Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire

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Revision as of 01:50, 24 January 2009 by Laoris (talk | contribs) (→‎Bonus eggs)
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Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire
[[File:File:Pokémon Box - Ruby & Sapphire.png|250px]]
The cover of Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire
Basic info
Platform: {{{platform}}}
Category: Utility
Players: 1-2
Connectivity: None
Developer: The Pokémon Company
Publisher: Nintendo
Part of: {{{gen_series}}}
Ratings
CERO: N/A
ESRB: E for Everyone
ACB: N/A
OFLC: N/A
PEGI: N/A
GRAC: N/A
GSRR: N/A
Release dates
Japan: May 30, 2003
North America: July 12, 2004
Australia: July 16, 2004
Europe: May 14, 2004
South Korea:
Hong Kong: N/A
Taiwan: N/A
Websites
Japanese:
English:

Pokémon Box Ruby & Sapphire is a Nintendo GameCube product released May 30th 2003 in Japan and in North America on July 11th 2004. In North America however, it was only available at the Pokémon Center in New York. Pokémon Box itself is not so much a game, however, as it is a storage unit for a Trainer's Pokémon.

European gamers were able to purchase the game with a GameCube Bundle which includes: Pokémon Colosseum, a memory card and a GameCube link cable. Also, there was a limited amount of Pokémon Box available online at the Stars Catalogue on the official Nintendo of Europe website.

Features

Trainers can store up to 1500 Pokémon in twenty-five boxes that hold sixty Pokémon and trade between Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald, as well as FireRed and LeafGreen. All the Pokémon can be stored on a memory card which comes with the game itself.

Once a Pokémon is in a box, Trainers can examine the stats of their Pokémon and open a spreadsheet style graph with numerous categories such as original Trainer, moves, Pokémon Contests stats, friendliness and level to name a few. In the main menu, each Pokémon can be displayed on a small stage. The host of the game, Bridgette, is the creator of the mass storage system, and is the sister of Lanette, who along with Bill developed the standard storage system.

The game also comes with a GameCube to Game Boy Advance link cable, which allows Trainers to deposit Pokémon from their GBA game to the Box without the need to trade. However, certain conditions in each game must be met before depositing Pokémon can begin. For example, the cartridge must have at least 100 Pokémon in the Pokédex and in the case of Pokémon FireRed and Pokémon LeafGreen, Trainers must have the National Pokédex as well.

Bonus eggs

When a certain amount of Pokémon are deposited from a game cartridge, a Pokémon egg is deposited in box. The Pokémon that hatches will know a special move that it would not learn normally and can not be passed down through breeding. It is important to note that these Pokémon do not all need to have the same original Trainer ID number, but must be transferred from the same game cartridge into Pokémon Box. This means that, in cases where a player has access to multiple games, all of the Pokémon can be transferred to one, then moved into Box. The Pokémon that are available from the special eggs are:

Receive at the start

Pokémon Info Trainer Memo Battle Moves Ribbons
File:Poke Ball III.png SWABLU Dex No. 0333 Unknown nature. -- -- None
Lv5 Type Met in Unknown at Lv 5. -- --
Spr 3r 333.png Unknown Unknown   -- --
OT (Hatcher)   -- --
ID No. (Hatcher) This Pokémon was available in Japan
from January 1 to December 31, 3000.
Item Ability
This Pokémon is English in origin.
Can be obtained with: R S FR LG E
Obtained from: Colo XD Box Chn Distribution

Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove/none Template:Efooter/cons

100 Pokémon from one game

Pokémon Info Trainer Memo Battle Moves Ribbons
File:Poke Ball III.png ZIGZAGOON Dex No. 0263 Unknown nature. -- -- None
Lv5 Type Met in Unknown at Lv 5. -- --
Spr 3r 263.png Unknown Unknown   -- --
OT (Hatcher)   -- --
ID No. (Hatcher) This Pokémon was available in Japan
from January 1 to December 31, 3000.
Item Ability
This Pokémon is English in origin.
Can be obtained with: R S FR LG E
Obtained from: Colo XD Box Chn Distribution

Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Efooter/cons

500 Pokémon from one game

Pokémon Info Trainer Memo Battle Moves Ribbons
File:Poke Ball III.png SKITTY Dex No. 0300 Unknown nature. -- -- None
Lv5 Type Met in Unknown at Lv 5. -- --
Spr 3r 300.png Unknown Unknown   -- --
OT (Hatcher)   -- --
ID No. (Hatcher) This Pokémon was available in Japan
from January 1 to December 31, 3000.
Item Ability
This Pokémon is English in origin.
Can be obtained with: R S FR LG E
Obtained from: Colo XD Box Chn Distribution

Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Efooter/cons

1499 Pokémon from one game

Pokémon Info Trainer Memo Battle Moves Ribbons
File:Poke Ball III.png PICHU Dex No. 0172 Unknown nature. -- -- None
Lv5 Type Met in Unknown at Lv 5. -- --
Spr 3r 172.png Unknown Unknown   -- --
OT (Hatcher)   -- --
ID No. (Hatcher) This Pokémon was available in Japan
from January 1 to December 31, 3000.
Item Ability
None None
This Pokémon is English in origin.
Can be obtained with: R S FR LG E
Obtained from: Colo XD Box Chn Distribution

Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove Template:Emove/none Template:Efooter/surf/nd

Emulation

Aside from being a storage device, Pokémon Box can be used to play Pokémon Ruby or Pokémon Sapphire on the television without the Game Boy Player. Only those versions, not FireRed, LeafGreen, or Emerald, can be played and the storage system on the memory card cannot be accessed via the in-game PC, just the game cartrige's boxes. In this way, it is much like the Game Boy Tower of Template:En and Pokémon Stadium 2.

Template:Main series


Event distributions
Generation I: JapaneseEuropean language
Generation II: JapaneseEuropean language
Generation III: JapaneseEnglishGermanSpanishFrenchItalian
Generation IV: Japanese (local | Wi-Fi) • English (local | Wi-Fi) • German (local | Wi-Fi)
Spanish (local | Wi-Fi) • French (local | Wi-Fi) • Italian (local | Wi-Fi) • Korean (local | Wi-Fi)
Trading (GTS)
Generation V: Japanese (local | Wi-Fi) • English (local | Wi-Fi) • German (local | Wi-Fi)
Spanish (local | Wi-Fi) • French (local | Wi-Fi) • Italian (local | Wi-Fi) • Korean (local | Wi-Fi)
Global Link promotions
Generation VI: Japanese region (Nintendo Network | serial code) • American region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
PAL region (Nintendo Network | serial code) • Korean region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
Taiwanese region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
LocalTrading
Generation VII: 3DS: Japanese region (Nintendo Network | serial code) • American region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
PAL region (Nintendo Network | serial code) • Korean region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
Taiwanese region (Nintendo Network | serial code)
Local
Switch: PE
Generation VIII: SwShBDSPLA
Trading
Generation IX: SV
Specific events: Gather More Pokémon! Campaign
PCNY (Gen II | Gen III) • Trade and Battle DayJourney Across AmericaParty of the Decade
Other groupings: Movie events10th AnniversaryTanabataUndistributed
Special Pokémon from games
In-game: Gen IGen II • Gen III (RSFRLGEOrre) • Gen IV (DP ​• Pt ​• HGSS) • Gen V (BWB2W2)
Gen VI (XYORAS) • Gen VII (SMUSUMPE) • Gen VIII (SwShBDSPLA) • Gen IX (SV)
Gift Pokémon (Eggs) • Wild Pokémon (Roaming Pokémon) • In-game trades (Hayley's trades)
Game-based: Gen IGen IIGen IIIGen IVGen VIGen VII
Gen VIII (Wild Area News) • Gen IX (Poké Portal News)
Other: Undistributed
Non-Pokémon event distributions
Gen IIIGen IVGen VGen VIGen VII (Game-based) • Gen VIIIGen IX (Game-based)
Global Link
Other lists
Notable ID numbers (Gens I-IIIII onward) • Wonder Cards (Gen VGen VIGen VII) • Serial code prefixes
Project Games logo.png This game-related article is part of Project Games, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon games.