Okay. I got my account fixed. That was a bit silly.
Today we'll do something a long time coming. Gen I Pokemon. And ALL of their remakes.
That means today we'll be talking about Red, Green, Blue, Yellow, FireRed, LeafGreen, Let's Go Pikachu. and Let's Go Eevee. We got quite the busy week ahead of us.
Game Summary: The original Pokemon games were originally released on the Game Boy. The games introduced 151 critters to catch, befriend, train and battle with. By using Pokeballs, players could catch wild Pokemon and have them join their team. Each Pokemon has one or two types, four usable moves and unique stat spreads making each of them feel unique. Battles use a turn based system where a Pokemon's type can give resistances or weaknesses to other types. Players were tasked with defeating the eight gym leaders of the Kanto region and finally defeating the Elite Four the become the champion of the region. Players would also need to beat their rival and stop the villainous Team Rocket.
Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen were updated remakes released on the GBA. The game updated the original game to use the Generation III Pokemon mechanics. The game also introduced new features including wireless trading and battling and introduced new areas like the Sevii Islands. Generation II and III Pokemon were added into the game, though many needed to be traded into them. The game is widely considered to be better than the original.
Pokemon Let's Go Pikachu and Let's Go Eevee are yet another trip to the Kanto region, however they play radically different to the Game Boy original. While Pokemon battles with trainer still happen with updated Generation VII mechanics, catching Pokemon now plays like Pokemon Go. The game also includes candies that power up your Pokemon and for the first time ever, coach co-op play. The game is divisive as many do not like the mechanical changes, but they do have their fans.
Initial Release:
Red and Green: February 17th, 1996
Blue: October 15th, 1996
Yellow: September 12th, 1998
FireRed and LeafGreen: January 29th, 2004
Let's Go Pikachu and Let's Go Eevee: November 16th, 2018
Playable on...
Red/Blue/Green/Yellow
FireRed/LeafGreen
Let's Go Pikachu/Let's Go Eevee
Notable Character Debuts:
Red/Green/Blue/Yellow
- Pikachu
- Jigglypuff
- Mewtwo
- Squirtle
- Ivysaur
- Charizard
- Red
- Blue
- Professor Oak
- Brock
- Misty
- Giovanni
- All Gen 1 Pokemon
FireRed/LeafGreen
- Leaf
Let's Go Pikachu/Let's Go Eevee
Current Metacritic Scores:
Red/Blue
Critics: 88%
FireRed/LeafGreen
Critics: 81
Players: 8.6
Let's Go Pikachu/Let's Go Eevee
Critics: 79
Players: 6.3
Confirmed Players:
Red/Blue/Yellow
- Swamp Sensei
- PLATINUM7
- Grim "Anubis" Reaper
- Noipoi
- Megadoomer
FireRed/LeafGreen
- Swamp Sensei
- PLATINUM7
- Grim "Anubis" Reaper
- Hadokeyblade
- Chocolatejr9
Let's Go Pikachu/Let's Go Eevee
Recommended by:
Red/Blue/Yellow
- Swamp Sensei
- PLATINUM7
- Grim "Anubis" Reaper
- Noipoi
- Megadoomer
FireRed/LeafGreen
- Swamp Sensei
- PLATINUM7
- Grim "Anubis" Reaper
- Hadokeyblade
Let's Go Pikachu/Let's Go Eevee
Pokemon is a very special series to me. I've loved the games ever since I was a child. In retrospect, the original games, while mind blowing at the time, have not aged well. They're glitchy messes but I find that's part of the charm. Red, Blue and Yellow are games I hold very dear, so its hard to critique them fairly. FireRed and LeafGreen were also childhood games of mine and are ones I think aged a lot better. Honestly I find it hard to talk about the mainline Pokemon games because... they were just always there for me. I suppose that's a ringing endorsement right there.
That said, I haven't actually played the Let's Go games. I have bought Eevee and its in my backlog, but I haven't touched it. That means this is the first game I won't be able to talk about in this thread. I hope you guys can discuss it properly.