Talk:Pokémon
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Creators
[edit]Should Masuda and Sugimori be credited as creators of the franchise as well? Masuda played a key roll in making the orginal games and Sugimori designed the original 151 Pokémon. Pikachubob3 (talk) 11:30, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
- Sugimoro and Masuda definitely played key roles in the development of Red and Green, but so did many members of the dev team. However, Tajiri came up with the franchise's core idea: catching and trading various creatures. Therefore, Tajiri is commonly said to have been the main creator of Pocket Monsters, which he initially called Capsule Monsters in his original pitch document.
- Sugimoro did not design *all* original 151 Pokémon. This is one of the many misconceptions about the franchise that have sprung up over the years, and which this Wikipedia article debunks. Sugimori designed part of them, as did Atsuko Nishida. Nishida designed Pikachu, Bulbasaur, Charmander, Squirtle, and various others. - Manifestation (talk) 14:12, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
- Ahh, makes sense Pikachubob3 (talk) 21:59, 5 September 2024 (UTC)
- @Manifestation Masuda did also introduce the erm... Masuda method Pokémon&BandGeek (talk) 20:38, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
Semi-protected edit request on 25 September 2024
[edit]This edit request has been answered. Set the |answered= or |ans= parameter to no to reactivate your request. |
I think it needs more The1hot1dog (talk) 09:54, 25 September 2024 (UTC)
- Not done. @The1hot1dog, please be more specific. - Manifestation (talk) 10:21, 25 September 2024 (UTC)
- For what purpose CheeseyHead (talk) 17:33, 18 October 2024 (UTC)
"Bulbagarden" listed at Redirects for discussion
[edit]The redirect Bulbagarden has been listed at redirects for discussion to determine whether its use and function meets the redirect guidelines. Readers of this page are welcome to comment on this redirect at Wikipedia:Redirects for discussion/Log/2024 September 27 § Bulbagarden until a consensus is reached. Jay 💬 11:26, 27 September 2024 (UTC)
Recent edits
[edit]User:TheFlamer2024 has made a number of frivolous edits to this article. Some of them made the article worse. To his credit, he reverted part of them, but others have remained.
One thing I dislike is that he conflated the introduction of Pokémon in North-America and the Pokémania fad:
− | + | === 1998–2000: International expansion and Pokémania ===
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And:
− | + | ==== Pokémania ====
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The enormous marketing effort of NoA and 4Kids to bring the phenomenon to the Western world, and the massive craze that resulted from it, are two completely different things which definitely shouldn't be lumped together. I know the time frames overlap, but that isn't a problem per se. If you're describing history, it is not unusual for events to overlap with each other. As long as you clearly separate the info into different paragraphs, this won't confuse the reader.
Here are other changes I don't agree with:
- 1
− | However, it later turned out that the term ''Capsule Monsters'' could not be | + | However, it later turned out that the term ''Capsule Monsters'' could not be [[trademark]]ed and was already registered. According to Hatakeyama & Kubo (2000), the word "capsule" could not be used in the trademark.<ref name="Hatakeyama_Kubo_(2000)_p476" /> Tomisawa (2000) states that the Game Freak staff then came up with several alternatives, before someone within the team suggested "''Pocket'' ''Monsters''",<ref name="Tomisawa_(2000)_p65-66" /> and it was subsequently decided as the final name for the titles.
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The two sources don't entirely line up here. So it seems logical to me that both are presented to the reader, to display the ambiguity. I don't understand why one should be removed while the other should stay.
- 2
− | However, as development progressed, GF's ideas and ambitions | + | However, as development progressed, GF's ideas and ambitions grew.
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Their ideas and ambitions *for Pokemon* grew. Not their ideas and ambitions in general. At the time, Game Freak had just one game, Quinty. Development of their second game, Pocket Monsters (then known as Capsule Monsters), was halted due to a lack of know-how. GF was in no position to be overly ambitious. For their next project, they created Yosshī no Tamago, a simplistic puzzle title. The idea for the game came from Tsunekazu Ishihara, who was hoping that it would generate money for Game Freak and Pokemon (see Hatakeyama & Kubo (2000), p111-p115). From the start, Yoshi was a very *un*ambitious project, which GF was basically doing for a paycheck.
Yoshi was a smash hit, selling about 2 million copies (source). Both Tajiri (source) and Masuda (source) have stated that the revenue allowed GF to survive. This in turn allowed them to take on more ambitious projects such as Pulseman (1994).
- 3
− | This resulted in | + | This resulted in the franchise having three legal owners
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I have my doubts here. At the time of the release of Red and Green, there were only one pair of games and one manga. I'm not sure if that counts as a franchise. Maybe the correct term here would be property?
- 4
− | Upon founding, the company was housed in the same | + | Upon founding, the company was housed in the same office building as Nintendo and Game Freak.
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AFAIK, Game Freak was never housed in the same Sudachō, Chiyoda office building as Nintendo and Creatures. According to this waybacked snapshot from 7 July 1997, GF was in Setagaya at the time, which is some kilometers west of Chiyoda.
- 5
− | ''Blue'' would not receive a normal retail release, but would be made available only through mail order for a limited time as a special | + | ''Blue'' would not receive a normal retail release, but would be made available only through mail order for a limited time as a special offer,<ref>{{Harvp|Hatakeyama|Kubo|2000|p=212-213}}.</ref> as also explained in the announcement for Blue in the November issue of ''CoroCoro'', to celebrate 1 million sales of ''Red'' and ''Green''.
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New text is definitely worse, and fails to emphasize that Blue was primarily offered through CoroCoro. That magazine was the primary marketing channel for the Japanese Pokemon franchise for many years.
- 6
− | The offer was a surprisingly big success: 300,000 units were expected to be sold, but over | + | The offer was a surprisingly big success: 300,000 units were expected to be sold, but over double was ordered.
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"over double was ordered" sounds iffy. Perhaps "more than double the amount was ordered"?
- 7
− | The original set | + | The original set would be titled the [[List of Pokémon Trading Card Game sets#Pokémon Base Set|Base Set]] internationally.
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No, in *English*. Not internationally. You can see the box of the original Pokemon card game here: front, back. As you can see, it was titled ポケモンカードゲーム, Pokemon Card Game. That's where it all started. The expansion sets came later. In English, the original set would be named Base Set. In other languages, it had different names. In Spanish, it was Edición Básica. In German, it was Grundset. And so on.
- 8
− | + | ==== ''Pokémon the Series'' ====
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This suggests that the section is about the first season as a whole. It is in fact about how the production of the anime was officially approved, prepared, set up, and eventually launched. It is still ongoing to this day, as new episodes continue to be produced.
- 9
− | In the end, all council members agreed that Pikachu should | + | In the end, all council members agreed that Pikachu should star in the franchise, as they expected Pikachu to appeal to both boys and girls.
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"central icon of the franchise" sounds better than "Pikachu stars in the franchise". Also, the two sources cited both state that Pikachu was chosen because it was expected to appeal to both children and their mothers. From the perspective of marketing, this is important.
Allison (2006), p226: "As he [Kubo] told me in an interview, the overarching objective [of the anime] was to extend the audience of Pokémon to girls, younger children, and even mothers (as important in the marketing of children’s entertainment as children themselves). ... [Pikachu's] huggable look makes children happy and mothers feel safe."
Allison (2006), p244: "In Japan, Pikachu had been the center of the Pokémon craze ever since the pocket monster’s role was expanded for the cartoon in an attempt to widen the audience base (to include younger children, girls, and mothers) from those drawn to the game (mainly boys aged eight to fourteen)."
Pokemon Business Study Group (1998), p196: 「ピカチュウ」は今ほどの人気はなかったが、あどけない可愛らしさがあり、子供はもちろん、母親にうけるのではないかと判断されたのである。Pikachu was not as popular as it is now, but it had an innocent cuteness, and it was judged that it would be popular with mothers as well as children.
- 10
− | + | The anime premiered in Japan on April 1, 1997.
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Of course the anime premiered in Japan. You don't have to state that.
Cheers, Manifestation (talk) 15:26, 7 October 2024 (UTC)
- Heard your feedback, edited those parts you wanted to. 👍 TheFlamer2024 (talk) 01:08, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
- @TheFlamer2024: You again made some mistakes.
− | The anime | + | The anime first premiered April 1, 1997. By November, it had become the highest-rated program on the network.
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- You changed "TV Tokyo" to "the network", making the sentence ambiguous. By the end of 1997, Pokemon was broadcast by 37 different Japanese TV stations. Aside from TV Tokyo, this included 5 affiliate stations, and 31 non-affiliated stations who bought the program from the copyright holders (source). The cited source says that Pokemon became the most-watched show *on TV Tokyo*. It says nothing about other broadcasters.
- Also:
− | At the time, Ape was housed in the same [[Kanda-Sudachō]] office building as Nintendo, located in [[Tokyo]].
| + | At the time, Ape was housed in the same [[Kanda-Sudachō]] office building as Nintendo, located in [[Setagaya]], [[Tokyo]].
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- And:
− | Upon founding, the company was housed in the same office building as Nintendo | + | Upon founding, the company was housed in the same office building as Nintendo in [[Sudachō]], [[Chiyoda]], Tokyo.
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- If you lack the necessary knowledge/skills, you shouldn't try to improve an article. That's like tweaking the engine of a car without knowing what you're doing. Cheers, Manifestation (talk) 17:28, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
- @TheFlamer2024 I am not going to comment on the discussion directly, but please do not revert talk page comments such as these without reason, especially while they are still ongoing. They are still important for historical reference, and in the case of this discussion, is still an actively ongoing discussion regarding the article's content, which is unviable to be removed given it is still an actively discussed issue. Unless you have a proper removal rationale, please refrain from removing talk page comments for the time being. Has one ever considered Magneton? Pokelego999 (talk) 12:14, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
- I second that. How can I respond to a threat if you delete it, TheFlamer2024? After a while, threads are auto-archived to "/Archive_" subpages. So you don't have to delete them. Deleting a thread only rarely happens on Wikipedia, e.g. when it's purely disruptive material. - Manifestation (talk) 19:08, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
- @TheFlamer2024 I am not going to comment on the discussion directly, but please do not revert talk page comments such as these without reason, especially while they are still ongoing. They are still important for historical reference, and in the case of this discussion, is still an actively ongoing discussion regarding the article's content, which is unviable to be removed given it is still an actively discussed issue. Unless you have a proper removal rationale, please refrain from removing talk page comments for the time being. Has one ever considered Magneton? Pokelego999 (talk) 12:14, 11 October 2024 (UTC)
- If you lack the necessary knowledge/skills, you shouldn't try to improve an article. That's like tweaking the engine of a car without knowing what you're doing. Cheers, Manifestation (talk) 17:28, 10 October 2024 (UTC)
Shiny Pokémon?
[edit]So I was scrolling through the article, looking for the section on shinys. Where is it? As far as I could tell, there was no section for shiny Pokémon, which, in my opinion, plays a very big role in the Pokémon franchise. Please add a section listing out shiny pokemon and how to hunt for them, shiny Pokémon history, odds, how they work, etc. Thank you to whoever does it. Pokémon&BandGeek (talk) 20:47, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- Yeah, I looked at the text, and the only metion of the word "shiny" was in the TCG section (I think) saying "With a shiny overlay effect" or something along those lines. Pokémon&BandGeek (talk) 20:53, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
- Hi Pokémon&BandGeek! Thank you for your comment. The reason why this article doesn't mention shiny Pokémon is because it is mostly about the creation of the franchise, and the cultural and financial impact it had on the world. Shiny Pokémon, unfortunately, fall outside this article's scope.
- Wikipedia is an encyclopedia, a scientific project. It is not supposed to be an entertainment site filled with video game walkthroughs, fictional biographies, episode summaries, celebrity juice, fan art, etc. There are plenty of other websites for that.
- Wikipedia does have a small paragraph on shiny Pokémon: Gameplay of Pokémon#Shiny Pokémon. But for more extensive info, you should try fansites like Bulbapedia or Serebii. Have a nice day, Manifestation (talk) 21:46, 2 November 2024 (UTC)
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