And honestly, it's been pretty great. Granted, I did go in with no expectations at all, and there were definitely parts of this game that could've been improved, but the game as a whole has been so wholesome and really was what I needed. It really did make me appreciate a lot of Pokemon that I don't necessarily did before, like Sawsbuck and Liepard and Clamperl. A lot of surprisingly deep secrets and interactions that flummoxed me -- in a good way. This particular part of the blog is going to chronicle my reactions as I go through the higher levels of the two DLC locations. As I mentioned in a previous post, I consider myself having 'completed' this game after I completed the Photodex, and that's what I did at the end of this. I just thought I'd open up with a nice little speech about how wholesome and how nice the whole game experience has been.
And I think the first time around is the River, which I had already been farming a bit even in previous segments. One of the coolest bit was showing Arbok swimming and gliding through the river, poking his head up and down until you Illumina Orb him. We always think of snakes as slithering through trees and shrubs all of the time, but snakes can swim! I don't think we've really ever seen them depict Arbok or Seviper or any of the other snakes like this, though. I mean, I'm sure the anime probably showed one of Jessie's snakes swim in a river at some point...
I love this, by the way. I love that a Pokmeon that's most well-known for being utilized as an antagonist's primary Pokemon in the cartoon ends up doing something pretty wholesome and protecting cute little Psyduck. That's why I adored that one episode with the evil psychotic Togepi in one episode of the anime.
In another run of the river level, Arbok is sleeping coiled up on a branch overlooking a river. And... I can cause a Magikarp to jump up and bonk Arbok right in the nose and cause him to fall into the river. Poor Arbok. I feel bad for him, but he can probably swim.
The night-time river is pretty calming. There's a bunch of fun interactions I can do with Feraligatr as it stalks on top of a cliff and later on jumps down into the river, knocking my vehicle into a shore where a bunch of Ariados-es and Quagsires are hanging out on. Even Pokemon that have shown up in older areas got a fair bit to do! Woopers and Quagsires alternate between sleeping and piddle-paddling in the river, and there's a cliffside where it seems like there's only one Aipom but there's actually a troop of a half-dozen damn dirty apes.
Unlocking this secret cave in the night also unlocks it in the day... but I think it's only open at level 3, because at level 2 River Day I keep getting knocked to the little island where the Tropius are when Quagsire jumps his fat ass into the river. In the day, the Cleffas are waving their tiny nub-hands and practicing Metronome, that's adorable.
In level 3 of the rivers, we finally get to see the enigmatic Ursaring that the claw marks on the tree trunks have been foreshadowing all game long... and the Ursaring is the one who shows up and roars to scare off the Aipom from bullying Psyduck. So whether I intervene with Arbok or not, Psyduck will always get saved at some point. It also seems to be an alternating thing whether it's Ursaring or Arbok that sleeps on the log, but whoever sleeps there I can always use an Illumina Orb to summon Magikarp to conk the sleeper into the raging rivers. Another part of the level has Ursaring lurk next to the river, like a bear trying to catch salmon. Except it seems like this particular Ursaring's prey of choice are the poor Magikarps!
A lot of smaller changes happen in level 3 of the river, but the most significant and the most adorable one is... a Tropius flying over the final part of the area... WITH A WOOPER ON HIS HEAD.
I say that again, a Tropius is giving a happy Wooper a ride on his head as he flies around.
That is so fucking wholesome. 10/10 game.
Anyway, Ursaring was the last Pokemon I needed for the Belusylva full sticker. And maybe it's a function of being designed as a DLC, and maybe it's because the river actually moves a fair bit fast at some places that it's hard for me to do what I want to, but I felt like the river content is so densely packed with content that I have barely scratched the surface of what's in here.
There are a couple of fun interactions you can do in both the night and day Badlands, including a point where you can goad Tyranitar to beat the shit out of a random Crustle and tip it over. There's a lot of stuff to do with Diglett, too, and I think if you time it right you can get them to knock over the giant boulder? That bit really is a bit puzzling, since my apples can do it in the day, but put like five butterflies on it and suddenly I need help from so many Digletts to tip it over? Hmm? Diglett is pretty fun in this level in general, with them popping up all over the place and basically invading the Onix holes in the canyon at the end of the level... which is very lore-accurate.
I do really like the Gliscors hanging upside-down like the psychotic scorpion-bats that they are, though. One of the Gliscors I can wake up flies right into a part of the area that gets pelted by a ton of Miniors, the poor sod.
I do really like the Gliscors hanging upside-down like the psychotic scorpion-bats that they are, though. One of the Gliscors I can wake up flies right into a part of the area that gets pelted by a ton of Miniors, the poor sod.
This is a wholesome game and I feel bad about badmouthing Zeraora, so I do enjoy a lot of the other interactions going on here. Swalot gets a lot of mileage out of the animations that the animators pull with his big mouth, and there's a fair bit more Silicobra than I thought there is in the level... again, I never visualized them hiding under the sand that way, with the tip of its mouth poking upwards. I always thought that they'd hide under the sand like, well, like real desert snakes, where they just burrow under the sand horizontally.
You would think that Zeraora is the last Pokemon for me to take a photo off, and that I could close this Photodex... but no, it's not Zeraora. It's actually... Salazzle! Which is such a random Pokemon to make show up in the final level of the Badlands, but why not? I have to lure it out with the music box from the rock behind Mandibuzz, which has the Salazzle come out and do a little dance. I mean... okay, Salazzle. Sure.
And with that bit, I have obtained the Voluca island's sticker and completed my Photodex. It's been an absolute blast as I go through this calming and unexpectedly fun journey. I do know that there's probably a lot more that the game still has to offer -- and I'm sure that I could write a lot more posts about this. But it is a nice enough stopping point. See you guys on the next review series!
Random Notes:
- I do plan to put down New Pokemon Snap for a while, but it's going to be a game that, if I'm bored in the next couple of years, I can just pop in and try and figure out how to get the missing star pictures or a side-quest for some Pokemon, y'know? It's a very 'arcade-y' game, so to speak.
- Shout out to the TCG artwork, by the way. Making these blog posts really did end up causing me to go through and appreciate a lot of Pokemon TCG art, and that's always a nice thing.
- Doing a starter count now that the game's over... and it's interesting! Obviously all 3 Kanto starter lines are represented in both their first and final forms, and all 3 Galar starters are represented in their first forms. But it's interesting to see who got left out! We have a representation of all 3 Johto and Sinnoh starters... but we're missing the Treecko line from the Hoenn starters, the Oshawott line from the Unova starters, both the Litten and Rowlet lines from the Alolan starters and surprisingly, no one from Kalos showed up to play. Really? I thought Greninja'd be a shoo-in!
- Which actually makes me appreciate this game a bit more, particularly the whole Sawsbuck spiel I did in the previous post. You'd think that some of the rather obvious 'superstar' evergreen Pokemon like Jigglypuff, Lucario, Zoroark, Mewtwo, Dragonite, Togepi, Ditto, and some others would be given prominence... but even some super-classic Pokemon like Snorlax, Psyduck and Gyarados are relegated to DLC! It does really speak to how much the game designers tried to make this a full Pokemon experience instead of just the all-stars that we get a lot of stuff from more obscure Pokemon like Vivillon or Lanturn or Tropius or Shinx!
- My reflexes are not fast enough to hit the Crystalblooms as we go down the waterfalls. I can hit one of them, but never two of them in quick succession. I assume that's related to how I summon Gyarados.
- There is, surprisingly, no legendary in the river? The Badlands had Zeraora, and the other DLC area, the secret path, is connected to the nature reserve and Shaymin hangs out there. But with how well-hidden a lot of the legendaries in these other areas are, I'm surprised level 3 didn't unlock a legendary for the River area. I don't know what would work here... Zarude, maybe, swinging through the treetops? That monkey would've been new at the time that this game was released, right?
- Psyduck eating an apple is adorable.
- Honestly, the highlight of the Badlands is seeing the nonsense that Torchic, Tepig and Shinx get up to as they run around and wander everywhere and poke in and out of the Onix holes.
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