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The cat and its evolution are slightly overdesigned but would probably fit in 4th gen, on the lower end. Barewl, meanwhile, might well be worse than every (non- conkeldurr) pokemon that actually exists, it's a bronze ball wearing half a nut with a pubic hair poking out of the top
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:13 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 21:49 |
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Spinarak does not deserve to be in this awful game and I'll be real upset if it actually is.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:16 |
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Kemix posted:Yes we get it it's an abomination beyond abominations give it a loving rest already. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIPuX4iNZM0&t=19s Remember Justy from Pokemon Colosseum and how he ran a Sand Veil team? I fuckin hated that guy. I think I'd hate this gym too.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:21 |
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Let's just rewind a little bit, because I want to talk about how the very first choice you make in this game that has any effect is also the prime evidence that there was no playtesting. It's choosing your starter. Specifically, the grass starter. Theo get the starter that has a type weakness to you, in this case, he gets water. As has been mentioned, the water starter will paralyse the opponent when hit with a contact attack. Guess what kind of attack the grass starter has? On top of that, GUESS WHICH STARTER DOES NOT START WITH A TYPED ATTACK. The grass starter starts with Tackle. Not razor leaf, or even leach seed. Tackle. If you pick the grass starter, you will lose the tutorial fight. You will get paralyzed, at a point where the entirety of the curatives you have access to is a single potion. You will not be able to capitalise on the type advantage you are given. And then, as the cherry on top, while Theo goes off to celebrate his victory, the Professor will chew you out for losing when you had the type advantage. If you're curious, no, losing here does not have any lasting change to Theo's behaviours. Half way through the chat with his dad, he's back to his default "I won't lose next time" script.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:22 |
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The Watercrown posted:Let's just rewind a little bit, because I want to talk about how the very first choice you make in this game that has any effect is also the prime evidence that there was no playtesting. It's choosing your starter. Specifically, the grass starter. That's atrocious. I might rag a little on Game Freak for always having their starters have the abilities they do since they're boring, but I can immediately see why they wouldn't give anything special to a starter now. A situation like that is just idiotic. How did they devs not see that coming? (My guess is the devs liked one of the other starters more and didn't test the grass one.)
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:36 |
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FPzero posted:(My guess is the devs liked one of the other starters more and didn't test the grass one.) Dev picked squirtle and never forgave Blue's bulbasaur for beating him.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:41 |
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Spinarak is awesome, his butt face turns angry when he attacks. He ruled even before he did that. Also I don't remember the roadblocks from Sun and Moon much but I seem to remember that at least one of them involved Team Skull, so that one at least must have been good. At the very least it would have had the music.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 21:59 |
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By the way, if we're talking about nonsensical roadblocks, then I think the chief among them must go to the fanhack Pokemon Glazed. The situation is you're invading the underground hideout of a church of Arceus worshippers to find their leader Pius (It's as bad as it sounds.) all so you can rescue Jasmine who got kidnapped. So you battle guards, move to the bad guys office and a dude off to the side shouts "No entering without permission!" And you just can't enter. You are storming the enemy base, there is nothing in front of you, the door isn't locked, this guy wont fight you. He just compels you to not attack by saying you aren't allowed in. So you have to search for another route. Another constant Fan Game sin is the feeling that you're not actually accomplishing anything. I've not actually played Uranium, so I have no idea if it does it. But count how many times in a Pokemon game you fight the evil team and then they accomplish their goal anyway and you 'lose' essentially. It's not often, more than likely they'll win because their goal wasn't you or right there. Like in S/M how they capture Nebby by making it so you're nowhere near when they try it. Or by stalling you, like Courtney in Ruby. Imagine if, when you got to the legendaries in Sinnoh, you beat Cyrus and then he went "Master Ball go!" and caught the two legendaries anyway. Why the gently caress did it matter?
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 22:23 |
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The Watercrown posted:Let's just rewind a little bit, because I want to talk about how the very first choice you make in this game that has any effect is also the prime evidence that there was no playtesting. It's choosing your starter. Specifically, the grass starter. This is why the starters always have the "power up when on low HP" abilities. I also like that Sun/Moon gave everyone a typed attack at the start so you have more cool stuff to play with at the start, but that works due to the balance, whereas Uranium has the problem mentioned above.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 22:26 |
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I actually went through to see how many Pokemon families are actually from the original series, and how many are unchanged. There are only 14 original families in Uranium. Only 5 of them are left unaltered. Several get either bad evolutions, bad megas, radioactive forms, or any combination of the 3. Only 5 exist in their original form without a fake form of some kind. There are some GLARING omissions. I realize to mention a single one of them would likely qualify as a spoiler. But on a personal level they left out nearly every Pokemon that means anything to me on a personal level. I am not interested at hinting as to which ones are excluded. I AM interested in seeing reactions of 'Well at least that's in there' and 'They included THAT thing?' because hoo boy the latter was my reaction most of the time.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 22:28 |
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GeneX posted:The cat and its evolution are slightly overdesigned but would probably fit in 4th gen, on the lower end.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 22:35 |
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MadScientistWorking posted:The problem with your comparison is that you can tell what conkeldurr is by looking at it. Is it dumb? Yes. Does it have the same issue of not knowing what it is that Barewl does? No. Conkeldurr actually has a design philosophy behind it that makes its evolutionary line cohesive and actually good. Barewl is indecipherable and only later down the line does it look even have a discernible form, though even that's debatable. I think Conkeldurr is actually pretty good, btw. Just because something's ugly doesn't mean it's stupid or badly designed.
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# ? Feb 21, 2017 22:52 |
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To be fair, one of my real pet peeves about the later pokemon games is that they really dropped the ball on making it instantly apparent what type a given pokemon is. Take a glance at, say, Golem and you can tell that it's rock type. There are exceptions, but for the most part you can tell the typing from a glance at the sprite. In the later gens there are some sprites that I have absolutely no idea on, with Florges, Dhlemise and Fomantis/Lurantis being particularly bad offenders. And as for the ultra beasts, how is this grass type, this flying type and this a goddamn rock/poison type?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:17 |
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Mr. Vile posted:To be fair, one of my real pet peeves about the later pokemon games is that they really dropped the ball on making it instantly apparent what type a given pokemon is. Take a glance at, say, Golem and you can tell that it's rock type. There are exceptions, but for the most part you can tell the typing from a glance at the sprite. In the later gens there are some sprites that I have absolutely no idea on, with Florges, Dhlemise and Fomantis/Lurantis being particularly bad offenders. And as for the ultra beasts, how is this grass type, this flying type and this a goddamn rock/poison type? To be fair those three are a) Legendaries, which can sometimes be tough to get a type reading on (Dialga, Palkia) and b) Some sort of extradimensional eldritch beings.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:26 |
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According to the page you linked. That rock/poison type seems to be based on a jellyfish which seems to make sense for poison. Though it's tentative at best. gently caress knows how they got rock from that though. I don't think it even has bones.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:28 |
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Onmi posted:By the way, if we're talking about nonsensical roadblocks, then I think the chief among them must go to the fanhack Pokemon Glazed. The situation is you're invading the underground hideout of a church of Arceus worshippers to find their leader Pius (It's as bad as it sounds.) all so you can rescue Jasmine who got kidnapped. So you battle guards, move to the bad guys office and a dude off to the side shouts "No entering without permission!" Team Flare did this loving constantly.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:28 |
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Mr. Vile posted:To be fair, one of my real pet peeves about the later pokemon games is that they really dropped the ball on making it instantly apparent what type a given pokemon is. Take a glance at, say, Golem and you can tell that it's rock type. There are exceptions, but for the most part you can tell the typing from a glance at the sprite. In the later gens there are some sprites that I have absolutely no idea on, with Florges, Dhlemise and Fomantis/Lurantis being particularly bad offenders. And as for the ultra beasts, how is this grass type, this flying type and this a goddamn rock/poison type? The Ultra Beasts are meant to feel otherworldly and wrong, so the hosed-up typings make sense there (if you want an explanation for the Rock type on Nihilego, it could be related to how some space aliens/extra-dimensional beings are depicted as silicon-based life to underscore their alien nature). As for the rest, sometimes it's given an explanation (Dhelmise is the seaweed around the anchor, not the anchor itself), sometimes it's not (the Flabebe line and Comfey look like they should have a Grass subtype, and Lurantis looks like it should be part Bug, but they aren't, for no real reason aside from gameplay).
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:31 |
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Mr. Vile posted:And as for the ultra beasts, how is this grass type, this flying type and this a goddamn rock/poison type? The Ultra Beasts are extradimensional creatures and do not conform to our 3d paradigms. Perhaps it is hosed up to them that Golem is Rock/Ground?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:35 |
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Mr. Vile posted:this a goddamn rock/poison type? oh hey, nihilego. someone at nintendo liked the username i used as a teen!
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:37 |
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Orange Fluffy Sheep posted:The Ultra Beasts are extradimensional creatures and do not conform to our 3d paradigms. Perhaps it is hosed up to them that Golem is Rock/Ground? The Ultra Beasts do seem to kind of make a point of having weird types for an "otherwordly" theme, but I feel like some kind of concession should have been made for gameplay reasons. Besides, they already did that trick back in Gen 2 with Sudowoodo . Dhelmise I can forgive because they do justify it in the dex entry with the anchor just being a thing the actual seaweed pokemon picked up, but again, that trick was fun the first time they pulled it with Sudowoodo. Having one deliberately misleading sprite is cute, especially when it has a punny name to go with it. Having a half a dozen of them just rubs me the wrong way.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:43 |
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The Watercrown posted:Let's just rewind a little bit, because I want to talk about how the very first choice you make in this game that has any effect is also the prime evidence that there was no playtesting. It's choosing your starter. Specifically, the grass starter. There is a built-in Nuzlocke mode in this game. You can render your game into an unwinnable state by failing a personality test five minutes in. Regarding Trade Evolutions being an atrocity, please remember this is a PC game which does not have the advantage of portability and relies on ad-hoc internet connectivity to allow said trades to function. If the game's servers ever go down (incredibly likely given the game's already been C&D'd) then all of those evolutions become entirely inaccessible without hacking the game. More than even with a romhack, this is rather inexcusable from a design standpoint.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:49 |
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To be fair to Kartana and Celesteela, Kartana is basically made to look as much like a piece of paper as possible and Celesteela resembles a space shuttle in the initial stages of flight.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:51 |
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krisslanza posted:So you mean the Cazadors, right? Them or the loving army of Deathclaws in the quarry.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:53 |
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Mr. Vile posted:The Ultra Beasts do seem to kind of make a point of having weird types for an "otherwordly" theme, but I feel like some kind of concession should have been made for gameplay reasons. After your first encounter with any Pokemon in Gen VII, the game tells you which moves have what effectiveness, it may be that the feature was implemented in part as a concession to players potentially confused by the visual design of a given Pokemon they're not familiar with. Really, there's a ton of Pokemon whose type or subtype isn't immediately obvious based on their visual design, and you need to consult the Pokedex for an explanation of how their looks lead to their type, and even then there's some designs that make no sense. Has there ever been an explanation for why Gyarados is part flying-type?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:55 |
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OneDeadman posted:To be fair to Kartana and Celesteela, Kartana is basically made to look as much like a piece of paper as possible and Celesteela resembles a space shuttle in the initial stages of flight. I think Celesteela is based on a bamboo shoot so I was really confused when it turned out not to be grass type.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 00:58 |
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I will say that every single time I see a Gliscor I forget that it's a Ground type.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:00 |
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EclecticTastes posted:Has there ever been an explanation for why Gyarados is part flying-type?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:02 |
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flarp22 posted:I think I remember reading somewhere that it was because Game Freak didn't want to give it Dragon subtyping because it would be super hard to break in Gen 1, where there was no Dragon STAB to speak of, and Magikarp were EVERYWHERE. Or maybe that was a theory I latched onto. Well, yeah, I get the gameplay justification, Gyarados-but-Dragon is a deeply irritating prospect, but most odd typings got a reason in the Pokedex at some point. Guess it just got grandfathered in.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:05 |
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I've always held that a couple of the weirder ones from gen 1 are because they used poison as a kind of substitute for dark-type, hence the bat being flying/poison.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:08 |
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homeless hungry plz help posted:Conkeldurr actually has a design philosophy behind it that makes its evolutionary line cohesive and actually good. Barewl is indecipherable and only later down the line does it look even have a discernible form, though even that's debatable. Conkeldurr is a scourge on this planet and its designer should be euthanized, but I will agree that it has a cohesive design, unlike our friend barewl
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:12 |
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Mr. Vile posted:I think Celesteela is based on a bamboo shoot so I was really confused when it turned out not to be grass type. Celesteela is based on Princess Kaguya from The Tale of the Bamboo Cutter, which is why it looks like its made of Bamboo, its Steel Flying because its literally a goddamn rocket ship built to go to the moon. Kartana is Grass/Steel because its literally an origami samurai wearing metal armor over its paper body. edit: Although somewhat amusingly because there are so many cutting based flying moves and Celasteela flies by rocket propulsion, Kartana learns more flying moves then it. Meanwhile because Celestella is based on a bamboo shoot and Kartana is based on paper, Celestella actually learns more grass moves of the two. Vorpal Cat fucked around with this message at 01:26 on Feb 22, 2017 |
# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:21 |
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GeneX posted:Conkeldurr is a scourge on this planet and its designer should be euthanized, but I will agree that it has a cohesive design, unlike our friend barewl ...Wh... Di... Did Conkeldurr hurt you in some way? What did Conkeldurr do to you?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:45 |
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Mr. Vile posted:To be fair, one of my real pet peeves about the later pokemon games is that they really dropped the ball on making it instantly apparent what type a given pokemon is. Take a glance at, say, Golem and you can tell that it's rock type. There are exceptions, but for the most part you can tell the typing from a glance at the sprite. In the later gens there are some sprites that I have absolutely no idea on, with Florges, Dhlemise and Fomantis/Lurantis being particularly bad offenders. And as for the ultra beasts, how is this grass type, this flying type and this a goddamn rock/poison type? Nihilego's a rock type because it looks like it's made from glass, although that could be more of an argument for it being ground instead.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 01:59 |
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flarp22 posted:I think I remember reading somewhere that it was because Game Freak didn't want to give it Dragon subtyping because it would be super hard to break in Gen 1, where there was no Dragon STAB to speak of, and Magikarp were EVERYWHERE. Or maybe that was a theory I latched onto. Actually it's because there just was no dragon type until the rear end end of development and flying was their go-to replacement for the concept. Charizard was the same deal. e: Also the UBs have bizarre typings because they're supposed to be hosed up and wrong, that's kind of their Thing
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:01 |
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homeless hungry plz help posted:...Wh... Di... Did Conkeldurr hurt you in some way? It looks like a roided clown on the brink of death. Its one of the only pokemon I find really repulsive (along with Stantler, Tympole, Mr. Mime and loving Diggersby)
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:02 |
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I actually don't mind most canon pokemon designs, but there's no excuse for Bruxish. It's like Lisa Frank exploded on a humuhumu and gave it nightmarish teeth.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:16 |
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KataraniSword posted:There is a built-in Nuzlocke mode in this game. You can render your game into an unwinnable state by failing a personality test five minutes in. You know, the fact it has a built-in Nuzlocke mode, they should've made it so the mode went both ways. You're killing everyone else's Pokemon too. Then Theo has a reason to cry.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:26 |
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CoffeeAvenger posted:It's like Lisa Frank exploded on a humuhumu and gave it nightmarish teeth. Is it supposed to be a triggerfish? It looks more like a filefish.
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:27 |
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EclecticTastes posted:Has there ever been an explanation for why Gyarados is part flying-type? It flies, doesn't it?
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:28 |
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# ? May 13, 2024 21:49 |
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Amidiri posted:It flies, doesn't it? No, not unless you count the generic floating above the ground during battle that all fish-like Pokemon do. The only Flying-type moves it can learn in the entire franchise are Hurricane and Bounce (and the latter only from a Move Tutor in Gen VI).
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# ? Feb 22, 2017 02:32 |