Talk:Ash Ketchum/Archive 4: Difference between revisions

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[<i>"Strong Pokémon. Weak Pokémon. That is only the selfish perception of people. Truly skilled trainers should try to win with their favorites. I like your style. You understand what's important. Go on--the Champion is waiting."</i> ~ Karin of the Johto Shiten'no, Gold/Silver/Crystal Versions.  Satoshi doesn't play the same game you do.  He does as his heart tells him, he listens to his Pokémon, and he works with them, becoming the type of trainer they admire.  He doesn't force them to evolve because he cares about their feelings in the matter. But he doesn't just abandon his lower-staged Pokémon or leave them to live peacefully at Orchid-Hakase's corral because he believes in their abilities, and knows that with enough effort and determination, even a Pikachu or a Fushigidane or a Zenigame can overcome their stronger counterparts or more.  Pikachu was even strong enough to beat Regice, because Satoshi believed and trained and strategized.  Personally, I train parties with favourites, and try to arrange them to become combat worthy, instead of just choosing party combinations to form various teams that have strategies that they are built upon.  I build from the ground-up, using what I want, and so does Satoshi.  I'm not saying it's the best way, and I certainly have a lot of trouble in the competitive scene and the In-game equivalents (Trainer Towers, the Battle Frontier and the Battle Zone), but at least it doesn't devolve simply into a game of crunching numbers and picking out the right natures and items and abilities.  Oh - and since there's apparently no level cap in the anime, Satoshi can keep training his Pokémon to become stronger if he's having a hard time, instead of it becoming a standardized Lv.100 battling environment like in the games.  Just my 10cents.  ~Kumori Satosuke 17:46, 22 October, 2007 (EST)
[<i>"Strong Pokémon. Weak Pokémon. That is only the selfish perception of people. Truly skilled trainers should try to win with their favorites. I like your style. You understand what's important. Go on--the Champion is waiting."</i> ~ Karin of the Johto Shiten'no, Gold/Silver/Crystal Versions.  Satoshi doesn't play the same game you do.  He does as his heart tells him, he listens to his Pokémon, and he works with them, becoming the type of trainer they admire.  He doesn't force them to evolve because he cares about their feelings in the matter. But he doesn't just abandon his lower-staged Pokémon or leave them to live peacefully at Orchid-Hakase's corral because he believes in their abilities, and knows that with enough effort and determination, even a Pikachu or a Fushigidane or a Zenigame can overcome their stronger counterparts or more.  Pikachu was even strong enough to beat Regice, because Satoshi believed and trained and strategized.  Personally, I train parties with favourites, and try to arrange them to become combat worthy, instead of just choosing party combinations to form various teams that have strategies that they are built upon.  I build from the ground-up, using what I want, and so does Satoshi.  I'm not saying it's the best way, and I certainly have a lot of trouble in the competitive scene and the In-game equivalents (Trainer Towers, the Battle Frontier and the Battle Zone), but at least it doesn't devolve simply into a game of crunching numbers and picking out the right natures and items and abilities.  Oh - and since there's apparently no level cap in the anime, Satoshi can keep training his Pokémon to become stronger if he's having a hard time, instead of it becoming a standardized Lv.100 battling environment like in the games.  Just my 10cents.  ~Kumori Satosuke 17:46, 22 October, 2007 (EST)
I just think that Pikachu would have evolved by now. Ash's Pikachu was weak at first but Ash trained it up to the stage where it is now. Why does his stupid Pikachu not want to evolve? What is the matter with it? Is it worried that it won't look as cute as a Raichu? Honestly! But I do understand that a Pokémon that is weak can easily become the strongest in the world. It depends on the trainer's ability and personality. It also depends on the trust of the Pokémon towards the trainer. But you can't say that strenth has nothing to do with it. I like lots of Pokémon that aren't top notch: Dratini, Eevee, Squirtle, Zigzagoon, ect. Just about every Pokémon was weak at some point.[[User:Samrulz123|<span style="color:#FF0000">Samrulz</span>]][[User talk:Samrulz123|<span style="color:#00FF00">123</span>]][[Image:Ani151MS.gif]] 04:37, 23 October 2007 (UTC)
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