Last we left off, Taunie is heavily in debt and has dragged the rest of us into the sad world of being indebted to gangsters! But Rogue Mega Evolutions are threatening the city.
First up is the brand-new mega evolution, Barbaracle... and I must admit, the positioning of the quest marker made me spend way, way too much time trying to figure out how to get into the closed-off area. To make things worse, there are two massive scaffolding puzzles and I thought I had to do something with it and Roto-Glide to get around and find a way to climb around the walls.
Lida rather helpfully informs me that Mega Barbaracle will transform into a Rock and Fighting type. Yay! New type changes! I have my Mega Meganium ready to fight, and the battle begins... and... I don't know what I expected from Mega Barbaracle, but it's certainly not this! It does make sense, though, in the theme of Mega Evolutions being exaggerated versions of themselves. But Mega Barbaracle's body has expanded, it's got way more tentacles -- or more accurately, additional goose barnacles -- and the general result makes it look like a crazy octopus alien. Except it's a giant cluster of barnacles! There is definitely some heavy Sentai/Ultraman kaiju vibe to it, too.
Honestly, the biggest unexpected thing is just how utterly fast Mega Barbaracle is. I wouldn't peg Barbaracle as a fast-looking Pokemon, but in this game, at least, it's just blitzing all over the place like a Bleach character. It also summons Rock Slide from the sky, which is terrifying. Mega Barbaracle does feel extremely fragile, or it might just be that my Mega Meganium really is a bad counter with her Giga Drain and Dazzling Gleam attacks, but we won rather quickly. I was actually rather surprised at how fast Meganium was carving through Mega Barbaracle's health pool.
After this scene, we get another shot of Zygarde showing up and howling, before L appears and says some more of his ominous stuff about the protection of Lumiose City and the Rogue Mega Evolved Pokemon. He notes that the incidents of Rogue Mega Evolution seems to have something to do with the Prism Tower renovations. I mean, it's kind of what's expected from Pokemon at this point, right? The Mega Corporation is the real evil? L notes that Zygarde is an entity that's egging him on to investigate all of this for the betterment of Lumiose City -- and that it ties to his goal of a more beautiful city, and therefore a more beautiful world.
I mean, sure, Lysandre. You still tried to nuke France with the powers of the god of death for a beautiful world, you muppet.
I go for the Ampharos next, and Naveen is there complaining that the holovator leading to the top of the building where Ampharos is isn't working. Lurking from the side of a nearby building is... Gwynn! I like Gwynn! She's not really good at hiding, and most certainly not when a human-sized Chandelure is also peeking from the side of the building behind her.
Gwynn is extremely rude to Naveen, telling him to be quiet several times during the conversation. Gwynn wants to fight me as a revenge for her earlier defeat. She's actually changed her team a bit, adding a Gengar to her original team. We have a proper Mega Chandelure vs Mega Chandelure showdown! I think either one of our Chandlures would've one-shotted the other, but I quick-drawed her with Shadow Ball.
Okay? Was a bit weird, but it was nice to see Gwynn back again. I climb up the rooftop and fight the Mega Ampharos, and... there's really not a whole ton that I find to be special here. I don't have anything particularly good against either Electric or Dragon -- my only anti-Dragon measure is Slowbro's Ice Beam, but would get wrecked by Mega Ampharos's electric attacks. Ampharos's field attacks aren't the most impressive, really, it's just rather easily telegraphed thunderbolts coming down from the sky or rising from the ground. Eh.
After taking out Mega Ampharos, Emma shows up! I like that these Rogue Mega Evolutions are starting to involve more of the secondary cast. Emma just notes that she hasn't been particularly lucky or fruitful in finding either Zygarde or L, although she suspects L is actually evil.
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I do, of course, and as I let my Carvanha out in the canal... she refuses to attack or pretend to attack the actors. Oh no! Is the Parisian canal water getting to you, Carvanha? The actors tell the director that they studied up on the Pokemon, and turns out that Carvanha is actually very timid when alone, away from their pack. This leads the director to get surprised... before retooling the movie to feature a friendly Carvanha who is afraid of humans instead.
...I didn't actually know that about Carvanha! I actually learn something new about an older Pokemon!
I then find Herup in the sewers near Wild Zone 5. I actually discover him muttering about profiting from some entrepreneurship plans. Herup and his Camerupt reveals that this is another gateway to the Sewers, unlocking another portion of the Sewers we visited to find Gwynn. And a very convenient teleport point that makes me not need to look for where the frozen Clawitzer statue is!
...other than the fact that this is sewer water, you absolute muppet. There's a reason why sauna facilities aren't located in the sewer. Not to mention all the potential public property discussion.
My character doesn't point out the fact that this is a SEWER, but rather the fact that it's hard for people to reach this location. Yeah, sure. Herup is disappointed, but then a Scraggy, a Noibat and a Patrat show up. they like the warmth, which actually kind of makes sense for the lizard-based Scraggy in particular. Herup is reinvigorated and is happy to make the sewer sauna for the sewer Pokemon. I mean... it's still breaking public property and you're not going to profit from the Scraggys and Noibats, but whatever makes you happy, Mr. Herup! I kind of expected a bit more from you when I discovered you earlier in the game, not going to lie.
Finally, we've got a reunion with Dora, the lady who was the companion of the Rogue Hawlucha. She has gone back up on the roof to look for her friend. Apparently the formerly Rogue Hawlucha is depressed and despondent... because it wants a rematch! It's a nice little coda to that quest. I fight the Hawlucha with my own, which is both an Alpha and Mega Evolved. I crush the Hawlucha with a Flying Press, but the point for him is not to win -- it's to fight with his own full might.
Inspired by this, Dora decides to adopt the Rogue Hawlucha as her own partner, wanting to learn everything there is to know about Pokemon battling to better support Hawlucha. Aww, that's kind of a sweet way for this sidequest to end.
Wild Zone 15, on the other hand, is insanely hostile. The two poster boys of super-aggressive bug monsters, Beedrill and Scolipede, patrol this area and are as hostile as their anime counterparts. Also in this area are Pumpkaboos and a particularly angry Alpha Gourgeist. Not as cool as zone 13, I feel, but I think that's because I was low-key hoping for a full Halloween-themed location for Pumpkaboo.
Random Notes:
- More sidequests that don't make the cut for me properly describing them:
- An overacting dude who yells 'feel the energy' a lot, and has a team... based on the move Focus Energy? Out of all the moves to make a quest around, this isn't it, sorry. The overacting jokes also kind of fall flat, and I wonder if there's a better pun in the original Japanese script.
- A far more interesting move-based side-quest is a woman who insists that Detect is better than Protect, because it might do the same thing but it's cooler. In ZA, I do feel like Detect actually activates the second you hit the button, while there's a bit of animation with Protect. So you're cool, Detect Girl.
- Another broken holovator, but this time I need to hit it with a physical move to get it up and running. A bit late for the physical/special split. This was was kind of cute because it's one of Ivor's muscle-brained minions that tell that to me, and insists that percussive maintenance is the only way to fix machines.
- Mega contacts lady asks me to bring her Mega Medicham and fight her with that. Same old, same old, but she unlocks some rather interesting contact lenses, letting my eyes have the colours patterned after the Poke Ball, the 'cyberspace' box, and pure lifeless void. Mmmkay!
- I've been reading the dex entries. Most of them are honestly quite boring, but Mega Chandelure's actually got one eye that has turned purple, and its dex entry points this out -- that eye is connected between this world and the afterlife. Cool!
- I've also been slowly evolving a bunch of my Pokemon in the box. Gallade, Venusaur, Sylveon, Lucario, Pidgeot...
- The pokedex still differentiates between the different sizes of Pumpkaboo/Gourgeist despite all Pokemon having size differences. In real life that's because the different Pumpkaboo sizes have incrementally different stats, which justifies them as separate forms. The Pokedex insists that this is because 'the varieties of Pumpkaboo vary not only in size, but also in the sized of the souls they collect', excuse me, how do you measure- I mean- uh- okay. Sure. Fine.
- One of the random NPC's insists that she wants to know what "you are not the one" means. That has been one of the creepier easter eggs in Pokemon XY that everyone thought was going to lead to something, some secret encounter or a foreshadowing to a new game... but never really led anywhere. I guess them making fun of it is the final nail in the coffin, then.
- A bit less of an orphaned joke is a tourist who wonders if he should go to Alola to get a 'Strange Souvenir'. The Strange Souvenir is a weird key item in Pokemon XY whose only usage was to foreshadow Alola in Generation VII. That's cute.
- A bunch more easter eggs of older characters include the revelation that Diantha stepped down as champion to pursue her acting career; and Siebold also left the Elite Four to pursue his cooking career. Man, with Clemont also presumable MIA, ain't nobody in Kalos taking their duties seriously.