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Fairy Bottle

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Fairy Bottle
Bottled Fairy - Twilight Princess.png
The Legend of Zelda (universe)
Bottled Fairy from Twilight Princess.
Universe The Legend of Zelda
Appears in SSB4
Ultimate
Item class Throwing, Recovery
Article on Zelda Wiki Fairy Bottle
Picking up this item will heal 100 points of damage for a player--as long as the player was already over 100%. If a player doesn't have enough damage, the Fairy Bottle has no effect, so the item's usefulness depends greatly on the situation.
Super Smash Bros. 4 Official Site

The Fairy Bottle (妖精のビン, Fairy Bottle) is an item that debuted in Super Smash Bros. 4. It can be picked up and thrown, and can only be opened by a player with 100% damage or more; doing so will release the fairy inside, reducing the user's damage by 100%. Because it can't be opened by someone under 100%, they can wield it as both a weapon (against players that are also under 100%), use it on an ally to heal them, or just hold it as a backup for when their own damage reaches 100%+, as it will automatically heal them as soon as their damage reaches 100%. In this manner, it is a combination of the Heart Container and the Team Healer.

Origin[edit]

Link catching a Fairy in a bottle in The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time.

Fairies first appeared in The Legend of Zelda and have appeared in almost every subsequent Zelda game since as a method of regaining health. The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past introduced the ability to capture Fairies in bottles, and many Zelda games since have also allowed this, which will cause the Fairy to be released automatically and revive Link should he lose all of his hearts. In Zelda games, a Fairy always heals a fixed number of hearts, usually six – whereas the player’s health bar starts out at three hearts but can rise to twenty.

The design of the Fairy in Super Smash Bros. 4 originates from The Legend of Zelda: Ocarina of Time; some later Zelda games have also retained this design of Fairies. These Fairies come in a variety of colors; usually blue, yellow, or pink. Typically in Zelda games, pink Fairies are the type of Fairies found that can heal Link and can be captured. In Super Smash Bros. 4, the fairy is pink. The design of the bottle, however, comes from The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword.

In Super Smash Bros. Brawl[edit]

In Brawl, a sticker of a fairy in a bottle, titled Fairy, is available.

Sticker[edit]

Name Game Effect Fighter(s)
Fairy The Legend of Zelda: Twilight Princess Tail (type) Attack +7 Yoshi Pikachu Diddy Kong Pokémon Trainer Yoshi (SSBB)Pikachu (SSBB)Diddy Kong (SSBB)Pokémon Trainer (SSBB)
Brawl Sticker Fairy (Zelda Twilight Princess).png
Fairy
(Zelda: Twilight Princess)

In Super Smash Bros. 4[edit]

Bowser performing a taunt in front of a Fairy Bottle to make it look like he's about to pick it up.

The Fairy Bottle is a thrown projectile item that ricochets off its target, allowing it to be caught and thrown again, dealing about 8 damage with medium knockback. If it is held by or hits a character with over 100% damage then it will open instantly and the fairy will heal that character by 100%. If eaten by a character under 100%, it will heal 1% like other items; however, doing so in All-Star Mode will not heal any damage.

Trophy[edit]

Fairy Bottle's trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS
Fairy Bottle's trophy in Super Smash Bros. for Wii U
Fairy Bottle
NTSC A bottle that contains a helpful fairy. You can release this fairy to heal 100 points of damage, but only if you have 100% or more. If you don't, you can still throw the bottle... Just don't hit a 100% or more enemy, or they'll be healed instead and you'll feel pretty silly.
SNES: The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (04/1992)
Wii: The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (11/2011)
PAL A bottle containing a Fairy with healing powers. If your damage is 100% or more, it'll heal you by 100. If not, then the Fairy won't do a thing. On the plus side, if someone else needs it, you can take it instead and have the smug satisfaction of stealing their precious hope away.
SNES: The Legend of Zelda: A Link to the Past (09/1992)
Wii: The Legend of Zelda: Skyward Sword (11/2011)

In Super Smash Bros. Ultimate[edit]

The Fairy Bottle reappears as an item, functioning as it did in Smash 4. In addition, the Fairy Bottle appears as a spirit for the game's Spirit mode.

Spirits[edit]

No. Image Name Type Class Cost Ability Series
184
SSBU spirit Fairy Bottle.png
Fairy Bottle
Support
★★ 1 Fairy Bottle Equipped The Legend of Zelda Series

In addition to the above, equipping the Sprixie Princesses, Elline, Chansey or Lissa Support Spirits will give the player a Fairy Bottle at a start of their stock.

No. Image Name Type Class Cost Ability Series
76
SSBU spirit Sprixie Princesses.png
Sprixie Princesses
Support
★★ 1 Fairy Bottle Equipped Super Mario Series
381
SSBU spirit Elline.png
Elline
Support
★★ 1 Fairy Bottle Equipped Kirby Series
449
SSBU spirit Chansey.png
Chansey
Support
★★ 1 Fairy Bottle Equipped Pokémon Series
667
SSBU spirit Lissa.png
Lissa
Support
★★ 1 Fairy Bottle Equipped Fire Emblem Series

Gallery[edit]

Names in other languages[edit]

Language Name Meaning
Japan Japanese 妖精のビン Fairy Bottle
UK English Fairy Bottle
France French Fée en bouteille Fairy in a Bottle
Germany German Feenflasche Fairy Bottle
Spain Spanish (PAL) Hada embotellada Bottled Fairy
Mexico Spanish (NTSC) Hada en botella Fairy in a Bottle
Italy Italian Bottiglia della fata Fairy Bottle
China Chinese (Simplified) 精灵之瓶 Spirit Bottle
Taiwan Chinese (Traditional) 妖精之瓶 Magic Creature Bottle
South Korea Korean 요정의 병 Fairy Bottle
Netherlands Dutch Feeënflesje Fairy Bottle
Russia Russian Бутылка феи Fairy Bottle

Trivia[edit]

  • The reveal picture of the day for this item is a reference to Super Mario 3D World, in which Bowser captures several Sprixie Princesses inside bottles.
  • Despite it being a throwable weapon with potentially useful knockback, there are extremely few situations where it can be used for a KO because if the opponent is over 99% damage they will be healed instead.
    • However in some situations it can be used to KO someone; if thrown at a lightweight character who has 99% worth of damage, the force of the knockback will throw them off the stage, possibly KO'ing them, while also being healed by the fairy as the damage caused from the attack would permit it to do so.
  • Likely because of the ability to heal hurt players accidentally, CPU players are extremely likely to either only pick up a Fairy Bottle only when they can be healed by it, or immediately throw the item away and off the stage. This is one of the few items a CPU-controlled player will purposely throw away, deliberately missing opponents.
  • In Smash 4, if a player has over 100% and picks up this item as soon as it bounces on the ground, it will repeatedly make its bouncing noise.[1]

References[edit]