Software:Pokémon Red and Blue

From HandWiki
Short description: 1996 video games


  • Pokémon Red Version
  • Pokémon Blue Version
  • Pocket Monsters: Green
Pokémon Red and Blue cover art.webp
North American cover art for Pokémon Red, depicting Charizard, and Pokémon Blue, depicting Blastoise. The cover art for Pocket Monsters: Green depicts Venusaur (not pictured).
Developer(s)Game Freak
Publisher(s)Nintendo
Director(s)Satoshi Tajiri
Producer(s)
  • Shigeru Miyamoto
  • Takashi Kawaguchi
  • Tsunekazu Ishihara
Designer(s)Satoshi Tajiri
Programmer(s)
  • Junichi Masuda
  • Shigeki Morimoto
  • Tetsuya Watanabe
  • Sousuke Tamada
Artist(s)
  • Ken Sugimori
  • Atsuko Nishida
Writer(s)
  • Satoshi Tajiri
  • Ryosuke Taniguchi
  • Fumihiro Nonomura
  • Hiroyuki Jinnai
Composer(s)Junichi Masuda
SeriesPokémon
Platform(s)Game Boy
Release
  • Pocket Monsters: Red and Green
    • JP: February 27, 1996
  • Pocket Monsters: Blue
    • JP: October 15, 1996
    (CoroCoro Comic)
    • JP: October 10, 1999
    (retail)
  • Pokémon Red and Blue
    • NA: September 28, 1998
    • AU: 1998
    • EU: October 5, 1999
Genre(s)Role-playing
Mode(s)Single-player, multiplayer

Pokémon Red Version and Pokémon Blue Version are 1996 role-playing video games developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy. They are the first installments of the Pokémon video game series. They were first released in Japan in 1996 as Pocket Monsters: Red[lower-alpha 1] and Pocket Monsters: Green,[lower-alpha 2] with the special edition Pocket Monsters: Blue[lower-alpha 3] being released in Japan later that same year. The games were later released as Pokémon Red and Pokémon Blue in North America and Australia in 1998 and Europe in 1999. Pokémon Red and Pokémon Blue combined Red/Green/Blue for release outside of Japan.

Pokémon Yellow, an improved version, was released in Japan in 1998 and in other regions in 1999 and 2000. Remakes of Red and Green, Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, were released for the Game Boy Advance in 2004. Red, Blue, and Yellow–in addition to Green in Japan–were re-released on the Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console service on Nintendo eShop as direct ports of the originals, in 2016 as a commemoration of the franchise's 20th anniversary.

The player controls the protagonist from an overhead perspective and navigates him throughout the fictional region of Kanto in a quest to master Pokémon battling. The goal of the games is to become the champion of the Indigo League by defeating the eight Gym Leaders and then the top four Pokémon trainers in the land, the Elite Four. Another objective is to complete the Pokédex, an in-game encyclopedia, by obtaining the 151 available Pokémon. Red and Blue utilize the Game Link Cable, which connects two Game Boy systems together and allows Pokémon to be traded or battled between games. Both titles are independent of each other but feature the same plot,[1] and while they can be played separately, it is necessary for players to trade between both games in order to obtain all of the original 151 Pokémon.

Red and Blue were well-received with critics praising the multiplayer options, especially the concept of trading. They received an aggregated score of 89% on GameRankings and are considered among the greatest games ever made, perennially ranked on top game lists including at least four years on IGN's "Top 100 Games of All Time". The games' releases marked the beginning of what would become a multibillion-dollar franchise, jointly selling over 300 million copies worldwide. In 2009 they were declared by IGN to be the "Best selling RPG on the Game Boy" and "Best selling RPG of all time".

Gameplay

The player's Bulbasaur engaged in battle with a Charmander[2]

Pokémon Red and Blue are played in a third-person view, overhead perspective and consist of three basic screens: an overworld, in which the player navigates the main character;[3] a side-view battle screen;[4] and a menu interface, in which the player may configure their Pokémon, items, or gameplay settings.[5]

The player can use their Pokémon to battle other Pokémon. When the player encounters a wild Pokémon or is challenged by a trainer, the screen switches to a turn-based battle screen that displays the two engaged Pokémon. During a battle, the player may choose to fight using one of four moves, use an item, switch the active Pokémon, or attempt to flee; however, fleeing is not possible in trainer battles. Pokémon have hit points (HP); when a Pokémon's HP is reduced to zero, it faints and can no longer battle until it is revived. Once an enemy Pokémon faints, the player's Pokémon that were involved in the battle receive a certain number of experience points (EXP). After accumulating enough EXP, a Pokémon will level up.[4] A Pokémon's level controls its physical properties, such as the battle statistics acquired, and the moves it has learned. Some Pokémon may also evolve at certain levels. These evolutions affect the statistics and the levels at which new moves are learned. Pokémon at higher stages of evolution gain more statistics each time they level up, although they may not learn new moves as early, if at all, compared with the lower stages of evolution.[6]

Catching Pokémon is another essential element of the gameplay. While battling with a wild Pokémon, the player may throw a Poké Ball at it. If the Pokémon is successfully caught, it will come under the player's ownership. Factors in the success rate of capture include the HP of the target Pokémon, whether it is under a status effect, and the type of Poké Ball used: the lower the target's HP, and the stronger the status effect and type of Poké Ball, the higher the success rate of capture.[7] The ultimate goal of the games is to complete the entries in the Pokédex, a comprehensive Pokémon encyclopedia, by capturing, evolving, and trading to obtain all 151 creatures.[8]

Pokémon Red and Blue allow players to trade Pokémon between two cartridges via a Game Link Cable.[9] This method of trading must be done to fully complete the Pokédex since certain Pokémon will only evolve upon being traded and each of the two games have version-exclusive Pokémon.[1] The Link Cable also makes it possible to battle another player's Pokémon team.[9] When playing Red or Blue on a Game Boy Advance or SP, the standard GBA/SP link cable will not work; players must use the Nintendo Universal Game Link Cable instead.[10] Moreover, the English versions of the games are incompatible with their Japanese counterparts, and such trades will corrupt the save files, as the games use different languages and therefore character sets.[11]

As well as trading with each other and Pokémon Yellow, Pokémon Red and Blue can trade Pokémon with the second generation of Pokémon games: Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal. However, there are limitations: the games cannot link together if one player's party contains Pokémon or moves introduced in the second generation games.[12] Also, using the Transfer Pak for the Nintendo 64, data such as Pokémon and items from Pokémon Red and Blue can be used in the Nintendo 64 games Pokémon Stadium[13] and Pokémon Stadium 2.[14] Red and Blue are incompatible with the Pokémon games of the later "Advanced Generation" for the Game Boy Advance and GameCube.[15]

Bugs and glitches

Pokémon Red and Blue are notable for a large quantity of glitches, possibly due to the game's scope in comparison to Game Freak's development experience at the time.[16] One of the most popular glitches in Red and Blue involves encountering MissingNo. (short for "Missing Number"), a glitch Pokémon with multiple forms that arise when different glitches are performed.[17] Additionally, several other Pokémon can be encountered using glitches, such as the otherwise-unobtainable Mythical Pokémon Mew. Another glitch, dubbed the "EXP underflow glitch", allows players to manipulate unsigned integers in the game's code for Pokémon in the "medium slow" experience group in order to max out the level of any Pokémon.[18]

Plot

Setting

Red, Green, and Blue take place in the Kanto region, based on Japan's real Kantō region
Map of Kantō region, Japan

Pokémon Red and Blue take place in the region of Kanto, which is based on the real-life Kantō region in Japan. This is one distinct region, as shown in later games, with different geographical habitats for the 151 existing Pokémon species, along with human-populated towns and cities and Routes connecting locations with one another. Some areas are only accessible once the player learns a special ability or gains a special item.[19] Kanto has multiple locations: Pallet Town (マサラタウン Masara Town), Viridian City (トキワシティ Tokiwa City), Pewter City (ニビシティ Nibi City), Cerulean City (ハナダシティ Hanada City), Vermillion City (クチバシティ Kuchiba City), Lavender Town (シオンタウン Cion Town), Celadon City (タマムシシティ Tamamushi City), Fuchsia City (セキチクシティ Sekichiku City), Saffron City (ヤマブキシティ Yamabuki City), Cinnabar Island (グレンじま Guren Island), Seafoam Islands (ふたごじま Twin Islands) and the Indigo Plateau. Each city has a gym leader, serving as the boss and the Elite Four and final rival battle occur at Indigo Plateau. Areas in which the player can catch Pokémon range from caves to the sea, where the kinds of Pokémon available to catch varies. For example, Tentacool can only be caught either through fishing or when the player is in a body of water, while Zubat can only be caught in a cave.

Story

The player begins in their hometown of Pallet Town. After venturing alone into the tall grass, the player is stopped by Professor Oak, a famous Pokémon researcher. Professor Oak explains to the player that wild Pokémon may be living there and encountering them alone can be very dangerous.[20] He takes the player to his laboratory where the player meets Oak's grandson, a rival aspiring Pokémon Trainer. The player and the rival are both instructed to select a starter Pokémon for their travels out of Bulbasaur, Squirtle and Charmander.[21] Oak's Grandson will always choose the Pokémon which is stronger against the player's starting Pokémon. He will then challenge the player to a Pokémon battle with their newly obtained Pokémon and will continue to battle the player at certain points throughout the games.[22]

While visiting the region's cities, the player will encounter special establishments called Gyms. Inside these buildings are Gym Leaders, each of whom the player must defeat in a Pokémon battle to obtain a total of eight Gym Badges. Once the badges are acquired, the player is given permission to enter the Indigo League, which consists of the best Pokémon trainers in the region. There the player will battle the Elite Four and finally the new Champion: the player's rival.[23] Also, throughout the game, the player will have to battle against the forces of Team Rocket, a criminal organization that abuses/uses the Pokémon for various crimes.[6] They devise numerous plans for stealing rare Pokémon, which the player must foil.[24][25]

Development

Tajiri pitched the concept of Pokémon to Nintendo's staff in 1990[26] and was met with skepticism. They believed his ideas were too ambitious and found it difficult to see the appeal. However, Shigeru Miyamoto saw great potential in the idea and convinced the company to go ahead with the project.[27]

The initial concept for Pokémon stemmed from the hobby of insect collecting, a popular pastime which game designer Satoshi Tajiri enjoyed as a child.[28] While growing up, however, he observed more urbanization taking place in the town where he lived and as a result, the insect population declined. Tajiri noticed that kids now played in their homes instead of outside and he came up with the idea of a video game, containing creatures that resembled insects, called Pokémon. He thought kids could relate with the Pokémon by individually naming them, and then controlling them to represent fear or anger as a good way of relieving stress. However, Pokémon never bleed nor die in battle, only faint – this was a very touchy subject to Tajiri, as he did not want to further fill the gaming world with "pointless violence".[29]

When the Game Boy was released, Tajiri thought the system was perfect for his idea, especially because of the link cable, which he envisioned would allow players to trade Pokémon with each other. This concept of trading information was new to the video game industry because previously connection cables were only being used for competition.[30] "I imagined a chunk of information being transferred by connecting two Game Boys with special cables, and I went wow, that's really going to be something!" said Tajiri.[31] Upon hearing of the Pokémon concept, Shigeru Miyamoto suggested creating multiple cartridges with different Pokémon in each, noting it would assist the trading aspect.[32] Tajiri was also influenced by Square's Game Boy game The Final Fantasy Legend, noting in an interview that the game gave him the idea that more than just action games could be developed for the handheld.[33]

The main characters were named after Tajiri himself as Satoshi, who is described as Tajiri in his youth, and his long-time friend, role model, mentor, and fellow Nintendo developer, Shigeru Miyamoto, as Shigeru.[29][34] Ken Sugimori, an artist and longtime friend of Tajiri, headed the development of drawings and designs of the Pokémon, working with a team of fewer than ten people who conceived the various designs for all 151 Pokémon. Atsuko Nishida created the designs for Pikachu, Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle, and many others.[35] Sugimori, in turn, finalized each design, drawing the Pokémon from various angles in order to assist Game Freak's graphics department in properly rendering the creature.[36][37] Music for the game was composed by Junichi Masuda, who utilized the four sound channels of the Game Boy to create both the melodies and the sound effects and Pokémon "cries" heard upon encountering them. He noted the game's opening theme, titled "Monster", was produced with the image of battle scenes in mind, using white noise to sound like marching music and imitate a snare drum.[38]

Originally called Capsule Monsters, the game's title went through several transitions due to trademark difficulties, becoming CapuMon and KapuMon before eventually settling upon Pocket Monsters.[39][40] Tajiri always thought that Nintendo would reject his game, as the company did not really understand the concept at first. However, the games turned out to be a success, something Tajiri and Nintendo never expected, especially because of the declining popularity of the Game Boy.[29]

Tajiri said that the Poké Ball concept was inspired by Ultraseven's Capsule Monsters from the tokusatsu superhero television series Ultraseven (1967–1968).[41] Nintendo spent $13 million marketing Pokémon Red and Blue in the United States.[42]

Music

Junichi Masuda composed the music for all versions

The music was composed by Junichi Masuda[43] at his home on a Commodore Amiga computer, which only features PCM sample playback, and converted to the Game Boy with a program he had written.[44]

Release

In Japan, Pocket Monsters: Red and Green were the first versions released, having been completed by October 1995 and officially released on February 27, 1996.[45][46] They sold rapidly, due in part to Nintendo's idea of producing the two versions of the game instead of a single title, prompting consumers to buy both.[31] Several months later, Pocket Monsters: Blue was released in Japan as a mail-order-only special edition[47] to subscribers of CoroCoro Comic on October 15, 1996. It was later released to general retail on October 10, 1999.[48][49] It features updated in-game artwork and new dialogue.[50] Using Blastoise as its mascot, the code, script, and artwork for Blue were used for the international releases of Red and Green, which were renamed to Red and Blue.[47] The Japanese Blue edition of the game features all but a handful of Pokémon available in Red and Green, making certain Pokémon exclusive to the original editions.

To create more interest for the games, Tajiri revealed an extra Pokémon called Mew hidden within them, which he believed "created a lot of rumors and myths about the game" and "kept the interest alive".[29] The creature was originally added by Shigeki Morimoto as an internal prank and was not intended to be exposed to consumers.[51] It was not until later that Nintendo decided to distribute Mew through a Nintendo promotional event. However, in 2003 a glitch became widely known and could be exploited so anyone could obtain the elusive Pokémon.[52]

During the North American localization of Pokémon, a small team led by Hiro Nakamura went through the individual Pokémon, renaming them for western audiences based on their appearance and characteristics after approval from Nintendo. In addition, during this process, Nintendo trademarked the 151 Pokémon names in order to ensure they would be unique to the franchise.[53] During the translation process, it became apparent that simply altering the games' text from Japanese to English was impossible; the games had to be entirely reprogrammed from scratch due to the fragile state of their source code, a side effect of the unusually lengthy development time.[37] Therefore, the games were based on the more modern Japanese version of Blue; modeling its programming and artwork after Blue, but keeping the same distribution of Pokémon found in the Japanese Red and Green cartridges, respectively.[47]

As the finished Red and Blue versions were being prepared for release, Nintendo allegedly spent over 50 million dollars to promote the games, fearing the series would not be appealing to American children.[54] The western localization team warned that the "cute monsters" may not be accepted by American audiences, and instead recommended they be redesigned and "beefed-up". Then-president of Nintendo Hiroshi Yamauchi refused and instead viewed the games' possible reception in America as a challenge to face.[55] Despite these setbacks, the reprogrammed Red and Blue versions with their original creature designs were eventually released in North America on September 28, 1998, over two and a half years after Red and Green debuted in Japan.[56][57] The games were received extremely well by the foreign audiences and Pokémon went on to become a lucrative franchise in America.[55] The same versions were later released in Australia sometime later in 1998[58] and in Europe on October 5, 1999[59][60] being the second-to-last video game released for the original Game Boy in Europe with Pokemon Yellow Version: Special Pikachu Edition being the last.

Pokémon Yellow

Main page: Software:Pokémon Yellow

Pokémon Yellow Version: Special Pikachu Edition,[lower-alpha 4] more commonly known as Pokémon Yellow Version, is an enhanced version of Red and Blue, and was originally released on September 12, 1998, in Japan,[61][62] with releases in North America and Europe on October 19, 1999,[63] and June 16, 2000,[64] respectively. The game was designed to resemble the Pokémon anime series, with the player receiving a Pikachu as their starter Pokémon, and their rival starting with an Eevee. Some non-player characters resemble those from the anime, including Team Rocket's Jessie and James.

Re-releases

During the November 12, 2015, Nintendo Direct presentation, it was announced that the original generation of Pokémon games would be released for the Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console service on February 27, 2016, the 20th anniversary of the games' original Japanese release. The games include a first for the Virtual Console: simulated Link Cable functionality to allow trading and battling between games.[65] As was the case with its original release, Green is exclusive to Japanese consumers.[66] These versions of the games are able to transfer Pokémon to Pokémon Sun and Moon via the Pokémon Bank application.[67]

A special Nintendo 2DS bundle was released in Japan, Europe, and Australia on February 27, 2016, with each console matching the corresponding color of the game version.[68] North America received a special New Nintendo 3DS bundle with cover plates styled after Red and Blue's box art.[69]

By March 31, 2016, combined sales of the re-releases reached 1.5 million units with more than half being sold in North America.[70]

Reception

Reception
Aggregate score
AggregatorScore
GameRankings88% (Red)[71]
88% (Blue)[72]
Review scores
PublicationScore
AllGame4.5/5 stars (Blue)[73]
EGM8.5/10[74]
Famitsu29/40[75]
GamePro4.5/5[76]
GameSpot8.8/10 (Blue)[6]
IGN10/10 (Red)[1]
Nintendo Power7.2/10[77]

The games received mostly positive reviews from critics, holding an aggregate score of 88% on GameRankings.[71] Special praise was given to its multiplayer features: the ability to trade and battle Pokémon with one another. Craig Harris of IGN gave the games a "masterful" 10 out of 10, noting that: "Even if you finish the quest, you still might not have all the Pokémon in the game. The challenge to catch 'em all is truly the game's biggest draw". He also commented on the popularity of the game, especially among children, describing it as a "craze".[1] GameSpot's Peter Bartholow, who gave the games a "great" 8.8 out of 10, cited the graphics and audio as somewhat primitive but stated that these were the games' only drawbacks. He praised the titles' replay value due to their customization and variety, and commented upon their universal appeal: "Under its cuddly exterior, Pokémon is a serious and unique RPG with lots of depth and excellent multiplayer extensions. As an RPG, the game is accessible enough for newcomers to the genre to enjoy, but it will entertain hard-core fans as well. It's easily one of the best Game Boy games to date".[6]

The success of these games has been attributed to their innovative gaming experience rather than audiovisual effects. Papers published by the Columbia Business School indicate both American and Japanese children prefer the actual gameplay of a game over special audio or visual effects. In Pokémon games, the lack of these artificial effects has actually been said to promote the child's imagination and creativity.[78] "With all the talk of game engines and texture mapping and so on, there is something refreshing about this superlative gameplay which makes you ignore the cutesy 8-bit graphics" commented The Guardian .[79]

During the 2nd Annual AIAS Interactive Achievement Awards (now known as the D.I.C.E. Awards), Pokémon Red and Blue won the award for "Outstanding Achievement in Character or Story Development", along with nominations for "Console Role-Playing Game of the Year" and "Outstanding Achievement in Interactive Design".[80]

Sales

Pokémon Red and Blue set the precedent for what has become a blockbuster, multibillion-dollar franchise.[81] In Japan Red, Green, and Blue sold 1.04 million units combined during 1996, and another 3.65 million in 1997. The latter performance made Pokémon, collectively, the country's best-selling game of the year, surpassing Final Fantasy VII.[82] By 1997, about 7 million Game Boy units had been sold in Japan.[83] In 1998, Red, Green and Blue sold 1,739,391 units in Japan.[84] By 1998, 10 million units had been sold in Japan.[85] Pokémon Red, Green and Blue ultimately sold 10.23 million copies in Japan,[86] and as of August 2020, were the country's best-selling video games.[87] The video games were accompanied by the Pokémon Trading Card Game; both the video games and card game grossed combined sales revenue of more than $4 billion in Japan, (As of 2000).[88]

In the United States, it became the fastest-selling Game Boy title, having sold 200,000 copies within two weeks and 4 million units by the end of 1998.[89] It went on to become the best-selling video game of 1999 in the United States, where 6.1 million copies were sold that year.[90] By 2007, it had total combined sales of 9.85 million in the United States.[91] In Europe, the games had grossed €60,388,924 or $Undefined year "1,999" (equivalent to $Error when using {{Inflation}}: NaN, check parameters for non-numeric data: |value=Undefined year "1,999" (parameter 2). in 2019) in 1999.[92] In France, over 2.5 million copies were sold within a year.[93] In Germany, they became the first video games to receive two Special Prize awards from the Verband der Unterhaltungssoftware Deutschland (VUD) for sales above 2 million copies by early 2001.[94] In the United Kingdom, Red and Blue received two Platinum awards for sales above 600,000 copies.[95]

Worldwide sales reached over 31 million copies sold.[96] It was "the most successful computer game of all time" according to Joseph Tobin in 2004.[97] In 2009, IGN referred to Pokémon Red and Blue as the "Best selling RPG on the Game Boy" and "Best selling RPG of all time",[98] while in 2017, Guinness World Records declared the games to be the "Best-selling videogame (excluding bundle sales)."[99]

Legacy

The video game website 1UP.com composed a list of the "Top 5 'Late to the Party' Games" showing selected titles that "prove a gaming platform's untapped potential" and were one of the last games released for their respective console. Red and Blue were ranked first and called Nintendo's "secret weapon" when the games were brought out for the Game Boy in the late 1990s.[31] The game's success revitalized the Game Boy in the late 1990s.[97] Nintendo Power listed the Red and Blue versions together as the third best video game for the Game Boy and Game Boy Color, stating that something about the games kept them playing until they caught every Pokémon.[100] Game Informer's Ben Reeves called them (along with Pokémon Yellow, Gold, Silver, and Crystal) the second best Game Boy games and stated that it had more depth than it appeared.[101] Official Nintendo Magazine named the games one of the best Nintendo games of all time, placing 52nd on their list of the top 100 games.[102] Red and Blue made number 72 on IGN's "Top 100 Games of All Time" in 2003, in which the reviewers noted that the pair of games "started a revolution" and praised the deep game design and complex strategy, as well the option to trade between other games.[103] Two years later, it climbed the ranks to number 70 in the updated list, with the games' legacy again noted to have inspired multiple video game sequels, movies, television shows, and other merchandise, strongly rooting it in popular culture.[104] In 2019, PC Magazine included the games on their "The 10 Best Game Boy Games".[105] In 2007, Red and Blue were ranked at number 37 on the list, and the reviewers remarked at the games' longevity:

For everything that has come in the decade since, it all started right here with Pokémon Red/Blue''. Its unique blend of exploration, training, battling and trading created a game that was far more in-depth than it first appeared and one that actually forced the player to socialize with others in order to truly experience all that it had to offer. The game is long, engrossing and sparkles with that intangible addictiveness that only the best titles are able to capture. Say what you will about the game, but few gaming franchises can claim to be this popular ten years after they first hit store shelves.[34]

The games are widely credited with starting and helping pave the way for the successful multibillion-dollar series.[31] Five years after Red and Blue's initial release, Nintendo celebrated its "Pokémoniversary". George Harrison, the senior vice president of marketing and corporate communications of Nintendo of America, stated that "those precious gems [Pokémon Red and Blue] have evolved into Ruby and Sapphire. The release of Pokémon Pinball kicks off a line of great new Pokémon adventures that will be introduced in the coming months".[106] The series has since sold over 300 million games, all accredited to the enormous success of the original Red and Blue versions.[31][107]

On February 12, 2014, an anonymous Australian programmer launched Twitch Plays Pokémon, a "social experiment" on the video streaming website Twitch. The project was a crowdsourced attempt to play a modified version of Pokémon Red by typing commands into the channel's chat log, with an average of 50,000 viewers participating at the same time. The result was compared to "watching a car crash in slow motion".[108] The game was completed on March 1, 2014, boasting 390 hours of multi-user controlled non-stop gameplay.[109]

In 2017, The Strong National Museum of Play inducted Pokémon Red and Green to its World Video Game Hall of Fame.[110]

Remakes

Main page: Software:Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen

Pokémon FireRed Version[lower-alpha 5] and Pokémon LeafGreen Version[lower-alpha 6] are enhanced remakes of Pokémon Red and Blue. The new titles were developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy Advance and have compatibility with the Game Boy Advance Wireless Adapter, which originally came bundled with the games. However, due to the new variables added to FireRed and LeafGreen (such as changing the single, "Special" stat into two separate "Special Attack" and "Special Defense" stats), these titles are not compatible with older versions outside of the third generation of Pokemon. FireRed and LeafGreen were first released in Japan on January 29, 2004,[111][112] and released in North America and Europe on September 9[113] and October 1, 2004[114] respectively. Nearly two years after their original release, Nintendo re-marketed them as Player's Choice titles.[115]

The games received critical acclaim, obtaining an aggregate score of 81 percent on Metacritic.[116] Most critics praised the fact that the games introduced new features while still maintaining the traditional gameplay of the series. Reception of the graphics and audio was more mixed, with some reviewers complaining that they were too simplistic and not much of an improvement over the previous games, Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire. FireRed and LeafGreen were commercial successes, selling a total of around 12 million copies worldwide.[117]

Related games

Main pages: Software:Pokémon Stadium and Software:Pokémon Pinball

Notes

  1. Japanese: ポケットモンスター 赤 Hepburn: Poketto Monsutā Aka
  2. Japanese: ポケットモンスター 緑 Hepburn: Poketto Monsutā Midori
  3. Japanese: ポケットモンスター 青 Hepburn: Poketto Monsutā Ao
  4. ポケットモンスターピカチュウ Poketto Monsutā Pikachū, lit. "Pocket Monsters: Pikachu"
  5. ポケットモンスター ファイアレッド Poketto Monsutā Faiareddo, lit. "Pocket Monsters: FireRed"
  6. ポケットモンスター リーフグリーン Poketto Monsutā Rīfugurīn, lit. "Pocket Monsters: LeafGreen"

References

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  2. MacDonald, Mark; Brokaw, Brian; Arnold; J. Douglas; Elies, Mark (1999). Pokémon Trainer's Guide. Sandwich Islands Publishing. p. 73. ISBN 0-439-15404-9. https://archive.org/details/pokmontrainers00macd. 
  3. Game Freak (1997-12-09). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 8. 
  4. 4.0 4.1 Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 17. 
  5. Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 10. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 Bartholow, Peter (2000-01-28). "GameSpot review". http://www.gamespot.com/gameboy/rpg/pokemonblue/review.html. 
  7. Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 21. 
  8. Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 7. 
  9. 9.0 9.1 Game Freak (1998-09-30). Pokémon Red and Blue, Instruction manual. Nintendo. p. 36. 
  10. "nintendo.com.au – GBC – Frequently Asked Questions". Nintendo. https://www.nintendo.com.au/gbc/faqs/index.php. 
  11. "Game Boy Game Pak Troubleshooting – Specific Games". Nintendo of America Inc.. https://www.nintendo.com/consumer/systems/gameboy/trouble_specificgame.jsp#missingno. "MissingNO is a programming quirk, and not a real part of the game" 
  12. "Pokemon Gold and Silver Strategy Guide: Trading". http://guidesarchive.ign.com/guides/12865/trading.html. 
  13. Gerstmann, Jeff (2000-02-29). "Pokemon Stadium for Nintendo 64 Review". http://www.gamespot.com/n64/puzzle/pokemonstadium/review.html?om_act=convert&om_clk=gssummary&tag=summary;read-review. 
  14. Villoria, Gerald (2001-03-26). "Pokemon Stadium 2 for Nintendo 64 Review". p. 2. http://www.gamespot.com/n64/strategy/pokemonstadium2/review.html?om_act=convert&om_clk=gssummary&tag=summary%3Bread-review&page=2. 
  15. Harris, Craig (2003-03-17). "IGN: Pokemon Ruby Version Review". http://gameboy.ign.com/articles/389/389660p2.html. 
  16. bitmob (2011-12-08). "The 7 Freakiest Pokemon Red/Blue/Yellow Glitches" (in en-US). https://venturebeat.com/gbunfiltered/the-7-freakiest-pokemon-redblueyellow-glitches/. 
  17. Preskey, Natasha (2019-02-18). "The mythos and meaning behind Pokémon’s most famous glitch" (in en-us). https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2019/02/the-mythos-and-meaning-behind-pokemons-most-famous-glitch/. 
  18. Hernandez, Patricia (2014-03-11). "Two Incredible Glitches Make The First Pokémon Games Way Easier" (in en-us). https://kotaku.com/two-incredible-glitches-make-the-first-pokemon-games-w-1541387847. 
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