Wild Pokémon: Difference between revisions

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In the [[EP001|first anime episode]], Ash's Pokédex states that wild Pokémon tend to be jealous of human-trained Pokémon, this being one of the reasons that the {{p|Spearow}} Ash hit with a rock attacked {{AP|Pikachu}} instead.
In the [[EP001|first anime episode]], Ash's Pokédex states that wild Pokémon tend to be jealous of human-trained Pokémon, this being one of the reasons that the {{p|Spearow}} Ash hit with a rock attacked {{AP|Pikachu}} instead.
==In the manga==
As Pokédexes prior to the arcs in [[Hoenn]] typically needed the Pokémon to be captured in order for data to be gained, capturing wild Pokémon has been a long-standing point for every [[Pokédex Holder]] save {{Adv|Gold}} and {{adv|Silver}} until the {{chap|Ruby & Sapphire}}. The first wild  Pokémon to be captured was a wild {{p|Nidorino}} by {{adv|Red}}, and even legendary Pokémon were seen as soon as the first round, though the one in question (a {{p|Mew}} appearing near [[Pallet Town]]) was not captured. Pokémon that have been released, unlike in the games, do sometimes appear in the wild and can be re-caught or controlled by another trainer (such as [[Emerald's Sceptile]] and [[Mewtwo (Adventures)|Mewtwo]], and again unlike in the games, where identical trainer ID means that high-level Pokémon can be controlled by its trainer, several Pokémon such as [[Pika]] and [[Pearl (Adventures)#Zeruhiko|Buizel]] were disobedient and likely to even attack its trainer on a whim.


[[Category:Terminology]]
[[Category:Terminology]]
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