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Pokemon - Blue Version |  | From: SPIG Category: Video Games
List Price: $34.99 Buy Used: $10.00 as of 9/6/2010 04:59 CDT details You Save: $24.99 (71%)
New (4) Used (54) Collectible (10) from $10.00
Seller: kecuris Rating: 146 reviews Sales Rank: 1477
Platform: Game Boy Genre: Adventure Games ESRB: Everyone Media: Game Cartridge Operating System: Game Boy Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.1 Dimensions (in): 4 x 4 x 0.3
MPN: 73082 UPC: 045496730826 EAN: 0045496730826 ASIN: B00000IYER
Release Date: February 15, 1999 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Features:
| • | Collect up to 139 Pokémon with this game | | • | both Red and Blue versions are required to capture all 150 | | • | use the optional Game Link cable to trade Pokémon and play against a friend | | • | for one to two players |
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description It's the game that started a revolution, but it's not just the fad that convinced gamers to "catch 'em all." This deceptively simple and child-friendly roleplaying game design is a far deeper game design than it looks. Pokemon features way more strategy and gameplay than it leads on, offering gamers almost infinite gaming possibilities even after the main adventure ends. Initially released in Japan as Pocket Monster Red and Green in 1996 (and later Red), the franchise arrived in the west in 1998 as Pokemon Blue and Red. The games could be linked up with each other and with the N64's Pokemon Stadium titles for creature trading.
Editorial Review Welcome to the world of Pokémon, one filled with wild Pokémon and the people who attempt to tame them. You are Ash Ketchum, a boy on a quest to become the best Pokémon trainer in the world. Professor Oak, the leading authority on Pokémon, has given you your choice of three tame Pokémon in exchange for your helping him catalog and document every Pokémon in the world. But to catalog a Pokémon, you have to capture it by first beating it up with one of your trained Pokémon, and then hitting it with an empty Poké Ball. As your tame Pokémon gain experience in battle, their abilities improve and they earn access to new attacks. Sometimes they even evolve into more advanced Pokémon. Aside from capturing wild Pokémon and evolving your own, you can catalog new Pokémon by trading with another Pokémon player using either a link cable or the Game Boy Color's infrared system. Pokémon gained through trades learn and evolve faster, and trading is the only way to capture all 151 Pokémon, since each Pokémon game (Pokémon Red, Pokémon Blue, andPokémon Yellow) has certain Pokémon missing. Of course, as a Pokémon trainer, you've "gotta catch 'em all!"--150 to be exact. So if you own Blue and want to have a complete set of Pokémon, you must find a friendly Red or Yellow owner and arrange a trade. Pokémon Blue is packed with interesting characters, an ingenious story hook, intriguing strategy, and of course plenty of cute Pokemon and it's easy to see how it started the Pokémania that is sweeping the world. --Michael Fehlauer Pros: - Gameplay and strategy that's fun for all ages
- Fantastic replay value
- Brilliant game design encourages players to meet and trade
Cons: - Hours of looking at the Game Boy's little screen may hurt neck
- Only 1 saved game per cartridge--2 people can't share a single game
- No difference between Red and Blue except for distribution of Pokémon
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| Customer Reviews:
Showing reviews 1-5 of 146
Shipped Fast, Game Defaulty April 27, 2010 Brett Mason 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
I ordered this game b/c i enjoyed the Red Version so much and i wanted to capture the Unique pokemon in blue version. However, when i received the game and put it into my game system it turns on but u can't start a new game or Talk to anyone. I don't know what would cause this but either the game is defaulty or something is up. Won't be buying this online unless its from a game dealer.
Good quality and fast shipping April 10, 2010 Thomas J. Rauh Game came in the condition specified by the seller and the game was shipped fast.
Birth of a Series March 27, 2010 Benjamin S. Cosgriff Pokemon Red and Blue. The first two games to be released in America in the Pokemon series. For people my age, looking back at these games is nostalgia, but that doesn't mean these games didn't age well. In fact, they get better with age, due to the simply presented, yet deeply complex underlying mechanics. I mean, I sure as hell didn't know most of this game's underlying mechanics even EXISTED when I first played it.
The game starts you off with one pokemon, which you choose out of 3 possible starters. The pokemon you choose will almost invariably become the backbone of your team, so this is a decision you want to put some thought into. Each possible choice will give you options and strategies when building your team, such as a turtle (defensive) or an aggro (offensive) or a special attacker (gamble, sometimes your attacks will be devastating, sometimes they'll be ineffective. Note on this one, as you gain insight into how the mechanics of the game work, you'll understand which pokemon have a resistance to special attacks and which are weak to them) As a kid, I know I didn't put much thought into strategy, but playing through the game again today, there's a whole nother world underneath what I remember. A last note, you'll also have to be aware of type weaknesses and strengths. If a pokemon is weak to a certain type, getting hit by a move of that type will do double the damage, and if a pokemon is strong to a type, it'll take half the damage. Some types also have immunities to other types, like, Ghost is immune to Normal.
The main objective of the game is to raise and care for your pokemon, gaining experience from battles with wild pokemon and trainers for your pokemon to gain levels, which in turn will eventually mean learning new moves, or having some (most do) of your pokemon evolve into a new form. Make no mistake though, Pokemon is an RPG first and foremost. You'll sometimes have to grind for experience so you'll be able to get through the next challenge.
Getting into the story, you'll meet your childhood rival when you pick your starter pokemon, and as a note, he'll always pick the pokemon with a type advantage over yours. You'll have to fight him constantly throughout the game, and he'll obtain new pokemon and evolve his over time, just as you're doing. It's a well used pace-car, as the areas you meet him in lead to a new Gym, or an otherwise challenging area, and the designers made his pokemon just about as powerful in these encounters as the ones you'll find on the road ahead.
Which brings me to the next plot point, Gyms. Gyms typically have a small puzzle, or multiple trainers (at least one) that you must fight to get to the gym leader. For overcoming the leader in each gym, you receive a badge, which does multiple things, the main point being that you need all the badges to enter the final area of the game, the Pokemon League. Another very important factor of badges is that they break limitations on the levels of your pokemon. Badges are another pace-car of this game, as, if you were to level your pokemon up to an absurdly high level at the beginning of the game, they won't listen to what you tell them to do in battle. Each badge lifts a layer of that restriction away, so by the end, you'll be able to control pokemon all the way up to the level cap, 99.
A nice finishing touch to this already stellar game is the addition of legendary pokemon, which gives you incentive to keep playing even if you've beaten the story. Legendary means that there is only one of each of these pokemon in the game. There are technically 4 legendary pokemon in the first generation games, 5 if you count a glitch pokemon named Mew, used as a testing device in the production of the game, since it can learn any move. It wasn't removed, and there are ways of obtaining it. If you go after them, I wouldn't recommend going into a legendary encounter without 99 Ultra Balls (it's an item you use to catch wild pokemon that has a high success rate) You are required to go through a dungeon area to find each of these pokemon, and they'll be sitting at the end of it, so I suggest you save in front of them each time, and reset if something goes wrong. Yes, they're THAT hard to catch.
If you'd rather not bother with complex strategics, and wasting an hour of your life trying to catch one pokemon though, just go through and have a good time, don't worry too much about the strategy and hidden stats and all what-have-you. In my case, even as a kid, I didn't stop playing until I got all 151 pokemon, but that just proves, this game is versatile, it can suit whatever level of play you desire, and it'll be rewarding at any level too.
So to recap and make final points, Pokemon is an RPG in which you train and raise the titular creatures, collecting badges as proof of your abilities so you can challenge the 4 toughest pokemon trainers for the title of Pokemon Master. (corny, I know) The game has brilliant mechanics which allow you to play at a surface level, or get down and dirty into the minute details to eke out the best performance from your pokemon. All ages and sexes will enjoy this game. At most, it is similar to chess in complexity, at least, it is a casual experience anyone can pick up very quickly. If you haven't played the original Pokemon games yet, I would highly recommend you do so. It's worth $20 to play the game that started this huge franchise. Plus, you'll get maybe 20 or 30 hours of play out of it if you aren't using a guide.
Brings back memories March 24, 2010 Attila M. Papp (New York, NY USA) A great game from my childhood one of my favorite games of all time a classic that even today's kids will love
This Pokemon game is AWESOME!!!! January 8, 2010 Pacifico P. Deguglielmo (Belmont, MA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I love this game!!!! I got it for a birthday present.
The Pokemon I got from Professor Oak is a Squirtle.
Some other Pokemon I have in this game:
- Pikachu
-Nidoking
-Victoreebel
-Vulpix
-Vaporeon
-Lapras
-Snorlax
-Tauros
-Kangaskhan
-Zapdos
-Cloyser
-Articuno
-Moltres
-Chansey
-Electrode
-Rhydon
-Dragonite
In this game you can find a Meowth to battle in the glasslands by Lavender Town and Celadon City, When I battle Meowth on the grassland by Celadon City, I feel like I'm battling Team Rocket's Meowth. I hate Team Rocket because they are evil, that they hurt pokemon. When I am battling Meowth by using one of my pokemon to knock it down, I blame Meowth for stealing Pikachu from Ash in the series and trying to mess up on Ash's friends Misty and Brock. Team Rocket should learn how to get away from Pikachu and stop bothering Ash, Misty, and Brock. Ash, Misty, and Brock are good trainers. When I play this game with my cousin, we go to the grassland by Celadon City to battle Meowth.
This Pokemon game is GREAT!!!!
Showing reviews 1-5 of 146
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