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Buck

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May 9, 2005, 1:59:31 PM5/9/05
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I am fairly new to the Pokemon games. My daughter has the GBA and had
Ruby. I bought Fire Red and Sapphire (before I knew that Sapphire was
just Ruby with some different pokemon.) I have played a little on
Sapphire and less on Ruby, but I have over 40 hours in on Fire Red. I
The first of May I bought Emerald. I haven't seen it yet, but my
daughter keeps talking about how much she likes it.

My question is, how many pokemon should I be raising? I have finally
raised all my critters to at least 10-14 and more than half 15-19 with
about a dozen raised over 20. Two are over thirty including my 48
level charmelion (evolved to the third level).

I have spent many hours trying to keep the critters leveled together
and paired (male and female) so they may be bred later on. Now I find
out that I need an extra for trading, lol.

I found the right combination for fighting Misty was four Pekachu
level 14+ and two level 14 Butterfree. However, I used vs seeker to
help level up my critters so my main force is now close to level 30 or
higher. At this point, I am just over powering the challengers and
gym leaders.

I don't want to restart the game again. (I had to do that when I met
Misty without any pekachu.) But I am considering creating a few
retirement bins and parking the pokemon I don't want to build up etc
there and keep a main force of about six to twelve pokemon raised for
fighting etc.

any thoughts?

Buck
Buck
--
For what it's worth.

John Salerno

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May 9, 2005, 10:03:50 PM5/9/05
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I just raise about four or five to take me through the game, plus one
for HMs to sit in the back of the group. The level doesn't matter for
breeding.

daramark

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May 9, 2005, 11:15:42 PM5/9/05
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"John Salerno" <john...@NOSPAMgmail.com> wrote in message
news:35udneajbt8...@rcn.net...


Depends on why you are breeding. If you are breeding to pass on moves that
are naturally learned you need to raise both the male and female to have
both with the moves you would like to pass on.

As for the original poster Buck, mostly what works is having a wide variety
of types. And while bug types tend to be available and evolve early in the
game they also tend to fade away. The goal is to beat the Elite 4 (E4 with
actually one more) and they have certain types that you need to raise pokes
to beat.

You don't need to start over again though. I turned off my gameboy when I
found I didn't have the Ice moves neccessary to beat the Dragons. This is
called resetting, and it can be very important. There are some pokes that
are only available once in a game and if you lose or beat it without
catching it you will not have a chance to get it again without resetting the
game.

And you can always come back and raise your favourites later, and some pokes
grow at different rates, making the slow ones harder to raise.

Depending on how much you like knowing what is to come you could check out
www.gamefaqs.com for info. There are walkthroughs that are very specific
and there are guides that cover a wide range of the compications of Pokemon
and Pokedexes so that you know what moves are to come. Have fun!

daramark


Joseph William Dixon

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May 10, 2005, 1:23:33 PM5/10/05
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On Mon, 9 May 2005, daramark wrote:
> As for the original poster Buck, mostly what works is having a wide
> variety of types. And while bug types tend to be available and evolve
> early in the game they also tend to fade away.

Depends on the Bug, really. In R/S/E, Beautifly (Aerial Ace, Silver Wind,
Giga Drain and Stun Spore being my preferred moveset) is well worth the
time and effort. In my Emerald game, I'm about to assault the Team Aqua
hideout and my level 42 Beautifly (with that moveset) is still taking an
active role. She'll probably still be around for the Elite Four. :)
Now, for battling against humans, I probably wouldn't take it against the
more fanatical battlers, but it'd do quite well, I'll bet, for the casual
battlers (you know, those who use their story-mode lineup and don't
specifically tune to take on other humans - far more fun that way, IMHO)

--
"...there are hardly any excesses of the most crazed psychopath that cannot
easily be duplicated by a normal, kindly family man who just comes into
work every day and has a job to do." [Terry Pratchett, "Small Gods"]
http://www.chebucto.ns.ca/~aa343/index.html

Adrian Tymes

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May 10, 2005, 2:39:22 PM5/10/05
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Buck wrote:
> My question is, how many pokemon should I be raising? I have finally
> raised all my critters to at least 10-14 and more than half 15-19 with
> about a dozen raised over 20. Two are over thirty including my 48
> level charmelion (evolved to the third level).

That depends on what you're raising them for. If you're trying to beat
the game - e.g., beat Misty et al - I've found that Ash's strategy works
well: raise one main pokemon, and rotate a few others as they give type
advantages or moves of use against certain trainers. Mainly, just work
that one pokemon (my starter, usually, unless I acquire another pokemon
of similar level but better stats) to the bone, using it to lead against
every trainer and quite a few wild pokemon until it's near fainting.
I've been able to build up a consistent 10 level advantage over even the
gym leaders by the latter half of the game that way - and at that point,
so long as you keep enough variety of move types so you don't have to
use ones that are weak or ineffective due to type against whatever
specific pokemon you face, you can often just roll right over the gym
leaders.

This strategy doesn't work once you get to level-automatched areas like
the Battle Frontier, but by that point you've already "beaten" the game.
(Then again, for the BF itself, you can apparently get the stat-up items
cheap in terms of Battle Points, then sell those for Pokeyen or whatever
the monetary unit is, which can in turn be spent to acquire TMs and
other useful items. Now if only you could buy Rare Candies, levelling
up would become a lot less time consuming.)

Chet Weaver - But the talent contest is tomorrow!

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May 10, 2005, 5:29:28 PM5/10/05
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Buck wrote:

> I don't want to restart the game again. (I had to do that when I met
> Misty without any pekachu.) But I am considering creating a few
> retirement bins and parking the pokemon I don't want to build up etc
> there and keep a main force of about six to twelve pokemon raised for
> fighting etc.
>
> any thoughts?

Yeah, that's what I do. I go with two special boxes, one for my team
and another for Pokemon I'm trying to evolve. Once I fully evolve a
Pokemon, I either put it on my team or just to another box. For my
team, I generally stick to one favorite per type and rotate them when
they level up. When I get tired of that, I just try to keep all my
bases covered typewise and keep to six Pokemon. In the past, I've
spread out my HMs amongst my team, but next time I think I'll keep the
HMs on one or two utility Pokemon.

--

Chet "Tech" Weaver

"Internet dating is another factor in geeks taking over our women. If
you can't figure out how to upload your picture to your MySpace profile,
you're missing out on the greatest source of unlimited sex since science
invented your mother. Hahaha, FACE!"
-- Seanbaby, The Final Last Word (The Wave, March23 - April 5, 2005 issue)

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daramark

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May 17, 2005, 12:23:07 AM5/17/05
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"Chet Weaver - But the talent contest is tomorrow!" <Zero...@netscape.net>
wrote in message news:4281...@news.usenetzone.com...

> Buck wrote:
>
>> I don't want to restart the game again. (I had to do that when I met
>> Misty without any pekachu.) But I am considering creating a few
>> retirement bins and parking the pokemon I don't want to build up etc
>> there and keep a main force of about six to twelve pokemon raised for
>> fighting etc.
>>
>> any thoughts?
>
> Yeah, that's what I do. I go with two special boxes, one for my team and
> another for Pokemon I'm trying to evolve. Once I fully evolve a Pokemon,
> I either put it on my team or just to another box. For my team, I
> generally stick to one favorite per type and rotate them when they level
> up. When I get tired of that, I just try to keep all my bases covered
> typewise and keep to six Pokemon. In the past, I've spread out my HMs
> amongst my team, but next time I think I'll keep the HMs on one or two
> utility Pokemon.
>

I have done both the HM slaves (Farfetch'd was great for this) and spreading
out the HMs. I think the HM slaves work best because then you just have to
level them up to about 40 playing through the game, and switching them out
for some other more useful pokes leveling up. But once you beat the E4 and
are just leveling up pokes and catching pokes they become the strongest
members of your young teams and can really help out.

Because of all the Water HMs I find that Azumaril is wonderful, especially
if you get one with Huge Power (or whatever it's called) instead of Thick
Fat. They learn 5 HMs, so you don't have to stick all the water on one but
you can, and still have a physical attack. Tropius is another, because of
Fly (very important for leveling up, fight until everyone is almost gone and
then Fly to the Pokecenter of your choice) and it learns Cut (it's a useless
move though) too. And of course there is Zigzagoon/Linoone who can learn
lots (including Surf), but you should leave Covet on. Never know when you
might need a Heartscale. :) Mind you for Flash I still can't seem to break
my dislike of the move. I tend to find some poor poke who can learn it, use
it for those tasks only and box it till next time. I don't even know who
has it right now in either Sapphire or Ruby. And yet I love Sand Attack.
Same move but with different accuracy, so maybe that's why (doubt it
though).

daramark


HippayMan

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May 17, 2005, 10:02:33 PM5/17/05
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Leveling up is a very anooying thing for me to do but I find that it is
the best. This is just my oppinion but take a few pokemon you like and
are of different types(for type adv. and dis adv.). Find a place to
train based on level and move when your pokemons exp. isn't gaining any
ground and move to spot where you can find higher level pokemon.
Depending on where you're at in the game this could take anywhere from
a couple of hours to weeks of leveling up you partners. Hope this helps

Chad Rushing

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May 17, 2005, 11:51:10 PM5/17/05
to
Ha, I do the same thing with Flash. I think in RUBY I caught a nobody
Pokémon who could learn FLASH, named him "TORCH" (which I think is the
British term for "flashlight" ... no, I'm not British), and only pulled
it out of the PC when I had to go into a cave. I did not even bother
to level it up.

I sort of wish that you just needed a FIRE Pokémon in your party in
order to see in caves rather than have to use a special move. I think
Charmander's tail lit many a dark cave for Ash on the show.

- Chad
who really wishes trading between games was not *required* in order to
acquire all of the Pokémon

daramark

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May 18, 2005, 2:18:44 AM5/18/05
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"Chad Rushing" <not...@aol.com> wrote in message
news:1116388270....@g49g2000cwa.googlegroups.com...

Ha, I do the same thing with Flash. I think in RUBY I caught a nobody
Pokémon who could learn FLASH, named him "TORCH" (which I think is the
British term for "flashlight" ... no, I'm not British), and only pulled
it out of the PC when I had to go into a cave. I did not even bother
to level it up.

I sort of wish that you just needed a FIRE Pokémon in your party in
order to see in caves rather than have to use a special move. I think
Charmander's tail lit many a dark cave for Ash on the show.


Now there's a Bright Idea. I dislike naming my pokes, so I probably
wouldn't have thought of it. Though I have named a few pokes, usually
because I hit the wrong button when I caught them.

I tend to have to look at all the pokes in several boxes to find the
miserable Flash move. And yes the Brits call a flashlight a Torch (I'm not
either, but I read a lot of mysteries and Brits tend to write some of the
best).

Thanks! I am hoping to get something Pokemon for two special occasion coming
up. Money permitting of course.


daramark


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