Okay, hi everyone! This is lemar_deuce123, and I just wanted to say that I, just like any other Super Mario fan, love this game. I remember when I used to play this years ago with my older cousins, and I still play it now, obviously. Well, enough about how much I enjoy playing this game. I'm sure no one really wants to hear about that, and I really don't want to Wright much about it. Well anyway, I made this view to discuss one thing about the single player mode, and this is the level difficulty and how to really teach yourself to become a better player faster at this game if you're new to it like some others may be. In Super Smash Bros, when you play single player there is a mode called Classic Mode. This is the single player mode for the game. When in this mode you are to choose a character, in which normally, someone like me would pick the stars of the game, Mario and Luigi. After you have chosen your character, pick how many lives, which is also known as stock, you want, and which difficulty you want to play in. The number of lives, or stock, you are able to choose are 5. If you play Classic Mode for the first time, you should maybe start with 5 stocks just in case you get your tail handed to you and go with the unwanted goal of actually getting smashed.For beginners, I would normally say to pick the easy difficult setting. They also have a very easy setting, but that's just boring. I think if you want things to be very easy, you should just practice on a fight dummy, and have it to where he doesn't fight back. I think if you really want to be a good fighter in this game you should just start with the normal difficult setting, mostly because its not easy, or boring, and you do, in my opinion, learn to play better. This will also teach you the other character's moves better, enabling you to predict their actions for a better win. On difficulty settings like easy, they just move a little bit. On difficult settings like very easy, they barely move at all, and you really cant learn anything of get any fun out of fighting if your opponent doesn't fight back. What are they on strike or something?
you also have a series of levels in which, of course as you should know, go around fighting different bosses like luigi, donkey kong, pikachu, and other known characters like kirby. In the very end, you will be fighting a hand, in which is really in the game's reality the hand of the child who owns you, since the characters in single player mode are really just toys he makes a fight scene out of. And also, if you do good enough in the story mode, you will be able to fight a bonus character, in which if you beat the character you can access him or her in multiplayer, as well as single player mode. So now, with that being said I hope you have a nice time playing Super Smash Bros. See you later!
Okay, hi everyone! This is lemar_deuce123, and I just wanted to say that I, just like any other Super Mario fan, love this game. I remember when I used to play this years ago with my older cousins, and I still play it now, obviously. Well, enough about how much I enjoy playing this game. I'm sure no one really wants to hear about that, and I really don't want to Wright much about it. Well anyway, I made this view to discuss one thing about the single player mode, and this is the level difficulty and how to really teach yourself to become a better player faster at this game if you're new to it like some others may be. In Super Smash Bros, when you play single player there is a mode called Classic Mode. This is the single player mode for the game. When in this mode you are to choose a character, in which normally, someone like me would pick the stars of the game, Mario and Luigi. After you have chosen your character, pick how many lives, which is also known as stock, you want, and which difficulty you want to play in. The number of lives, or stock, you are able to choose are 5. If you play Classic Mode for the first time, you should maybe start with 5 stocks just in case you get your tail handed to you and go with the unwanted goal of actually getting smashed.For beginners, I would normally say to pick the easy difficult setting. They also have a very easy setting, but that's just boring. I think if you want things to be very easy, you should just practice on a fight dummy, and have it to where he doesn't fight back. I think if you really want to be a good fighter in this game you should just start with the normal difficult setting, mostly because its not easy, or boring, and you do, in my opinion, learn to play better. This will also teach you the other character's moves better, enabling you to predict their actions for a better win. On difficulty settings like easy, they just move a little bit. On difficult settings like very easy, they barely move at all, and you really cant learn anything of get any fun out of fighting if your opponent doesn't fight back. What are they on strike or something?
you also have a series of levels in which, of course as you should know, go around fighting different bosses like luigi, donkey kong, pikachu, and other known characters like kirby. In the very end, you will be fighting a hand, in which is really in the game's reality the hand of the child who owns you, since the characters in single player mode are really just toys he makes a fight scene out of. And also, if you do good enough in the story mode, you will be able to fight a bonus character, in which if you beat the character you can access him or her in multiplayer, as well as single player mode. So now, with that being said I hope you have a nice time playing Super Smash Bros. See you later!
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