Fighting Silhouette Team

The Fighting Silhouette Team, or simply referred to as Silhouettes, is the enemy team that appears in the Super Smash Flash games's Multi-Man mode and Classic mode. They are the Super Smash Flash series's incarnation of the enemy teams (謎のザコ敵軍団, Nazo no Zako Tekigun Dan, lit. Mysterious Small Fry Enemy Corps) that appear in every installment of the Super Smash Bros. series.

As their name implies, they are silhouette versions of real characters. Unlike most of the enemy teams, both incarnations of the Silhouettes use the voices of the characters that they copy instead of remaining silent.

In Super Smash Flash
In Super Smash Flash, they could take the form of any of the playable characters, with more becoming available as characters were unlocked. They appeared in stage 7 of Classic mode, labeled "Random Melee!" Because of SSF ' s already-limited movepool, the original Silhouettes were complete clones of the characters themselves.

In Super Smash Flash 2
In Super Smash Flash 2, the Silhouettes behave differently. Instead of taking the forms of the entire roster, they only take the form of, , , or , using the same voices and moveset as these characters. The Silhouettes, like the enemy teams in the official Super Smash Bros. games, have weaker AI and are unable to use special moves.

In most situations, they are relatively passive. However, in Cruel mode, they attack far more often than normal, often to the point of recklessness.

Despite being created with the palette swap mechanic, they are not available as costumes for the player. However, has a costume based on them.

Trivia

 * Unlike the Fighting Polygon, Wireframe, Alloy, or Mii Teams, can Inhale a Fighting Silhouette and gain the ability of the character it's copying. With the other teams, it would simply fail. This is because, unlike the teams in the official games, the Fighting Silhouettes are not separate character files from the character that they copy, and their inability to use special moves is due to their different AI refusing to use them rather than a hardcoded lack of them.