Super Smash Bros. · Tutorial · 2017
Dancing Blade's meteor potential transforms a risky maneuver into one of Smash's most disrespectful plays. This compilation highlights the third hit of Marth's signature side-special, which can send opponents plummeting straight down and off the bottom blast zone in a single stock. The catch: the move is laggy, incredibly difficult to land, and susceptible to meteor cancelling, which is precisely why it appears so rarely in actual play. When a Marth lands it, the message is unmistakable—pure style and showboating. The video explores why this particular variation remains a niche flex despite its devastating potential, contrasting its theoretical power with the practical barriers that keep it from becoming a reliable kill tool. A rare look at the kind of tech that exists more for spectacle than competition.
Marth's 3rd hit of his side-b (Dancing blade) has a variation that can meteor your opponent, causing them to be smashed into the bottom blastzone and lose a stock. However, due to the fact that it can be meteor cancelled, it's laggy, and it's incredibly hard to land, you only ever see a Marth use it if they REALLY want to style all over their opponent in the most disrespectful…
Show more →Marth's 3rd hit of his side-b (Dancing blade) has a variation that can meteor your opponent, causing them to be smashed into the bottom blastzone and lose a stock. However, due to the fact that it can be meteor cancelled, it's laggy, and it's incredibly hard to land, you only ever see a Marth use it if they REALLY want to style all over their opponent in the most disrespectful way possible. It's just so rude. Thanks for watching! PS: I also considered including using clips from Roy's dancing blade in this video (As one of his hits is also a meteor) however, after checking my documents of all
From GR.'s YouTube channel