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- Head_swap abstract "This article is about the animation technique. For the sketch on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, see List of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon sketches#Head Swap.Head swapping is the act of removing the head from an animated character and replacing it with a different one. This is usually done for one of two reasons: cost and memory constraints (on video game consoles).Artwork is expensive to produce, so by recycling characters' bodies and only having to draw new heads, studios can save time and money. Early game consoles also had quite limited amounts of memory and storage space for games, so by reusing the body, several characters could be produced with only minimal extra memory requirements. This technique is closely linked to the more common palette swap.Perhaps the most famous use of the head swap is in Capcom's Street Fighter series. Since the player could not select their character in the original Street Fighter, the character controlled by the second player, Ken, was made identical to the first player's character Ryu with a different hairstyle, yellow armbands (instead of Ryu's red gloves), and lack of slippers being the only distinguishing graphical features (in addition to Ken's red gi and blond hair). From Street Fighter II and onward, Ryu's and Ken's fighting styles began to deviate from each other and other head swaps who used variations of their fighting style began to be introduced such as Akuma (in Super Street Fighter II Turbo), Dan (in Street Fighter Alpha) and Sean (in Street Fighter III). Other examples include Juli and Juni in Street Fighter Alpha 3 (who were both head swaps of Cammy), Yun and Yang in Street Fighter III, and most of the enemy characters in Final Fight (such as Andore and Abigail).Head swapping is not the only method of reusing character sprites, as a graphic designer can also change other parts of the body, whether it'll be the character's arms, legs or torso, with new ones to create a new sprite. An example of this would be the final boss in Smash TV, MC Mayhen, who uses the same base sprite as the Mutoid Man, but with a different head and chest as well.The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion (and games built off the same engine, such as Fallout 3) uses a similar technique in order to create the variety of characters necessary to fill the large area the game is set in. Although its characters are three-dimensional, it uses sets of predefined bodies and combines them with heads randomly generated from its character customization program.In Mike Tyson's Punch-Out!!, each opponent has a head-swapped counterpart, with the exception of King Hippo.".
- Head_swap wikiPageID "3557552".
- Head_swap wikiPageLength "3250".
- Head_swap wikiPageOutDegree "27".
- Head_swap wikiPageRevisionID "690957321".
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Akuma_(Street_Fighter).
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Animation.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Cammy.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Capcom.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Category:Animation_techniques.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Category:Video_game_design.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Dan_Hibiki.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Fallout_3.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Final_Fight.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Ken_Masters.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink King_Hippo.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Late_Night_with_Jimmy_Fallon.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Jimmy_Fallon_games_and_sketches.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Palette_swap.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Punch-Out!!_(NES).
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Ryu_(Street_Fighter).
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Smash_TV.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter_(video_game).
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter_Alpha.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter_Alpha_3.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter_II:_The_World_Warrior.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Street_Fighter_III.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Super_Street_Fighter_II_Turbo.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink The_Elder_Scrolls_IV:_Oblivion.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLink Video_game_console.
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLinkText "Head swap".
- Head_swap wikiPageWikiLinkText "head swap".
- Head_swap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:.
- Head_swap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Unreferenced.
- Head_swap wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Videogame-software-stub.
- Head_swap subject Category:Animation_techniques.
- Head_swap subject Category:Video_game_design.
- Head_swap type Technique.
- Head_swap comment "This article is about the animation technique. For the sketch on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, see List of Late Night with Jimmy Fallon sketches#Head Swap.Head swapping is the act of removing the head from an animated character and replacing it with a different one.".
- Head_swap label "Head swap".
- Head_swap sameAs Q5689482.
- Head_swap sameAs Cambio_de_cabeza.
- Head_swap sameAs m.09ldyd.
- Head_swap sameAs Q5689482.
- Head_swap wasDerivedFrom Head_swap?oldid=690957321.
- Head_swap isPrimaryTopicOf Head_swap.