Emerald Cave

Emerald Cave is a starter stage in Super Smash Flash 2, based on the platforming Wario Land series, more specifically, Wario Land 4.

Layout
While it appears to be a simple flat stage at first, the main feature of the stage lay beyond the wooden panels, there are two on the surface of the stage, one each on the sides, and one at the bottom of the cave. These wooden panels can be attacked and destroyed to allow entrance in and out of the cave inside the stage. In the center of the cave is yet anther wooden panel with a ceiling just a few feet above it where characters can be stage spiked down into the hole when the wooden panel is broken. After some time, the wooden panels will respawn, sometimes "trapping" the fighters inside the cave.

Music

 * The main music track is titled Palm Tree Paradise (previously appointed the name Monsoon Jungle) as a remix from the game Wario Land 4. Arranged by Andrew asf Fisher, Ema 194 Alvarado and Jacob Xyless Tjolsen.

Tournament legality
Emerald Cave has been ruled a banned stage by the Smash Flash Back Room. The inner cave creates an overly powerful camping spot, especially for characters such as. The inner cave is also a cave of life, and over-centralizes gameplay on teching, while the pit in the middle can lead to extremely fast gimps or stage spikes that are otherwise impossible on neutral stages. The stage also features edges that are sometimes obscured by breakable walls, which can cause gimps if one of the walls respawns while a player is recovering.

Origin
In Wario Land 4, Wario is trapped inside an ancient golden pyramid while treasure-hunting. Inside the pyramid there are six passages based on a different themes, each one with at least one level for Wario to explore. There is a green-colored passage called the Emerald Passage and its very first level is called, Palm Tree Paradise. As the name states, this level takes place on a sunny beach chore filled with eponymous palm trees and during certain parts of the level, Wario stumbles upon caves portions filled with valuable treasures to collect. In fact, there is an instance in that level that one of these paths is obstructed by a breakable block requiring Wario to smash it open in order to access and underground cave. In SSF2, the stage is appropriately called Emerald Cave, named after the passage, and prominently features a cave below a palm tree-filled zone. Though wooden panels like the ones seen in Emerald Cave never appeared in Wario Land 4, they are inherently based on the blocks that Wario is able break using his trademark attack.

Trivia

 * Emerald Cave bears an uncanny resemblance to the Floating Islands from the original Super Smash Flash. This is, however, because the latter directly use sprites from Palm Tree Paradise, whereas Emerald Cave is indirectly based on that level.