Generations: In the Pokemon video games, there consists of seven different generations. In each generation divided by a chronological order by release, the RPG series releases new Pokemon, characters, and gameplay concept. Generation 1: The first generation of Pokemon, also known as Generation 1, started with the release of “Pocket Monsters Aka and Midori” for the Game Boy in 1996. The first generation of pokemon introduced a total of one hundred fifty-one new species of Pokemon consisting of
“So, with everything that happened, I didn't get your name. I'm Ash, Ash Ketchum of Pallet Town.” The two teens were currently seated in the waiting area of the Viridian Poké Center. After the chase’s finale, Pikachu had collapsed from exhaustion. Luckily, the chase had pushed them to move as fast as they could, reaching Viridian city in record time. What had been meant as a two day walk between cities had been reduced to an eight hour, frantic sprint, though the river had helped a bit too. “Oh
sapphire), and has roots that are even older than the idea of Pokémon. It all started simply as a hobby that Satoshi Tajiri (the creator of Pokémon) had, who as a child
page: “Pokémon: For many kids it’s now an addiction—cards, video games, toys, a new movie. Is it bad for them?” That edition came out only five years after the Pokémon universe emerged out of the inventive mind of the Japanese video game designer Satoshi Tajiri. In the following years, Pokémon rapidly became a worldwide phenomenon, leading many to even consider it as “Japan’s most successful export.” With passionate fans from across Asia and the Americas consuming all kinds of its texts, the Pokémon