The Scientist
PKMN Scientist/Mathemagician
- 721
- Posts
- 21
- Years
- In a Laboratory
- Seen Jul 28, 2012
Back when Pokemon first came out, they were treated as animals. I mean, they hunted and ate one another (Pidgey's old PokeDex entry mentioned that it ate Magikarp), and only a select few Pokemon could completely understand and comprehend human speech, namely psychic-types, Ninetales, and Dragonite. Regarding death, they did, in fact, show a Metapod get cut in half, not to mention the Rockets' killing of the Cubones in the Ghost Tower. They even left [fossilized] droppings!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBGOUTG9WM8 <- check out 08:10. You wouldn't hear a Trainer mention killing an opponent's Pokemon nowadays.
One interesting thing I noticed is that in the episode where the S.S. Anne sank, you could see fish swimming around through one of the portholes. Not fish Pokemon, plain. old. fish.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SI17W5M0mBU <- Check out 03:08
Back then, the world didn't completely revolve around human-Pokemon interaction... And apparently, there were other, normal, animals that shared the world with people.
The new series seem to have taken a completely different direction, though: they started adding more human dimensions to Pokemon, such as the introduction of personalities, affinities for flavors of candy, and a more widespread capacity to understand speech (hold a conversation with people, only limited by their physical inability to use human language). They feel emotions more strongly than their First Gen counterparts, and never seem to get seriously injured. They almost never attack maliciously people, like those Spearow on Ash in the second episode, or the Beedrill in episode 4... And just look at the intro shorts to the Pokemon movies... those aren't animals running around, those are little people in funny suits!
Not to mention that the entire Universe, time, space, and Earth were supposedly created by Pokemon... Back in the earlier days, there was no mention of Pokemon being superior to humans in any way...
Did you prefer when Pokemon were just smart animals, or how they are portrayed now as conscious, humanlike [or even god-like] beings? Or maybe you don't see this distinction?
Discuss the change in Pokemon representation from then to now.
Edit: I found two episodes to use as references.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EBGOUTG9WM8 <- check out 08:10. You wouldn't hear a Trainer mention killing an opponent's Pokemon nowadays.
One interesting thing I noticed is that in the episode where the S.S. Anne sank, you could see fish swimming around through one of the portholes. Not fish Pokemon, plain. old. fish.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SI17W5M0mBU <- Check out 03:08
Back then, the world didn't completely revolve around human-Pokemon interaction... And apparently, there were other, normal, animals that shared the world with people.
The new series seem to have taken a completely different direction, though: they started adding more human dimensions to Pokemon, such as the introduction of personalities, affinities for flavors of candy, and a more widespread capacity to understand speech (hold a conversation with people, only limited by their physical inability to use human language). They feel emotions more strongly than their First Gen counterparts, and never seem to get seriously injured. They almost never attack maliciously people, like those Spearow on Ash in the second episode, or the Beedrill in episode 4... And just look at the intro shorts to the Pokemon movies... those aren't animals running around, those are little people in funny suits!
Not to mention that the entire Universe, time, space, and Earth were supposedly created by Pokemon... Back in the earlier days, there was no mention of Pokemon being superior to humans in any way...
Did you prefer when Pokemon were just smart animals, or how they are portrayed now as conscious, humanlike [or even god-like] beings? Or maybe you don't see this distinction?
Discuss the change in Pokemon representation from then to now.
Edit: I found two episodes to use as references.
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