Mega Man
Template:Character-infobox Mega Man is the titular protagonist of the Mega Man video game series. In his own series, Mega Man was originally created in the year 200X as a robot named Rock to be Dr. Light's lab assistant. However, when Light's jealous colleague Dr. Wily had taken Dr. Light's industrial robots and reprogrammed them for evil, Rock volunteered to be converted into a battle robot to combat them, being dubbed Mega Man.
In the Mario series, Mega Man has only made appearances in the Club Nintendo comics.
History
Club Nintendo comics
Mega Man's first appearance in the Mario series is in "Super Mario: Die Bescherung". The comic shows him with several other characters at Mario and Luigi's Christmas party.
His first and only major appearance was in the 1993 comic "Super Mario: Die Verwandlung", where he serves as Dr. Light's assistant. Besides taking care of the doctor and welcoming his visitors, Mega Man also drives the car they use for catching Wario.
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U
- Main article: SmashWiki:Mega Man (SSB4)
After twenty years of not appearing in any Mario-related media, Mega Man has been confirmed to be a playable guest character in the upcoming Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS / Wii U. Mega Man's appearance and aesthetics in this game are based on his appearance in the NES titles, possessing a moveset centered on shooting his opponents; he can use the Mega Buster to fire multiple single shots, or use the Charge Shot as a side smash attack[1]. His only melee attacks are the slide move, making its debut in Mega Man 3, and the Mega Upper, a move introduced in Mega Man 2: The Power Fighters which later appeared in Marvel vs. Capcom. His recovery is the Rush Coil, a common ability in the Mega Man series that is introduced in Mega Man 3.
He can also use various Robot Master abilities from his series.[2] These include:
- Super Arm, from the original Mega Man, as a throw.
- Metal Blade, which operates similarly to its Mega Man 2 incarnation, though the projectiles can be picked up and thrown.
- A tornado-based move (possibly Air Shooter from Mega Man 2)[3] as an aerial up projectile.
- Leaf Shield, also from Mega Man 2.
- Crash Bomber, also from Mega Man 2, which operates identically to the Gooey Bomb from Super Smash Bros. Brawl.
- Top Spin from Mega Man 3, which is a spinning attack, similar to Meta Knight's Mach Tornado from Brawl.
- Hard Knuckle as a Meteor Smash, which can be fired as a projectile just like in Mega Man 3.
- Spark Shock and Flame Blast, from Mega Man 3 and Mega Man 6 respectively, uniquely utilize both Mega Busters in Mega Man's arms though using either one causes the Busters to open up and vent out excess heat.
- Slash Claw from Mega Man 7 and Flame Sword from Mega Man 8 as ariel-based melee attacks.
Gallery
- Megaman intro.png
Mega Man's introduction.
- MMstart.PNG
Trivia
- In the comic "Super Mario: Mario im Wunderland", Kirby mentions that he wants to look like Mega Man.
- Mega Man is the third playable 3rd party fighter to appear in the Super Smash Bros. series and the first have to debuted on a Nintendo system.
- Mega Man series creator Keiji Inafune took some level of inspiration from Mario when designing his own series.[4]
- The venting of Mega Man's busters originated in the Sega Saturn and Playstation title Super Adventure Rockman. Doing so would prevent him from overheating.
- The Mad sketch, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid Icarus," stars Pit and features several other characters that appeared in the Super Smash Bros. series as well as Mega Man. In the end Mega Man, along with, Donkey Kong, Pikachu, Sonic the Hedgehog, and Pit, even engage in a Super Smash Bros.-like fight. This may have been a coincidence, or it may have been a hint that Mega Man would appear as playable character in the then-unannounced Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS/Wii U.