Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Red Rescue Team and Blue Rescue Team: Difference between revisions
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==Epilogue== | ==Epilogue== | ||
* Medicham and Ekans go to the Wish Cave to try to grant wishes for themselves. | |||
* Ekans is defeated and places a rescue request for Medicham, who is still stuck in the cave. | |||
* After rescuing Medicham, the player is rewarded with the Wish Stone. | |||
* Medicham and Ekans reveal that Gengar is trying to climb Mt. Freeze. | |||
* Gengar asks the player to escort him up Mt. Freeze. | |||
* Gengar reveals himself to be the selfish human in the legend of Ninetales, and is the master of Gardevoir. | * Gengar reveals himself to be the selfish human in the legend of Ninetales, and is the master of Gardevoir. | ||
* The player and Gengar go rescue {{p|Gardevoir}}. | * Ninetails gives Gengar the Nine Tail Crest, and sends him to Murky Cave. | ||
* The player and Gengar go rescue {{p|Gardevoir}}. Gardevoir then offers to join the players rescue team, but it has lost all its memory relating to Gengar. | |||
* After completing several missions in the Solar Cave, Spinda walks into Pokémon Square and collapses. The player and their partner take him back to their rescue base. | |||
* Spinda reveals he was looking for the mirage Pokémon, but doesn't know what it is. He gives the player the Clear Wing, then leaves and stays in Pokémon Square for a while. | |||
* | |||
=Characters= | =Characters= |
Revision as of 11:04, 3 January 2007
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon | |
---|---|
[[File:Mystery dungeon boxarts.jpg|250px]] The boxart, designed by Ken Sugimori. | |
Basic info
| |
Platform: | {{{platform}}} |
Category: | Dungeon Crawler |
Players: | 1 |
Connectivity: | None |
Developer: | Chunsoft |
Publisher: | Nintendo |
Part of: | {{{gen_series}}} |
Ratings
| |
CERO: | N/A |
ESRB: | Everyone |
ACB: | N/A |
OFLC: | N/A |
PEGI: | N/A |
GRAC: | N/A |
GSRR: | N/A |
Release dates
| |
Japan: | November 17, 2005 |
North America: | September 18, 2006 |
Australia: | September 28, 2006 |
Europe: | November 10, 2006 |
South Korea: | N/A |
Hong Kong: | N/A |
Taiwan: | N/A |
Websites
| |
Japanese: | Official Japanese site |
English: | Official English site |
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon Red Rescue Team and Pokémon Mystery Dungeon Blue Rescue Team are a matched pair of Pokémon games for the Game Boy Advance and Nintendo DS, respectively. These two games were developed by Chunsoft and were published by Nintendo. They were released in Japan on November 17, 2005, and were released in the U.S. on September 18, 2006. Release dates in other countries have yet to be announced.
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon starts with yourself as a human who is turned into a Pokémon via a series of questions at the start of the game.
When you discover you are a Pokémon, you will first meet your partner who also happens to be a Pokémon. You will start your journey by going out to find a lost Caterpie. Once this first quest is done, your journey will start to unfold.
All Pokémon from Generations I, II, and III are available in this game, and you are able to battle and befriend all of them to join your team. You will travel across this new land and enter and fight in dungeon levels.
The games have received adaptions in other formats through the anime episode Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Team Go-Getters out of the Gate! and the manga series Pokémon Mystery Dungeon: Ginji's Rescue Team.
Gameplay
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon is an adaptation of the Fushigi no Dungeon games for Pokémon. Like the main Pokémon RPGs, it has two gameplay modes; unlike the main RPGs, battle mode and dungeon mode are not distinct. It is a semi-turn-based game, with each step, attack, or item use being counted as a single turn.
The size of a party is limited to four in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon, compared to six in the main RPGs; furthermore, players are only able to directly control one Pokémon: their own character (or, later in the game, any other befriended Pokémon). The player's teammates are essentially autonomous, with player control being limited to general strategy such as avoiding Pokémon battles or not moving and staying in one place.
Plot
Main story
- The player wakes up one day in the Pokémon world, a human turned into a Pokémon.
- This world is suffering an imbalance in nature, with natural disasters occurring everywhere.
- The player and their partner form a rescue team after successfully rescuing Caterpie.
- Team Meanies steal the requests for help from the player's mailbox.
- The player consults Xatu for an explanation of their presence in this world as a Pokémon.
- The player learns of the legend of Ninetales: one day, a human angered a Ninetales and was cursed, however, his Gardevoir took the curse upon itself to save its master. However, the human selfishly deserts the cursed Gardevoir. Ninetails prophesises that the selfish human would be reborn as a Pokémon, and when that happens, the balance of nature in the world would collapse.
- Gengar convinces the Pokémon that the player is the selfish human in the legend of Ninetales, and they decide to run them out of town.
- The player meets the Ninetales of the legend and discovers that while part of the legend is true, and even though the selfish human from the legend is alive, the player is not that human.
- The player returns to the town, and Gengar is discredited. Meanwhile Team A.C.T. goes to the Magma Caverns to defeat Groudon.
- Wynaut and Wobbuffet ask the player to go defeat the Mankey gang in the Uproar Forest. In return, they offer a peeled Chestnut, which are in turn used to convince the Mankey gang to help renovate the Rescue Team Base.
- Team A.C.T. is instead defeated, and a new team, comprised of Blastoise, Octillery and Golem, is formed to go rescue them.
- The new team is also defeated. The player goes to Magma Cavern themselves to rescue Team A.C.T.
- After defeating Groudon, Xatu announces that a falling star is headed towards the planet, and that it is the meteor that is causing the imbalance in nature.
- Gardevoir reveals to the player, in a dream, the true reason for its transformation: the player was destined to be the savior of the Pokémon world; the player decided to erase the memories of being a human in order to cleanse the heart and mind.
- The player goes to find Rayquaza in order to convince it to destroy the falling star.
- The player ends up in the netherworld in the aftermath of the explosion; Gengar somehow helps them return to the Pokémon world.
- As the Pokémon celebrate the end of the calamities, the player says farewell and leaves to return to the human world.
- After the credits roll, the player decides to remain in the Pokémon world, and reappears at the rescue base.
Epilogue
- Medicham and Ekans go to the Wish Cave to try to grant wishes for themselves.
- Ekans is defeated and places a rescue request for Medicham, who is still stuck in the cave.
- After rescuing Medicham, the player is rewarded with the Wish Stone.
- Medicham and Ekans reveal that Gengar is trying to climb Mt. Freeze.
- Gengar asks the player to escort him up Mt. Freeze.
- Gengar reveals himself to be the selfish human in the legend of Ninetales, and is the master of Gardevoir.
- Ninetails gives Gengar the Nine Tail Crest, and sends him to Murky Cave.
- The player and Gengar go rescue Gardevoir. Gardevoir then offers to join the players rescue team, but it has lost all its memory relating to Gengar.
- After completing several missions in the Solar Cave, Spinda walks into Pokémon Square and collapses. The player and their partner take him back to their rescue base.
- Spinda reveals he was looking for the mirage Pokémon, but doesn't know what it is. He gives the player the Clear Wing, then leaves and stays in Pokémon Square for a while.
Characters
Playable characters
Male | Female | |
---|---|---|
Bulbasaur | Docile | Calm |
Squirtle | Jolly | Relaxed |
Charmander | Hardy | Brave |
Pikachu | Impish | Hardy |
Meowth* | Quirky | |
Psyduck* | Relaxed | Lonely |
Machop* | Brave | |
Cubone* | Lonely | Impish |
Eevee* | Naive | |
Chikorita | Docile | |
Totodile | Naive | Jolly |
Cyndaquil | Timid | |
Treecko | Sassy | Quirky |
Mudkip | Calm | Timid |
Torchic | Hasty | Sassy |
Skitty* | Hasty |
Notes:
- *: These Pokémon may not be selected as your partner.
- Some characters are only available to players of a certain gender.
Non-player characters
- Gardevoir (Player's dreams)
- Xatu (Hill of the Ancients)
- Ninetales (Mt. Freeze)
- Wynaut (Uproar Forest)
- Wobbuffet (Uproar Forest)
Plot-set friends
Pokémon Square
- Kecleon (younger)
- Kecleon (older)
- Persian
- Wigglytuff
- Kangaskhan (ガルーラおばちゃん Garura-obachan)
- Gulpin
- Snubbull → Granbull
- Lombre
- Magnemite ×2
- Jumpluff ×2
Makuhita Dojo
Whishcash Pond
Pelipper Post Office
- Pelipper Post Office (ペリッパーれんらくじょ)
- Bellsprout
- Diglett (son)
- Dugtrio (father)
Rescue teams
- Team A.C.T. (チーム F.L.B. Team F.L.B.)
- Team Meanies (チーム イジワルズ Team Ijiwarus)
- Team Shifty (チーム テングス Team Tengus)
- Team Constrictor (チーム カラミツキ Team Karamitsuki)
- Team Hydro (チーム ハイドロズ Team Hydros)
- Team Rumblerock (チーム ゴロゴロ Team Gorogoro)
Bosses
- Skarmory
- Team Meanies
- Zapdos
- Moltres
- Articuno
- Groudon
- Rayquaza
- Kyogre
- Regirock
- Regice
- Registeel
- Mew
- Latios
- Entei
- Raikou
- Suicune
- Ho-oh
- Jirachi
- Lugia
- Deoxys
- Mewtwo
Dungeons
Trivia
- This is the first game to date that allows the player to understand what Pokémon are saying.
- ..., except for the Wobbuffet who helps renovate the rescue team base, who seems to only be able to say Wobbuffet. However, since its Japanese name can be taken to mean "That's right", it is likely that it was intended to simply constantly be reassuring the Wynaut, whose Japanese name essentially translates to "Really?".
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