Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Versions: Difference between revisions

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==Contests==
==Contests==
In Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, a significant amount of changes have been made to the Pokémon contests, now known as Super Contests.  
In Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, a significant amount of changes have been made to the Pokémon contests, now known as Super Contests.  
Instead of making Pokéblocks with berries, you make Pofin, also known by fans as Pokébread. To make this, you stir the mixture in the direction the screen suggests, going faster or slower depending on which contest stat you wish to raise. Then, you feed it to the Pokémon as usual. With the addition of the Physical/Special/Other system, attacks in contests depend on these, with a contest based around Physical, anotheron Special, and the last on Other.
Instead of making Pokéblocks with berries, you make Pofin, also known by fans as Pokébread. To make this, you stir the mixture in the direction the screen suggests, going faster or slower depending on which contest stat you wish to raise. Then, you feed it to the Pokémon as usual.  


The first round is similar to the first round in Ruby, Sapphire and Emerald, but instead of relying solely on you Pofin stats, you must dress up your Pokémon with the stylus within a time limit, using different dress-ups depending on the style of contest. Depending on the rank of the contest, you have to decorate your Pokémon with more ornaments.
The first round is similar to the first round in Ruby, Sapphire and Emerald, but instead of relying solely on you Pofin or Pokéblock stats, you must dress up your Pokémon with the stylus within a time limit, using different dress-ups depending on the style of contest. Depending on the rank of the contest, you have to decorate your Pokémon with more ornaments.


The second is a dancing round, using buttons on the touch screen to either perform a dance that the others will find hard to mimic (If you're the main dancer) or to copy the lead Pokémons dance moves. Each Pokémon gets a turn at being the leader, and the leader must try to dance in time with the music, and so, obviously, so do the background dancers.
The second is a dancing round, using buttons on the touch screen to either perform a dance that the others will find hard to mimic (If you're the main dancer) or to copy the lead Pokémon's dance moves. Each Pokémon gets a turn at being the leader, and the leader must try to dance in time with the music, and so, obviously, so do the background dancers.


The third round is very similar to the third round in RSE, and the main, and indeed, only, difference is that there are three judges. You get more points if you are the only Pokémon to peform to that judge, less if another one appeals for that judge and so on. The "(Pokémon) got the crowd going!" system is still in place, but each judge has a seperate meter for that, meaning it could be an advantage to appeal for a judge everyone else is appealing for...
The third round is very similar to the third round in RSE, and the main, and indeed, only, difference is that there are three judges. You get more points if you are the only Pokémon to peform to that judge, less if another one appeals for that judge and so on. The "(Pokémon) got the crowd going!" system is still in place, but each judge has a seperate meter for that, meaning it could be an advantage to appeal for a judge everyone else is appealing for. However, it could be risky as well.


=Gyms and Elite Four=
=Gyms and Elite Four=
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