Thursday, August 25, 2011

#028 - Sandslash

SANDSLASH



IN SHOW
Sandslash was another background pokemon, one that was often seen in the background while the heroes were walking by to show the peaceful pokemon world, or one show as an opponent’s pokemon or in a flash of a pokemon battle. The most memorable Sandslash, for me anyways, was the Sandslash that was stuck in an Onix. Somehow the poor animal had gotten lodged in their causing pain for everyone involved and a truly terrifying Onix.





WHY YOU WANT A SANDSLASH


Sandslash was definitely a step up from Sandshrew, at least in the looks department. It was much more intimidating in its picture and you could actually see how your cute little Sandshrew could actually become your tough and scary Sandslash. The pokedex picture was actually pretty good, it definitely looked like a Sandslash, though Yellow’s picture was much better.








WHY YOU DO NOT WANT A SANDSLASH


Sandslash has an identical move set to Sandshrew, other than the strange fact that Sandslash can apparently learn Sand Attack twice, and Sandshrew actually learns the same moves faster than Sandslash! Sandshrew can even learn the exact same HM’s as Sandslash so Sandslash doesn’t even have that going for him. The poor thing.








IN SUMMARY


Sandslash literally only exists for the stat bonuses. You could actually simply keep your cute and cuddly little Sandshrew forever and never even attempt to evolve it if you don’t care about stats, or are planning on boosting them with different items, because Sandslash would bring nothing else to the table but better stats and a new hair cut. It’s true that Sandlash didn’t ever really make an impression on us in the show, but we at least assumed he would be better in some way then his pre-evolution. We were horribly, horribly wrong.


Thursday, August 18, 2011

#027 - Sandshrew


SANDSHREW



IN SHOW


I remember seeing Sandshrew a lot in the show, but not as a main character. Sandshrew was always one of those pokemon that you would see living life in a pokemon utopia while the main characters were walking by a field, or in clips of battle in a league competition. This always surprised me because Sandshrew was so cute and could have been a pretty good mascot for the series. Maybe not the main mascot, but Brock definitely could have branched out and caught one as it would have been much closer to Rock than his later pokemon would be.










WHY YOU WANT A SANDSHREW


Sandshrew actually has a pretty good pokedex picture, as far as they go. You can clearly identify what pokemon is popping up in front of you, and it’s cute, which is what we had come to expect for the Sandshrew we had seen on the show. It may not have been the most imaginative of the pokedex pictures but it did actually show the pokemon in a reliable way which is more than we had come to expect. He even has some pretty good moves that he’ll learn before evolving, and he continues the good move set even if you choose not to evolve him.






WHY YOU DO NOT WANT A SANDSHREW


Sandshrew doesn’t learn any Ground type moves. He’s the first Ground type pokemon in the pokedex and he doesn’t know a single move! Yes, all of his moves fit him and work well together, but when you add pokemon to your party a lot of people tend to do it because they need the type to defeat a trainer or gym leader, and when the first, and most likely to be found, Ground type doesn’t actually have any Ground type moves, that can cause serious problems. Also, it learns a poison attack and I don’t understand how it can do that but not learn any from its only elemental type.








IN SUMMARY


Sandshrew was a cute pokemon that got a lot of air time, even if it was in the background, and a lot of people remember it very clearly because it was in so many background shots. Its constant appearances are probably because it was so animal like and very believable. Even with effective attacks it lost its appeal because it didn’t actually have any moves of its type and that can cause problems when you’re building a team around different types and how they work well together. Having a Sandshrew is essentially the same thing as having a normal pokemon but with different weaknesses and it’s not really worth the slot on that basis alone.


Thursday, August 11, 2011

#026 - Raichu

RAICHU



IN SHOW


Though Raichu has been in a lot of episodes of the show, the first and only Raichu to appear was the one owned by Lt. Surge. He was a powerhouse that had been evolved at a young level just so he could be powerful. This Raichu easily defeated Pikachu the first time they faced off, and made Ash question whether or not he should evolve Pikachu to compete. Most other Raichu that have been seen have been background characters either demonstrating the evolutionary power of evolution stones or in background/filler fights. But Lt. Surge’s Raichu is the only one that ever strongly affected the plot, almost making Raichu the pokemon mascot and not Pikachu, and the only one anyone ever remembers.









WHY YOU WANT A RAICHU


Raichu looked cool, though not really intimidating or the powerhouse that we expected. He can learn a variety of TM’s, and even the HM Flash which can be helpful later on in the game as you begin to encounter dark and dangerous caves.











WHY YOU DO NOT WANT A RAICHU


First of all, Thunderstones are hard to locate, so even having the chance to get a Raichu can be a tedious chore, unless you decided to go through the process of catching one, which doesn’t make much sense when you already have a Pikachu you could evolve. Raichu was supposed to be a tough badass, but he didn’t learn any moves at all. Because of this he suffers from ‘exactly the same but...’, but in this case instead of the move set being only slightly improved on there is actually no change. Because Raichu will not learn any moves. At all.










IN SUMMARY


Raichu seems like a really cool idea, and it might just be because Pikachu is so popular. How many times did we wish as kids that Ash would finally take the plunge and evolve Pikachu, because we had been told that Raichu was stronger and would have a bunch of powerful moves. But the games were a huge disappointment because Raichu didn’t learn ANYTHING. And maybe it was because Thunderstones were so hard to come by that it was supposed to take a long time for you to be able to evolve your Pikachu so there was no real need for Raichu to learn any moves, but if you caught a wild Raichu you would have to rely solely on TMs. And some people would catch a Pikachu and not even look at it until they had a Thunderstone and could get the cool evolution. It’d be a shame for those people because their pokemon would never actually be worthwhile. EVER! When we were young we had no way of knowing whether or not a pokemon would learn moves. There was no book on the subject and no website that would give us a list. So people would evolve a young Pikachu, have a pointless Raichu, or catch a Raichu, and level it hoping that eventually it might learn something. Sadly you would get to level 100 and realize that you had levelled up a useless pokemon, and wasted a slot on your team that could have actually been held by a useful pokemon.


I’m done ranting now.


Thursday, August 4, 2011

#025 - Pikachu


PIKACHU


IN SHOW


Now we come to it, the man of the hour, the pokemon that even your grandmother can recognize on sight. Ash’s first pokemon who hated him in the beginning and by the end of the next episode was inseparable from him. Pikachu has been shown to hate being in a pokeball and is constantly on the run from the evil Team Rocket who are trying to enslave the poor guy because of his amazing strength. And it’s true, not all Pikachu are like the Pikachu we’ve come to know and love. Most Pikachu live out in the forest, in groups, finding food and just in general being electric mice. Pikachu has been in every single episode, except for special ones, and every single movie. He’s even been the subject of some of his own shorts. He loves ketchup and beating people, but he’s also very kind and loves to make other people happy.










WHY YOU WANT A PIKACHU


Despite Pikachu being omnipresent in the show’s universe, Pikachu is actually a pretty uncommon pokemon so if you can catch a Pikachu you can show it off to people and be proud. Plus, he comes in handy for the gym battle against Misty when, depending on the pokemon you chose, it can be hard to keep your head above water.






WHY YOU DO NOT WANT A PIKACHU


Almost everyone goes out of their way to locate and catch a Pikachu so that they can show it off because it is so popular so having a Pikachu won’t lead to any originality points. The only place you can locate a Pikachu is in the Veridian Forest and the next gym is Brock, so you won’t find much use for him in that battle. Pikachu is actually only really useful for the Water gym, as most other gyms are resistant to him or take only normal damage. Also, he looks a little chubby in the picture, and I’m pretty sure it’s because he’s been eating too much ketchup.








IN SUMMARY


Pikachu in the show is one of the main characters, and the only pokemon to never leave Ash for any reason, even if it’s just to be stored with Prof. Oak. He’s cute and cuddly and he’s got a personality that we all love. He’s at the center of almost every single one of Team Rocket’s plots and that’s saying something. Pikachu is the mascot of the entire franchise, and sure that’s mainly because he’s Ash’s pokemon, but still. But the Pikachu in the show is extremely smart, fast, and over powered. He can defeat rock and ground pokemon just because he wants to. When Pikachu defeated Brock by simply powering up his electricity or Rhyhorn by aiming for the horn, people laughed. It was one of the most ludicrous things we’d ever seen, and a clear break of the game rules. But our Pikachu would never be that awesome. Though Pikachu is a pretty nifty pokemon and is one of the most useful for defeating Misty, unless you’re running into a lot of water trainers, Pikachu can be pretty useless in game. So catch Pikachu because he’s hard to catch and it’s nice to say you did it, but don’t stick with him the whole game.