Game #24/200 Pokémon Blue is one of my all-time favorite games, as I, like many nostalgic 90s kids, grew up in a suburban neighborhood where we all rode scooters/bikes to trade Pokémon and Pokémon cards. I probably beat Blue/Red a half dozen or more times, always changing my team composition a bit but maintaining my favorites (Ninetails, Pinsir, Victreebell, Blastoise …
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Game #24/200 Pokémon Blue is one of my all-time favorite games, as I, like many nostalgic 90s kids, grew up in a suburban neighborhood where we all rode scooters/bikes to trade Pokémon and Pokémon cards. I probably beat Blue/Red a half dozen or more times, always changing my team composition a bit but maintaining my favorites (Ninetails, Pinsir, Victreebell, Blastoise to name a few). I have also beaten FireRed back in the day as an 11-year-old kid as opposed to an 8-9 year old playing the even older version. I remember enjoying it but preferring the original version. I can say now, after beating LeafGreen in 15 hours right on the heels of beating Emerald, that this game is indeed a classic beautiful adventure. I’m not going to go into all of my feelings about Gen I, but I’ll say that playing it as a kid was probably among the best parts of my life so far. Revisiting it through this remake, which updates the graphics significantly and makes many gameplay improvements but does not mess with the overall world/story/flow of the game, was remarkably fun. I can acknowledge as a 30-year-old man that the story is very weak (does not matter at all to me) and the gameplay needs some major tweaks. Notably, the routes are PACKED with trainers. You can certainly skip many of them, but you do miss out on leveling up by doing so. Leveling up by the way is very quick in this game. I think my Charmeleon was level 21 within the first hour and a half. Emerald is probably — no, definitely — a better overall experience due to its more balanced gameplay. You have many more moves and lots of variety among Pokémon typing in Emerald, whereas in this game that’s just not the case. For instance, I think there are only 3 ghost Pokémon. Steel type is nearly impossible to find as well as ice being rare, while water seems highly overrepresented (maybe this is always the case). Anyway, these things don’t matter much. The experience is huge fun partly because you’re revisiting your childhood, but mostly because Pokémon is such pure dopamine. Leveling, evolving, and knocking out enemy Pokémon is so addicting. Throw in the exploration element — finding items around landscapes and new monsters to catch — and it’s really a delightful time. There’s so much more to say, but maybe at a much later date when I replay the original Gen I titles. For now I’m looking forward to getting into HeartGold sometime next month.
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