Venia Silente
Inspectious. Good for napping.
- 1,303
- Posts
- 16
- Years
- on the second floor's nest
- Seen yesterday
As the good song says, to cook them is my real test, to bake them is my cause.
And let's be real, *someone*'s gotta have that goal, or have to serve that goal, in a Trainerverse setting. Sure, most of every child gets to go out to the wilderness and explore the world with a fluffy elemental dingo at the age of 10 on government dime, a small portion of them are going to attend regular Gym circuits at age 14, and by age 18 an even smaller proportion are going to be at the stage of training where they'll be good enough to have to seriously consider if to either specialize in riding Revavroom and maybe a monotype specialization, or getting a driver's license and maybe specializing in ambulance or truck driving.
You'd be correct in noticing the two latter options are not much, if at all, related to Pokémon. That's life for "everyone else" once adulthood comes. There's so much to do in a human-centric society, even if that centrism is somewhat shared. Someone's gotta bake the cakes, someone's gotta farm the wheat for the cakes, someone's gotta plan out wifi coverage across town, someone's gotta build the arenas, someone's gotta report on wrong weather because some silly spammed Rain Dance outside, someone's gotta defend VC startups from Team Rocket acquisitions in court.
And that someone isthem you, my dear fellow writer. You who write Trainerverse settings, have the background mission of making the lives of these workers make sense ('cause fiction!). So, how do you go about it? For example, how do people in your worlds work up to studies or jobs for things that aren't about Pokémon? How many years? Parallel Pokémon instruction or not? Does eg.: Law or Med school function like in our verse? How many people do you think make up your world's adult, performance level lawyers, nurses, engineers compared to eg.: performance level trainers? When you want to create a character (likely an NPC I guess) who is a space race scientist or a forensic science consultant working for the police, in a world that has Pokémon in it, how do you do it? What things change, what stays the same?
I'm leaving these here for discussion then. And remember: if you want to be a master chef, knowing your Berries might still be of some use.
And let's be real, *someone*'s gotta have that goal, or have to serve that goal, in a Trainerverse setting. Sure, most of every child gets to go out to the wilderness and explore the world with a fluffy elemental dingo at the age of 10 on government dime, a small portion of them are going to attend regular Gym circuits at age 14, and by age 18 an even smaller proportion are going to be at the stage of training where they'll be good enough to have to seriously consider if to either specialize in riding Revavroom and maybe a monotype specialization, or getting a driver's license and maybe specializing in ambulance or truck driving.
You'd be correct in noticing the two latter options are not much, if at all, related to Pokémon. That's life for "everyone else" once adulthood comes. There's so much to do in a human-centric society, even if that centrism is somewhat shared. Someone's gotta bake the cakes, someone's gotta farm the wheat for the cakes, someone's gotta plan out wifi coverage across town, someone's gotta build the arenas, someone's gotta report on wrong weather because some silly spammed Rain Dance outside, someone's gotta defend VC startups from Team Rocket acquisitions in court.
And that someone is
I'm leaving these here for discussion then. And remember: if you want to be a master chef, knowing your Berries might still be of some use.