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Age of Pokemon


You can still hear the battle music as the Gameboy loads up the screen.

Pokemon is the greatest game franchise that I ever have and will continue to play. How many of us have embarked on the epic quest to "catch em all?" The game has evolved for not only new generations of Pokemon but new generations of Pokemon players as well. Let's take a look at the beginning of the Pokemon craze back in 90's. 

The announcement of Pokemon on the Gameboy Color was like the Monolith to my primitive existence. 


I remember the exquisite details of watching the first commercial, everything from the knock-off Chris Farley to the weird sounding Pikachu. I wanted the power in my hands to catch them all!


The floodgates had opened. My heart and mind fluttered over all the possible combinations of Pokemon in my lineup. My interest in Pokemon exploded into full blown obsession. How would the video game stack up against the show? What types are super effective against others. What Pokemon would be in my lineup?



My neighborhood block became a battleground over Red vs Blue. Charizard super-freaks ran to Pokemon Red, ready to lay waste to their enemies with a sick Fire Spin. Fans of Blue thought they were cool as Squirtle as they unleashed their Butterfrees. The true winner could only be tested in battle!

But in order to catch them all, you needed to be friends with someone who had a different version. Sure there was that one kid whose parents bought them both Red & Blue and two Gameboys at launch but most of us were left scratching our heads over who would pick up the bill for the link cable.  

The Pokemon games were genius. They were designed for you to have to start over, essentially forcing you to buy another version to save your Pokemon on. Think of all the choices and pitfalls you had to struggle with in a single game- 


Kabuto or Omastar
Hitmonchan or Hitmonlee
Flareon or Jolteon or Vaporeon
Who to use the evolution stone on? i.e. Clefairy of Jigglypuff, etc.

And of course, the biggest decision of all would be who your starter Pokemon was. My favorite starter Pokemon was everyone's least favorite- Bulbasaur. 


Sure the little guy gets a lot flak being a head of lettuce whose basically useless in the late game but I love him! The main reason is because Bulbasaur is a boss on the gym leaders! While everyone else is trying to kill Onix with Charmander using Scratch, you are breezing by the first four gym leaders with no trouble at all. 

 

There was such an element of mystery in the Pokemon games, mainly because they didn't follow the show, most notably the weights and heights. The games played by their own set of rules. I remember gearing up for a fight against the Psychic Gym Leader Sabrina having just watched the episode where Ash does the same. I learned from the TV show that psychics are only weak against ghost types (and bug if you count trying to kill something with poison sting).

My plans were set. I caught a Ghastly from under the ghost of Cubone's mother. I lovingly raised the Ghastly into a Haunter and then when the time was right, I traded the Haunter for my ultimate creation- a Gengar! Surely Gengar would mop the floor with those near invincible psychics!

With Gengar in the top of the batting order, I was ready to take on Saffron City and pwn Sabrina's Kadabra and Alakazam! The battle was on but the only floor mopping was with Gengar's face as Kadabra took him down with confusion. What on Earth was going on here?!

 

My defeat at Sabrina's gym was but a temporary setback. I'd come back and beat her lineup with shear brute force. However, this gave light to the fact that Psychic Pokemon are pretty much overpowered in the original Red and Blue games. Without the Dark-type and stronger Bug-type moves introduced in later generations, Psychic Pokemon could wreak chaos on all other lifeforms.

For example, it is hard to think of a Pokemon that could reliably beat a lvl 100 Mewtwo. One of my friends wasn't able to catch Mewtwo in his game because he had used his master ball on a Graveler haha

  

I had heard rumors that a Parasect could take down Mewtwo by using spore to put it to sleep and then using a combination of growth and leach life. However, it's kind of a gamble on how long you can keep Mewtwo under without getting wrecked. Also, there is a very real chance that your opponent might switch to the lvl 100 Charizard in his lineup.

I'll tell you what is super effective against Mewtwo- Toxic. Just poison him and wait for the toxins to get stronger than his ability to recover and get in as many free shots as you can! 

That's what I love about Pokemon, there are so many different strategies and play styles. Just when you think that you have a stacked team, a trainer comes along and exploits a weakness. The combinations of Pokemon and move sets are endless.



The Missingo glitch, along with the Konami code, are two of the most well-known cheats in video game history. In the days before computer and internet usage was widespread, every kid knew to sail up and down the Cinnabar Island coast for infinite rare candies through word of mouth alone.

This is a testament to the incredible sense of community created by the Pokemon games. 

Seeing somebody with a Gameboy or set of Pokemon cards was a huge conversation starter. Several of my childhood friendships emerged from fellow Pokemon players. My friends and I would play Pokemon all night at sleepovers. My friend Chris had an SNES with a Gameboy adapter so we would pop in the game cartridge and play Pokemon on the big screen! What started as "I'll trade you a Weedle for a Caterpie" evolved into deeper conversations and relationships.   
 

What is absolutely incredible is how closely Pokemon crossed over into the real world. Seriously! If you were just walking around playing your Gameboy, people would seemingly jump out of the bushes like a crazed bug catcher eager to battle you!

There were toy Pokeballs with miniature Pokemon figures. You could even buy a Pokedex that would tell you what moves your Pokemon could learn, just like in the TV show! There was an entire underground for Pokemon. We had to play our cards on the bus and conduct trades in the hallways. Even where to buy Pokemon stuff was guarded like a Cloyster. I would even convince my mom to drive across state lines to the Wizard of the Coast store to get Pokemon booster packs.

Teachers and other adults were like Team Rocket, trying to cramp your style and steal your Pokemon! There was one teacher in the 4th Grade who seized my deck of Pokemon cards without even a warning. With my defenses lowered by her Zubat screech attack, I came back later that day to get my cards back, but she didn't want to give them to me! There they were sitting on her desk in plain view and she said that she had lost them! I pointed to them, and exclaimed "there they are" and she reluctantly handed them over. 

But the greatest adventure was right around the corner...


After my friend Chris and I graduated from the SNES to the N64, it was time for the big leagues, the Indigo League!

Pokemon Stadium rocked our worlds. There it was, the epic battle between Red vs Blue; Blastoise and Charizard locked in Mortal Kombat right on the cover of the game! We salivated over the thought of battling our Pokemon in amazing 3-D graphics!

It was probably one of the greatest gaming experiences in my childhood. There was something magical about playing Pokemon on the television set after raising your lineup on a 2-inch diameter screen. And boy was this game hard! I swear the game was rigged where accuracy stats were lowered. I remember getting into "Thunder Wars" where the opponent and I would try to one-hit-kill the other using Thunder.

If you could reach Pokemon Stadium using the Rental Pokemon, you were a true champion. You had two choices concerning rental Pokemon- you could either pick a strong Pokemon or a Pokemon with good moves. So you had to face several trainers consecutively using unevolved Pokemon as they threw their best at you.  

   

Pokemon is one of the greatest games of all time! I'll never forget the original Pokemon that were with me in the beginning- the Starmies, the Kangaskhans, the Dragonites that I raised. Like Ash, there were triumphs and tribulations; from winning epic battles to trading away Pokemon that I never got back.

The spirit of Pokemon has always stayed with me from the Gameboy Color, Gameboy Advance, DS, and so on. All of my brothers and even my sister have grown up playing Pokemon. We still have collections of drawings, cards, toys, and stuffed animals of our favorite Poke pals.    

The quest to catch em all is never truly over. There is always the option to select a "NEW GAME" 





 


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AngelOtter Posted on Aug 22, 2015 at 12:26 AM

I loved Pokemon (and still do!), The cards got banned from my school because kids were selling them and the parents were getting mad that their kids were using lunch money to buy them. That just made us want them more of course. I still buy every new game that comes out.

echidna64 Posted on Aug 14, 2015 at 05:16 AM

Thanks guys, it really was a great time to be a kid! Some of my best memories were playing Pokemon video games/card games with friends on camping trips, sleepovers, and summer camps. I would highly recommend getting your Pokemon game on, it's a wonderful adventure that needs to be experienced! Each version is super fun and very replayable!

massreality Posted on Aug 13, 2015 at 04:28 AM

Great article! I picked up a Pokemon game on the DS a few years back (the one with the Pokewalker). I had never played one before that, but I had a lot of fun with it. I wish I had grown up playing it, but I think I missed the Pokemon craze by a year or so.

Vaporman87 Posted on Aug 12, 2015 at 05:30 PM

I've never played a single Pokemon game, card or cartridge. I have no idea who these characters are (though I've become familiar with some because my daughter is somewhat interested in Pokemon). I'm lost in all the talk of moves and evolutions.

And yet, your enthusiasm for the property makes me wish I knew everything you know about. I can only imagine the fun and excitement of experiencing the camaraderie of the Pokemon fan community, especially in the early days. Thanks for this little taste of the fun and friendship that Pokemon helped to spark.

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