Television: Difference between revisions

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==Trivia==
==Trivia==
* TVs are wider in the [[Generation IV]] games.  This may reflect the general trend towards new TVs being widescreen.
* In [[Generation IV]], the CRT TVs that have been standard in Generations I to III were replaced by rear-projection HDTVs, probably in response to the real-world HDTV craze.


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Revision as of 19:03, 2 February 2009

This article is about the household appliance. For Secret Base decoration, see Ornament#TVs.

Televisions (also abbreviated TVs) are part of the furniture in most houses in the Pokémon world. They debuted in Generation I, but were merely for decoration until Generation III. They have also appeared in the Pokémon anime.

In the games

Generations I and II

Television in Red and Blue

The televisions in this Generation were merely for decoration purposes. Televisions only appeared in the player's home.

Generation III

Television returned in Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald, replacing Generation II's radio broadcasts and is more useful than Generation I use. They were present in most houses in Hoenn, but had a limited function here, only showing programs when an event occurs, such as swarming Pokémon, or the player changes a Pokémon's nickname at the Name Rater. They may also show interviews with the player character, who answers by selecting words from a drop-down list. When a program is airing, the television screen will flash, and will not cease flashing until the program has been watched. If an event has not happened to activate a television program, the screen will remain blank and the phrase "Mom will like this... better get going!" will be played. The programming is organized by Hoenn TV.

Generation IV

Televeision in Diamond and Pearl

In Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum television screens flash constantly. Jubilife TV produces many television programs broadcast all around the Sinnoh region, including the Trend Tracker show, Trainer Research, and Sinnoh Now. Each program includes information about events happening around Sinnoh, including swarming Pokémon and weather conditions affecting different routes. They may also contain information about the player which is customizable by speaking to a number interviewers which can be found scattered around the region. Like in the previous generation, the answers to the interviewers' questions are limited, but more answers can be added by learning trendy phrases in Snowpoint City. At the conclusion of each program, a series of advertisements is played.

The events of the main storyline are encouraged by a television program, The Search for the Red Gyarados. Later, at the Survival Area, the player will encounter the cameraman responsible for this story.

There is also a TV in the Old Chateau which contains a wild Rotom at night.

In the anime

Television has been present in the anime since the first episode, where Ash saw a Pokémon League battle on television. Ash and his traveling companions have met several television and film producers on their journeys, but televisions remained largely unseen until the Advanced Generation series. Several characters mention watching Pokémon Contests on TV, and in Saved by the Beldum! several supporting characters watch Ash's battle on TV. Like the games, Sinnoh Now is broadcast in the Sinnoh region, with host Rhonda.

Trivia

  • In Generation IV, the CRT TVs that have been standard in Generations I to III were replaced by rear-projection HDTVs, probably in response to the real-world HDTV craze.
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