Nate
Evil Cute Thing
- 1,410
- Posts
- 12
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- North East England
- Seen Nov 10, 2015
In pokémon games, we always have had a level system and a move system, and I think that's just a bit strange. If our animals could spark electricity there'd be hell on earth! So, I've come up with a suitable idea, and not really a theory, that might explain or at least give you food for thought on the matter.
The things we know about pokémon are that they're alive, due to humans being able to kill and eat them, as well as take their milk in the case of Miltank, and shearable in the case of Mareep, yet how are we able to use them as battle tools. What say it was all digital?
Let's take a Charizard for my theory here. In this world, Charizard can fly with actual wings, and breathe fire. Fair enough, it's a dragon. But how is it that we control this dragon? And what is the point of having these moves? I believe that in this digital world, it isn't the pokémon that are digitised but the moves and the level system. Alongside this, their understanding of human speech is incredible as they take orders perfectly. This system is highly scientific. My hypothesis is thus: in regions with a pokémon league such as Kanto and Johto and so on, the pokémon are able to fight and use their moves such as Charizard's flamethrower, however outside the league's domain, the pokémon don't have the ability to maintain their mental capacity, and thus cannot use these special powers of theirs. The moves they learn come from experience fighting, and training. The moves used never kill a pokémon yet put them in a state of 'faint.' This suggests to me that pokémon moves are only able to deduce stamina and not actually hurt them. If old Charizard used a flamethrower on Pikachu, I don't think the little mouse would come out of that alive. As such, it is entirely possible that they have found a way to increase the mental capacity and capability of pokémon through unique tools. I have 2 ideas that could be the reason to this - a being radio signals that are undetectable to humans, or b - a magnetic field of sorts that encompasses the region it's based in.
I can sort of prove that this theory is correct through hacks and the fact that evolved pokémon can learn moves at levels before they evolve. When you hack a pokémon in, you can change the level of that pokémon to 1, meaning it is completely inexperienced. This is similar to hatching an egg, where the newborn baby is level 1 also. The level system is a simple system used by trainers to measure the strength of their pokémon so they can judge and adapt their pokémon to be stronger. Pokémon without experience are level 1. Through hacks, you can place a pokémon from another place into this region, and make it level 1 like I've said, but does that mean it came from outside the region? Technically, yes it does. I know I'm stooping to non canon methods to prove this point but hear me out. On Bulbapedia, many second or third evolution pokémon that evolve through levelling up can learn moves before they actually evolve, meaning it's entirely possible for a pokémon to be evolved before being brought to the region. I think that the level system is just a rough measurement of strength, and not entirely accurate, and I don't think evolution has anything to do with levelling up, but a game being a game they have to have a singular goal to reach for in order to actually make this pokémon evolve. I think it's best to assume that pokémon just evolve over time. If a pokémon does come along to this new region all grown up, it starts at level one and begins to learn new things.
So our Charizard for example may come from somewhere undeveloped such as the Amazon rainforest. He might live in a little cave somewhere nice. One day, a person comes along and coaxes it, tames it and makes him a friend as such. The person then takes the tamed Charizard to New York / Unova and Charizard starts to think: hey, this guy/gal is a good person - he feeds me, pets me, loves me, and in return I get power. I think this a good deal. Then the Charizard accept allegiance with the person. Then comes the pokéball. Obviously this doesn't account for every pokémon, as most are probably specially bred or captured wild. I imagine that they aren't unwilling to join, and the pokémon fights could be a mere test of power to see if this trainer is suitable for them. The pokéball could just be an acceptance thing - if it breaks free it doesn't want your help. I also thought of pokéballs at this stage as a mechanism used to give pokémon a break and deliver basic human knowledge unto them. I know it's a little messed up but I have more.
With the idea of pokémon being living beings with an increased brain capacity and moves that only affect the stamina of a pokémon and don't physically hurt them, the idea of becoming a pokémon 'Champion,' is all that more appealing. The Champion is known throughout the entire region without a doubt, and even abroad. They're known for being the best trainer in that area, however this can be taken down by one battle. Champions train to remain on top. This is publicity. These champions gain publicity through people who come to watch the pokémon battles as a sport. They attend important regional events as guests of honour and are respected and most likely paid well. This is crucial to the pokémon world economy, as people pay for stadium tickets, goods, foods, pokémon goods such as the pokéballs themselves, and even tourism is a big factor. People from places without a league will come from across the world to watch these things I expect. Even the gym leaders and elite four gain a fair amount of publicity, and many have their own side vocations to give them character and keep them busy, so they can attend events relating to them on a personal level. It all links together in the end. Even Nurse Joy for crying out loud probably gets payed for energising your pokémon from their 'fainted' state. The reason trainers travel around the region is to show off their skills. Every gym defeated means another trainer has topped the league faster than the others. Every year round over a hundred trainers are most likely on watch through every gym battle, seeing how far each of them gets until they're sourly defeated. I must admit however, that in the games, you do have an infinite number of retries at a gym, but I could imagine the gym system being televised all the time, with each gym leader having a different team of different strength pokémon depending on where abouts in the league you are currently, and you only having one shot at each one until you lose. Only the best can truly reach the champion, which I imagine is very rare, with the exception of your own character.
So every time you play a pokémon game and you've so far agreed with my theory, just think, 100 other npc's you can never meet are all fighting these gyms, you can't be hurt by a pokémon move, the level system is an overall estimate, and pokémon are only capable of learning moves in a developed region! I thank you for taking the time to read this. I'm not brilliant at wording my thoughts, but I'm sure you can figure it out. Please tell me your thoughts :)
The things we know about pokémon are that they're alive, due to humans being able to kill and eat them, as well as take their milk in the case of Miltank, and shearable in the case of Mareep, yet how are we able to use them as battle tools. What say it was all digital?
Let's take a Charizard for my theory here. In this world, Charizard can fly with actual wings, and breathe fire. Fair enough, it's a dragon. But how is it that we control this dragon? And what is the point of having these moves? I believe that in this digital world, it isn't the pokémon that are digitised but the moves and the level system. Alongside this, their understanding of human speech is incredible as they take orders perfectly. This system is highly scientific. My hypothesis is thus: in regions with a pokémon league such as Kanto and Johto and so on, the pokémon are able to fight and use their moves such as Charizard's flamethrower, however outside the league's domain, the pokémon don't have the ability to maintain their mental capacity, and thus cannot use these special powers of theirs. The moves they learn come from experience fighting, and training. The moves used never kill a pokémon yet put them in a state of 'faint.' This suggests to me that pokémon moves are only able to deduce stamina and not actually hurt them. If old Charizard used a flamethrower on Pikachu, I don't think the little mouse would come out of that alive. As such, it is entirely possible that they have found a way to increase the mental capacity and capability of pokémon through unique tools. I have 2 ideas that could be the reason to this - a being radio signals that are undetectable to humans, or b - a magnetic field of sorts that encompasses the region it's based in.
I can sort of prove that this theory is correct through hacks and the fact that evolved pokémon can learn moves at levels before they evolve. When you hack a pokémon in, you can change the level of that pokémon to 1, meaning it is completely inexperienced. This is similar to hatching an egg, where the newborn baby is level 1 also. The level system is a simple system used by trainers to measure the strength of their pokémon so they can judge and adapt their pokémon to be stronger. Pokémon without experience are level 1. Through hacks, you can place a pokémon from another place into this region, and make it level 1 like I've said, but does that mean it came from outside the region? Technically, yes it does. I know I'm stooping to non canon methods to prove this point but hear me out. On Bulbapedia, many second or third evolution pokémon that evolve through levelling up can learn moves before they actually evolve, meaning it's entirely possible for a pokémon to be evolved before being brought to the region. I think that the level system is just a rough measurement of strength, and not entirely accurate, and I don't think evolution has anything to do with levelling up, but a game being a game they have to have a singular goal to reach for in order to actually make this pokémon evolve. I think it's best to assume that pokémon just evolve over time. If a pokémon does come along to this new region all grown up, it starts at level one and begins to learn new things.
So our Charizard for example may come from somewhere undeveloped such as the Amazon rainforest. He might live in a little cave somewhere nice. One day, a person comes along and coaxes it, tames it and makes him a friend as such. The person then takes the tamed Charizard to New York / Unova and Charizard starts to think: hey, this guy/gal is a good person - he feeds me, pets me, loves me, and in return I get power. I think this a good deal. Then the Charizard accept allegiance with the person. Then comes the pokéball. Obviously this doesn't account for every pokémon, as most are probably specially bred or captured wild. I imagine that they aren't unwilling to join, and the pokémon fights could be a mere test of power to see if this trainer is suitable for them. The pokéball could just be an acceptance thing - if it breaks free it doesn't want your help. I also thought of pokéballs at this stage as a mechanism used to give pokémon a break and deliver basic human knowledge unto them. I know it's a little messed up but I have more.
With the idea of pokémon being living beings with an increased brain capacity and moves that only affect the stamina of a pokémon and don't physically hurt them, the idea of becoming a pokémon 'Champion,' is all that more appealing. The Champion is known throughout the entire region without a doubt, and even abroad. They're known for being the best trainer in that area, however this can be taken down by one battle. Champions train to remain on top. This is publicity. These champions gain publicity through people who come to watch the pokémon battles as a sport. They attend important regional events as guests of honour and are respected and most likely paid well. This is crucial to the pokémon world economy, as people pay for stadium tickets, goods, foods, pokémon goods such as the pokéballs themselves, and even tourism is a big factor. People from places without a league will come from across the world to watch these things I expect. Even the gym leaders and elite four gain a fair amount of publicity, and many have their own side vocations to give them character and keep them busy, so they can attend events relating to them on a personal level. It all links together in the end. Even Nurse Joy for crying out loud probably gets payed for energising your pokémon from their 'fainted' state. The reason trainers travel around the region is to show off their skills. Every gym defeated means another trainer has topped the league faster than the others. Every year round over a hundred trainers are most likely on watch through every gym battle, seeing how far each of them gets until they're sourly defeated. I must admit however, that in the games, you do have an infinite number of retries at a gym, but I could imagine the gym system being televised all the time, with each gym leader having a different team of different strength pokémon depending on where abouts in the league you are currently, and you only having one shot at each one until you lose. Only the best can truly reach the champion, which I imagine is very rare, with the exception of your own character.
So every time you play a pokémon game and you've so far agreed with my theory, just think, 100 other npc's you can never meet are all fighting these gyms, you can't be hurt by a pokémon move, the level system is an overall estimate, and pokémon are only capable of learning moves in a developed region! I thank you for taking the time to read this. I'm not brilliant at wording my thoughts, but I'm sure you can figure it out. Please tell me your thoughts :)