Pokemon Gold/Silver is Brilliant.

What’s this? We’re back? Not raptured? Oh well. Maybe next time, eh?

Anyways, I’m here to tell you that Pokemon Gold/Silver is brilliant. And this is why:

You beat the game by beating the Elite Four. Typical Pokemon game, right? You beat the game, the credits roll, and you get the Game Over screen.

…that’s not the end of the game. In fact, you’re only about halfway through the content at that point.

“Now hold on a minute, Pike,” I can hear you saying. “I’ve played [insert game here] and there’s plenty of content after you beat the game. It’s got all sorts of replay value.”

You know what? You’re right. There’s a lot of games out there like that. But none that I have played so far have come close to pulling it off the Way Pokemon Gold/Silver did it.

You get the box art for Gold because that's the one I played. NOSTALGIA CENTRAL.

See, let’s go back in time a little. You’ve played the original Pokemon Red/Blue a million times. The sequel comes out, and you can’t contain your excitement. You load up the game, hoping for an adventure just like the first, but bigger and better. You’re greeted with a different world and different Pokemon, which feels just a little off to you somehow, but you play anyway and soon you love this new game as much as the last.

…but something still feels ever so very “off”. Namely, that initial desire you had to revisit the friends and places from the Pokemon games hasn’t quite faded away. You’re just a bit homesick.

Then you beat Pokemon Gold/Silver and guess what?

You actually get to go back to the world of the first game.

Your mind is blown to pieces by this revelation, and those pieces are blown into further pieces when you realize that you can go through and re-challenge all the gym leaders from the first game. You’re older and wiser now, and so are better prepared, and so are your rivals. You’re absolutely giddy at this notion and carefully go through and battle all of your old opponents.

But even that’s not the end, because then you go through a dungeon very similar to the ones you carefully crawled through back in the day and then you fight… yourself.

That’s right.

The climactic fight of this game is to battle the protagonist of the original, probably using a bunch of the Pokemon you, yourself, used back then. Oh, and they’re all, like, level 80.

I don’t think anything I type here can fully express the way you feel when you first stumble across this battle, so I’ll just leave these pictures right here:

I think it’s this whole second half of the game that cemented it as my firm favorite of the Pokemon generations and that still continues to blow my mind a decade later. I can’t think of another game that has done “post-credits content” so very well. If you can think of one that has, please direct me to it, because I must play it immediately.

5 thoughts on “Pokemon Gold/Silver is Brilliant.”

  1. *cough* Chrono Trigger *cough hack*

    Though I’m not sure if this counts, as it’s not so much “Now the game is over, continue” as “Now you just got one of the thirteen possible endings. You may have even gotten half of the sidequests. Wanna do that again?”

  2. Jade Cocoon 2.

    Seriously. Especially if you like pokemon and are patient with games that refuse to tell you how to play them (I figured out SO MUCH through trial and error. SO MUCH!) … we finished the game.

    It was epic. We sat through the credits, a thing we rarely do, because we EARNED those credits and it was awesome. The culmination of a ton of gameplay.

    The credits stop rolling and … you’re back in the end chamber of the game.

    Startled, we picked up the controller. We could move the character.

    We take the elevator and find … things have changed. It’s YEARS after the end of the game, and there are new quests, and what’s this? A WHOLE NEW EPIC SERIES OF ADVENTURES.

    We still haven’t beaten that game. It totally blew our minds that we hadn’t finished it the first time.

    Also? Awesome game. It’s like pokemon for people who love to theorycraft (which element monster should I use now? My enemy has X and Y monsters, so I should start with Wind, and follow up with fire! Aw, but my fire/wind monster is tired and can’t use both its abilities. Maybe I should open with earth, give that monster a chance to rest. Should I breed this one with this other one? What will the result be? How close am I to achieving the final evolution?)

    http://www.gamespot.com/ps2/rpg/jadecocoon2/index.html

    It’s got TERRIBLE engrish, and doesn’t explain important things about breeding that I think were difficult to guess at, but it’s one of the best games we’ve played. period.

    (Also, yay pokemon love! I don’t remember if I played gold or not, but I DEFINITELY didn’t know about the after-credits content!!)

  3. Silver was better, and SoulSilver is the primary reason I acknowledge the existence of later generations.

    (Then again, I think it would be hard to stop me acknowledging the existence of any game that lets me bring Lugia and Typhlosion to the Elite Four.)

  4. What do you mean ‘next’ time? There is no…

    …What? October? Are you kidding?

    So, we have an unraptured Pike back… but Mr Adequate is still mysteriously silent.

    Could he be Ryan Giggs?

    (Apologies to non-UK residents.)

  5. That sounds REALLY cool. I may even play Gold, I had no idea it had all that in it. That’s pretty awesome.

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