Duck
🦆 quack quack
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- he, they
- Seen Feb 23, 2023
How is the game approachable to little kids? It is bewildering. You can't work out how to the play the game from information inside the game. It is for teenagers.
It very much is though? Just spamming A will get you quite far, and I should know because that's what I did when I was a 7 ~ 8 year old playing RSE who didn't know a lick of English and so didn't understand any of the text and I still managed to get quite far into the game.
Every generation gives you the basic tutorial of how to catch things, will mention what TMs are (and until Gen VII, force you to know how to use those because of HMs). That's more or less all you need to know really, the battling details like strategy come later, and considering how the games are designed, just spamming whatever strong move you have will work out a lot of the time if your Pokemon have some level advantage.
Newer generations make it even easier by making sure to tell the players about super effective hits and even showing the effectiveness of moves (although I will grant you that the difficulty curve of Gen VII isn't necessarily the most kid friendly, even seasoned Pokémon veterans had a bit of trouble with those in the first playthroughs).
Competitive / Battle Facilities on the other hand, that's a whole different ballpark and not really kid friendly, I'll happily concede that.
But even then we don't need to talk about subjective things like opinions. TPC gutted the Game Corner because it'd increase the ratings from E to 12+, so they've all but outright said they consider kids under 12 to be a core part of their target audience.
Junichi Masuda also said they didn't port the Battle Frontier to ORAS because players these days "get bored and frustrated more easily and they aren't interested in things that are so demanding/challenging." Considering almost every single adult player I've seen talking about Pokemon complain about how the games are easy and not challenging enough, if it was the real reason and not just saving face due to time constraints or something like that, it heavily implies that they're focusing on younger kids.
Ash isn't a teenager, he's a 10 year old because the games are focusing on younger kids and they want those younger kids to see themselves in the protagonists. A same argument applies to most game protagonists, who are 10 ~ 12 ish with a few exceptions.
While there are certain aspects of the franchise which are aimed to older players (such as the TCG or nostalgia bait merch) by and large most of it is aimed to little kids.