Fire and Leaf are updated versions of the old Game Boy games (Red and Green, Green was only released in Japan) that can are compatible with the Gamecube Pokemon Stadium-type game.
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Fire and Leaf are updated versions of the old Game Boy games (Red and Green, Green was only released in Japan) that can are compatible with the Gamecube Pokemon Stadium-type game.
Although I have been losing intrest in the pokemon games lately I still like the series and I still play the games.
Do Leaf and Fire only have the original 150 and follow the basic Red and Blue plotline?
I have all of them up through Gold and Silver. I prefer the originals better, blue and red, and even yellow. I thought 250 was pushing it, and now the numbers they have are just crazy. I collected the original 150 pokemon, but my game got a virus (messing with Missing No.) and I my pokemon started to get screwed. My Charizard lost flame thrower for ember and crazy stuff like that. I cried when I had to delete the data. TT.TT
As far as I know that is correct. You can use the Google search at the top of the page to find out for sure.Quote:
Originally Posted by Behold the Void
The games are alright. I wish i never spent so much money on those trouty cards. Worst investment ever :mad:
I played Blue and Red, and was extremely obsessed, but I lost intrest and when Silver and Gold came out, I didn't care about them at all. All my friends got Ruby and Sapphire, and so did I, and I loved them. Can't wait for Leaf Green.
I like the game because of the customizability options. Do the math here.
Let's say what? 350 pokemon, x6 in your team, x4 attacks each, x150 attacks (I'd say that's about the mean of what all pokemon can use, at least as I remember it)=1,260,000 possible team structures. Rather extensive, no?
All 150 original are available between the two, as are the Gold/Silver Pokemon at special islands at the end of the game.Quote:
Originally Posted by Behold the Void
However, I do not believe that the remakes follow the plot of Gold/Silver, though they do Red/Blue.
I played them them, got all pokes in gold/silver. It was a good game, before it started going comercial. (like you can't trade ruby with gold without stadium)
dude, back in like 6th grade...around 98' pokemon was all the rage at my school. Everyone brought their gameboys to school and would trade and would fight each other...Long live the old Pokedays!
Actually, that's somewhat untrue. According to Nintendo, the USA Blue was actually the same as the JAP Green. We never got the real Blue (JAP had all three, Red, Green, and Blue). Nintendo started to consider releasing JAP Blue in USA and call it "True Blue," but they never did.Quote:
Originally Posted by Del Murder
Very interesting. Wonder why they did that.
I don't know, similar reason why the USA FFIII is actually JAP FFVI?