No hate man. There is legitimate reason to suspect Ridley may not make it again. I think the problem is that most people would rather not accept it if they have a choice. Ridley IS overdue, but hey, there is always a chance that the roadblocks of programming him, making him fit in to Smash's playable roster, and Sakurai's doubts could hold him back. I'm sure people will get annoyed with me for saying this, even though I SUPPORT Ridley, but there it is.
On another note.
"Mr. Vaztor, welcome back....we've...missed you."
"Vaztor: It ends this month."
"We know it does, we've seen it. That's why the rest of Smashboards is just going to enjoy the show.
We already know that Ridley is the one who makes it."
Thanks for being respectful about this.
For me personally, I don't necessarily think there's any roadblocks to programming him. I think they could easily put him in the game if they had their minds set on it.
I just feel as if Ridley is not in the same league with the other characters on the roster and on top of that, I feel as if Sakurai does respect some iota of size canon within contained game universes.
What I mean by that is, on the roster there is a specific breed of character that usually gets in, and the reasons are usually easy to distinguish. They are generally very iconic, contribute something new and unique to the game, represent an under-represented series, and make sense and work well in the Smash universe. Or maybe they're there for promotional reasons. Old and new games, future Nintendo plans we know nothing about. After all, many people forget Smash is also a marketing tool. I'm not saying this to insult Ridley, as there are plenty of characters I love that I know don't fit this mold for the roster.
I think the Brawl roster is a great example to get your bearings on what I'm trying to say and also gives some evidence for why I feel this way in regards to Ridley.
Metaknight, Pit, Wario are all fairly iconic. Wario and Pit represent their own series and bring something entirely new to the table. Metaknight fleshes out the Kirby series and is also a fairly popular and original choice.
Lucario, Ike, Diddy Kong, Dedede and Olimar were all characters that fit this mold almost perfectly. Big names, unique attributes, and very easy to forecast their inclusion.
Now obviously there are exceptions, clones and wildcards (Pokemon Trainer, ROB) but Ridley is neither of those. He wouldn't necessarily be a shock if he got on the roster (Even to someone like me) and he would most likely be an original character, so I don't see those sort of exceptions applying to him.
Maybe I'm not explaining it well, but it's almost a sixth sense as to the type of characters that are cut from the same cloth. I feel as if the characters that have that now are not the Ridley/Bowser Jr./Krystal/Toad/Waluigi type characters but the Little Mac, Chrom, Takamaru, Saki, types. Someone from Kid Icarus uprising (my bets are on Magnus and/or Hades), a replacement Pokemon rep, stuff like that. These aren't exact predictions, but a framework for the type of characters I expect.
I feel as if Ridley was going to be in the game, he would've been shown in that very first Brawl E3 trailer. The sole purpose of ZSS was to flesh out the Metroid roster. There is no doubt that Ridley was highly requested prior to the Brawl reveal so it kind of fills a picture in my mind for why Sakurai thought a virtual unknown a better choice than someone with more buzz.
I just don't really see Ridley as cut from this cloth of characters I've outlined. I don't believe he's particularly an iconic character in the same vein. For the general population he's more of a generic monster type lacking a distinguishing personality for people to latch onto. People easily relate more to characters like Metaknight and Wario and Diddy Kong. Moveset wise, he can certainly work, but as a contribution to the roster as a whole, he's not entirely worthwhile. Outside of a couple of unique moves, there's really not much moveset value in there like someone like Olimar or Dedede would easily have. Nor is there really any reason to go all out in creating an ultimately creative moveset (Akin to Fox, C. Falcon, ROB) for a character like Ridley as he already has a fleshed out set of abilities.
And as far as the size argument goes, I know everyone mentions Olimar, Kirby being the size of a quarter, but that's only relative to their game universes. The logistical canon size (ie "size of a quarter") doesn't really matter in terms of a players perspective. Olimar and Kirby don't look weird fighting alongside Mario and Link because from a player's perspective in their individual games, they are all roughly equivalent. They are also both, again, highly iconic, represent new franchises, bring entirely new and original moveset potential to the table.
Ridley on the other hand is seen more from a second person view. You identify with Samus and Ridley is a towering beast. My personal belief is that Sakurai respects the size canon in this regard. As such, we got Ridley as a boss in Brawl and ZSS as a playable character. Couple that with Ridley lacking the sort of iconic, well known traits someone like Bowser has (who arguably can fit into some of these same arguments) and it's easy to see how he might slip through the cracks on the roster.
Anyways, I've rambled a bit much, but I felt it was worth it to re-highlight my view. I don't think Ridley is impossible. I have always contended that he is a possibility and he has no real definitive limitations as anything is possible. I just strongly feels he's not particularly apt for the framework of the roster. Any "too big" arguments I make are more so a reflection of how I believe Sakurai sees Ridley's role in the Smash universe. I could be wrong and I'll be the first to admit it so we can all laugh about it. But until then I stand by this.