Cry: Difference between revisions

18 bytes removed ,  19 August 2008
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** {{p|Charizard}} and {{p|Rhyhorn}}
** {{p|Charizard}} and {{p|Rhyhorn}}
** {{p|Poliwag}}, {{p|Ditto}}, and {{p|Jigglypuff}}
** {{p|Poliwag}}, {{p|Ditto}}, and {{p|Jigglypuff}}
** {{p|Machop}} and {{p|Omanyte}}
** {{p|Goldeen}} and {{p|Caterpie}}
** {{p|Goldeen}} and {{p|Caterpie}}
** {{p|Vileplume}} and {{p|Aerodactyl}}
** {{p|Vileplume}} and {{p|Aerodactyl}}
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*According to a Pokémon Sunday clip, Shaymin's Sky Forme and Land Forme are revealed to have different cries, making Shaymin the first Pokémon to have different cries for different forms.
*According to a Pokémon Sunday clip, Shaymin's Sky Forme and Land Forme are revealed to have different cries, making Shaymin the first Pokémon to have different cries for different forms.


* From [[Generation II]] onwards, possibly due to improved technology, very few Pokémon were released with cries similar to another; those that do have similar cries are usually related by [[evolution]] as they were in Generation I. As the generations continue to pass, the calls of new Pokémon seem much cleaner and more refined, while the cries of Pokémon released in previous generations sound more like the electronic beeps they are.  In particular, the cries of new Pokémon in [[Generation IV]] are mostly recognizable digitized sounds, such as birds chirping for {{p|Starly}} or a xylophone being played for {{p|Kricketot}}.
* From [[Generation II]] onwards, possibly due to improved technology, very few Pokémon were released with cries similar to another; those that do have similar cries are usually related by [[evolution]] as they were in Generation I. As the generations continue to pass, the calls of new Pokémon seem much cleaner and more refined, while the cries of Pokémon released in previous generations, in comparison, sound more like the electronic beeps they are.  In particular, the cries of new Pokémon in [[Generation IV]] are mostly recognizable digitized sounds, such as birds chirping for {{p|Starly}} or a xylophone being played for {{p|Kricketot}}.


* Despite there being 151 Pokémon in Generation I, there are only 37 completely different cries in the game.  However, different Pokémon's cries are either pitched up, down, faster, slower, or disable one of the sound channels, making it harder to recognize.  For example, Charmander and Charmeleon's cries are the same, but an instruction in the game tells the pitch for Charmeleon to be lower than Charmander's.  Despite this, some Pokémon share the exact same cry with no sound tweaking, such as Charizard and Rhyhorn. In Generation II, there were 30 new cries introduced, applying to the same rules as before.
* Despite there being 151 Pokémon in Generation I, there are only 37 completely different cries in the game.  However, different Pokémon's cries are either pitched up, down, faster, slower, or disable one of the sound channels, making it harder to recognize.  For example, Charmander and Charmeleon's cries are the same, but an instruction in the game tells the pitch for Charmeleon to be lower than Charmander's.  Despite this, some Pokémon share the exact same cry with no sound tweaking, such as Charizard and Rhyhorn. In Generation II, there were 30 new cries introduced, applying to the same rules as before.
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