, as far as I know, is not used for any actual real life weapons (and if it were, that would probably be under copyright they didn't use too). What matters is that the developers wanted to put this popular item into Smash, where it would function well, and they did, though they possibly shouldn't due to copy right, but no one ever noticed, or if it was noticed it was quietly taken care of. There was no rule, aside from possibly copyright, that prevented them from doing this.

So that brings me back to Gearalt. I have not played the Witcher. I have not read the books or seen the TV Show. I have no personal attachment to this character. But could he be in Smash? Hell, yeah, why not. He would fit the setting and his video games were super popular. I don't think popular enough to make it likely, and I don't know what his legal stance will be but the only question that matters is "Would it be good in Smash?"

Smash is not going to put some random character into the game that has a huge level of popularity. No matter how popular Game of Thrones is, they're not going to toss John Snow in. The demographic overlap for one has no certain basis of overlap and it just wouldn't work well on a stylistic level. But if a video game adaption is released and proves super possible like Golden Eye? If the adaption spawns sequels over the course of years that run parallel or even outstrip the original material like Shin Megami Tensei or Parasite Eve? If it's a multimedia franchise with games that are a popular arm of it, then really, why not? You can bet Pokemon would still be there even if Satoshii Tajiri had written a pokemon book five years before creating the games. There is tonnes of precedent for content originating outside of video games in Smash already. The only troubles are legal troubles and Smash has proven they can negotiate characters that seem impossible legally speaking before. Where the character originated from is not the issue. It's how popular the character is with a certain demograph overlap with Smash and how well they'd fit into Smash stylistically and mechanically that matters.
literally every character is from a video game
 

Jotari

Smash Journeyman
Joined
Apr 22, 2015
Messages
438
Which character in Smash is NOT originally from a video game ?
I've already talked about this at length in the OP, with the counter arguments addressed and analyzed. There is one playable character who debuted outside of a video game, one entire series that started as set of novels, one item that originated in a movie and one assist trophy based on a real person.
 
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MasterCheef

Smash Ace
Joined
Jul 7, 2021
Messages
724
I've already talked about this at length in the OP, with the counter arguments addressed and analyzed. There is one playable character who debuted outside of a video game, one entire series that started as set of novels, one item that originated in a movie and one assist trophy based on a real person.
I meant playable character. I doubt we will ever get non video game character(s) playable in smash.
 

Jotari

Smash Journeyman
Joined
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Messages
438
I meant playable character. I doubt we will ever get non video game character(s) playable in smash.
I agree in the broad sense, that's why I say there's a soft rule and not a hard rule, but what is a video game character would need to be defined. Because there's a video game version of practically every character. For example, had Smash Bros. Been made back in the NES era I think there could have been a genuinely possibility of Mike Tyson from Punch Out being a character, copyright not withstanding, due to the popularity of the character on the system despite him being a real person.
 
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DKing

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Everyone knows who Dracula is and he is not primarily associated with video games,
[/QUOTE
It's because Dracula is in public domain, they use the Dracula version of Castlevania. Not the one of Universal, some movie, anime or tv version of the characters. But for sure Dracula is not associated with video games.
 

Jotari

Smash Journeyman
Joined
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Messages
438
I don't see the relevance of that. The only impact public domain has is how easy or difficult the rights to a character is to use. The base concept of a character either originating in a video game, originating out of a video game or being a video game version of a character who originated out of a video game remains consistent.
 

Quillion

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Messages
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I'll ask again: if Shueisha offered Sakurai and Nintendo a lot of money to put Goku or any other Shonen Jump character in Smash, would Sakurai accept?

That's what this argument should be focused on.
 

DKing

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I'll ask again: if Shueisha offered Sakurai and Nintendo a lot of money to put Goku or any other Shonen Jump character in Smash, would Sakurai accept?

That's what this argument should be focused on.
You aware that Nintendo is the one that pay to use the other company IP.
 

Jotari

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Messages
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I'll ask again: if Shueisha offered Sakurai and Nintendo a lot of money to put Goku or any other Shonen Jump character in Smash, would Sakurai accept?

That's what this argument should be focused on.
I think it usually goes the other way. Nintendo offers the other company money for the rights to use the character.
 

Quillion

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You aware that Nintendo is the one that pay to use the other company IP.
I think it usually goes the other way. Nintendo offers the other company money for the rights to use the character.
Yeah, but Sakurai has made it clear if that were the case, there's no chance for licensed game characters. He does not want to put his foot forward, and Nintendo doesn't like working with outside IP to begin with.

The only hope for licensed game characters is for the company who owns them to put their foot forward and sweeten the deal.
 

Jotari

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Yeah, but Sakurai has made it clear if that were the case, there's no chance for licensed game characters. He does not want to put his foot forward, and Nintendo doesn't like working with outside IP to begin with.

The only hope for licensed game characters is for the company who owns them to put their foot forward and sweeten the deal.
I'm not saying a licensed game character is likely not that I even want it to happen (I don't). But if one emerges that they genuinely want, there's no rule stopping them. Any strict rule one can consistently apply has been long broken. The only thing they work on is "what will make Smash a better (and more profitable) game"
 

Quillion

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I'm not saying a licensed game character is likely not that I even want it to happen (I don't). But if one emerges that they genuinely want, there's no rule stopping them. Any strict rule one can consistently apply has been long broken. The only thing they work on is "what will make Smash a better (and more profitable) game"
You can argue all you want over whether it's a hard rule imposed by either Sakurai or Nintendo, but the fact of the matter is he's been very unwilling to make a move even when companies like Shueisha or Marvel are very much willing to have their characters represented in other companies' media.

I agree that the "spirit of the law" with having no non-video game characters is the rights issues (Sakurai himself has stated it's the rights on several occasions). But Sakurai has repeatedly shown his unwillingness to change that spirit.
 

Oracle Link

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I think an exception should definitly made for character who were planned as videogame characters but were changed for reasons out of the creators control!
1721046121236.png

For example Videospiel-man falls into this camp the only reason why he didnt start of in a video game is cause i couldnt make one! So instead i turned the first game Idea into a comic!
His dna is still 100% Videosgamey (other than that hes a self insert but thats beside the point) From levels, Check points, healing items, bosses and the like the entire story still feels videogamey and his name is literally Videogame-Man in german!
 

UserKev

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I'm of some convincing none video characters will eventually be included but it will be VERY Japanese centric. We can definitely expect Goku and maybe Godzilla. They will NEED to be hugely celebrated characters with even stronger ties to Japanese fans.
 

DragonRobotKing26

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Lucario is based on Pokémon Anime series,that one who have Ash,Cloud have an alternate costume based on Advent Children,and Marvel VS Capcom is mentioned on Ryu's Palutena's guidance,and i can't forget Sora,who have Disney characters but do'nt appears on Smash,franchises who are from video games,but also are non-video game media can be allowed,and i wonder if next Smash, IDW Sonic characters gets trophies or spirits or if League of Legends adds Jinx having an alternate costume based on Arcane
 

Bowser D.X

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Lucario first appeared in that movie but he would have been conceptualized for Pokemon Diamond and Pearl. The movie released around the same time as Pokemon XD which included Bonsly and Munchlax as cameo Pokemon, so it was the same "show the public one of the new Pokemon for gen 4" just made into a film.
 

DKing

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I think that Sakurai or Nintendo saw that keeping the licensing of 4th party would be harsh . For example some of the first Batman games were produced by Sunsoft. Nowadays is not the case anymore. And third party sometimes could be tricky to keep (Square enix ). And Nintendo would not want to have this difficulty.
 
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Champion of Hyrule

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I'm of some convincing none video characters will eventually be included but it will be VERY Japanese centric. We can definitely expect Goku and maybe Godzilla. They will NEED to be hugely celebrated characters with even stronger ties to Japanese fans.
I disagree that it has to be a character made in Japan. Everyone working on Smash knows it has a massive fanbase across the world and there are plenty of western characters who would be popular enough in Japan to make it work (and have probably had at least one game developed in Japan anyway).
 

UserKev

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I disagree that it has to be a character made in Japan. Everyone working on Smash knows it has a massive fanbase across the world and there are plenty of western characters who would be popular enough in Japan to make it work (and have probably had at least one game developed in Japan anyway).
Like Spiderman? I feel like this is the rule Smash will strongly keep a tight grip. Western centric characters are a bit too complicated. Yes, Smash has a wide fan base but will still sell regardless.
 

Champion of Hyrule

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Like Spiderman? I feel like this is the rule Smash will strongly keep a tight grip. Western centric characters are a bit too complicated. Yes, Smash has a wide fan base but will still sell regardless.
Nintendo has collabed with western properties before, and lots of Japanese fighting games like Tekken and SoulCalibur have gotten western characters as their guest characters first. I don’t really see how it’s too complicated for Smash at all, to suggest it’s some iron clad rule feels arbitrary.
 

DKing

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Nintendo has collabed with western properties before, and lots of Japanese fighting games like Tekken and SoulCalibur have gotten western characters as their guest characters first. I don’t really see how it’s too complicated for Smash at all, to suggest it’s some iron clad rule feels arbitrary.
Off-topic but I like your profile picture.
 

Quillion

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I think that Sakurai or Nintendo saw that keeping the licensing of 4th party would be harsh . For example some of the first Batman games were produced by Sunsoft. Nowadays is not the case anymore. And third party sometimes could be tricky to keep (Square enix ). And Nintendo would not want to have this difficulty.
I think that was the case back then, but not so much now with things like a character from The Walking Dead TV show being in Tekken.

The real barrier now is that Sakurai and Nintendo are deliberately setting themselves apart.
 

DKing

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I think that was the case back then, but not so much now with things like a character from The Walking Dead TV show being in Tekken.

The real barrier now is that Sakurai and Nintendo are deliberately setting themselves apart.
I still saw it gonna be difficult to control with all the 4th party out there that have really popular movie or tv show(Western show in Europe, North America, Australia, Japan,India with Bollywood). And if they put goku they should also put astroboy because it motivated akira toriyama to draw Dragonball. No Astroboy no Dragonball but people would be angry if that happens. But I still see it not a good idea like think if some group favorite 4th party doesn't make it , or a lot of 4th party make it before Waluigi or longtime 3rd party favorite. It would be heartbroken sadly.
 

xavi223

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I agree that Sakurai and Nintendo are intentionally keeping their distance from 4th party characters. But I still think it would be tough to manage with all the popular Western TV shows and movies out there. For example, if they added Goku, they'd also have to consider Astro Boy, since it inspired Akira Toriyama to create Dragon Ball. But if they did that, people might get upset if their favorite 4th party character didn't make the cut. Or, what if a bunch of 4th party characters got in before Waluigi or other long-time 3rd party favorites? It would be heartbreaking, sadly.
 

Jotari

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I still saw it gonna be difficult to control with all the 4th party out there that have really popular movie or tv show(Western show in Europe, North America, Australia, Japan,India with Bollywood). And if they put goku they should also put astroboy because it motivated akira toriyama to draw Dragonball. No Astroboy no Dragonball but people would be angry if that happens. But I still see it not a good idea like think if some group favorite 4th party doesn't make it , or a lot of 4th party make it before Waluigi or longtime 3rd party favorite. It would be heartbroken sadly.
I agree that Sakurai and Nintendo are intentionally keeping their distance from 4th party characters. But I still think it would be tough to manage with all the popular Western TV shows and movies out there. For example, if they added Goku, they'd also have to consider Astro Boy, since it inspired Akira Toriyama to create Dragon Ball. But if they did that, people might get upset if their favorite 4th party character didn't make the cut. Or, what if a bunch of 4th party characters got in before Waluigi or other long-time 3rd party favorites? It would be heartbreaking, sadly.
Are you guys AIs or something? Because this is the exact same post.
 
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