Blue (game): Difference between revisions
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:''For the | :''For the game titled "Pokémon Blue Version", see [[Pokémon Blue Version (Japanese)]] and [[Pokémon Red and Blue Versions]].'' | ||
---- | ---- | ||
{{CharacterInfobox| | {{CharacterInfobox| | ||
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hometown=[[Pallet Town]] | | hometown=[[Pallet Town]] | | ||
region=[[Kanto]] | | region=[[Kanto]] | | ||
relatives=[[Professor Oak]] | relatives=[[Professor Oak]] (grandfather)<br>[[Daisy Oak|Daisy]] (sister) | | ||
trainer=yes | | trainer=yes | | ||
trainerclass=[[Gym Leader]], former [[Champion]], [[Rival]] | | trainerclass=[[Gym Leader]], former [[Champion]], [[Rival]] | | ||
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animecounterpart=[[Gary Oak]] | animecounterpart=[[Gary Oak]] | ||
}} | }} | ||
[[Image:Game character green.png|right|100px|thumb|Blue from [[Generation I]]]] | [[Image:Game character green.png|right|100px|thumb|Art of Blue from [[Generation I]]]] | ||
'''Blue''' (Japanese: '''グリーン''' ''Green'') | '''Blue''' (Japanese: '''グリーン''' ''Green'') is the [[rival]] of the [[player character|player]] in the [[Generation I]] games as well as in {{game|FireRed and LeafGreen|s}}, their [[Generation III]] remakes. He is a very cocky and somewhat unfriendly young man, typically bidding {{ga|Red}}/{{ga|Leaf}} farewell with "Smell ya later!", and his primary motivation throughout the game is to become the greatest Trainer. He eventually accomplishes this, defeating the [[Kanto]] [[Elite Four]] and becoming the [[Champion]], but is quickly defeated by the player, losing the position. | ||
Three years later, during [[Generation II]] and {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}}, the [[Generation IV]] remakes, he is the [[Gym Leader]] of [[Viridian City]], having taken that position after [[Giovanni]] disbanded [[Team Rocket]] and went into solo training. In this position, he is notably the only Gym Leader to not focus on one specific [[type]]. He has not lost his nature as a traveling Trainer, however, and frequently leaves his Gym, creating problems for Trainers who wish to challenge him. | |||
[[Professor Oak]], his grandfather, deems Blue to have not realized how to care for Pokémon, which he commends Red or Leaf for on their becoming Champion. This is evident in the state Blue leaves [[Silph Co.]] in, still under [[Team Rocket]] control, leaving Red or Leaf to take out Giovanni. | |||
==In the games== | ==In the games== | ||
In {{game| | In {{game2|Red|Green|Blue}}, {{game|Yellow}}, and {{game|FireRed and LeafGreen|s}}, Blue is the player's rival: he will meet up with the player as he or she journeys across the [[Kanto]] region, challenging him or her every once in a while to test their skills. Like the player, he receives a starter Pokémon from Professor Oak, his grandfather: the one he chooses will be of the type which weakens the type of the player's choice, except in Yellow, where he will instead take the {{p|Eevee}} Oak intended for the player. | ||
Eventually, Blue becomes the Champion at [[Indigo Plateau]], though he is defeated by the player before Professor Oak arrives to congratulate him. Frustrated, he journeys to the [[Sevii Islands]] at Professor Oak's request, obtaining new Pokémon to use in his matches against the player at the Indigo Plateau (as all in-game Champions return to their position on the player's return to their hometown). | |||
In {{game2|Gold|Silver|Crystal}} and {{game|HeartGold and SoulSilver|s}}, however, it is revealed that, after he was defeated at the Indigo Plateau by {{ga|Red}} ({{ga|Leaf}} does not appear and is not mentioned in the remake games, and did not exist at the time of Generation II), Blue returned to [[Pallet Town]]. As [[Viridian Gym]]'s [[Gym Leader|Leader]], [[Giovanni]], had abandoned it on his defeat at the hands of Red, Blue took the position, now handing out the [[Earth Badge]] to Trainers who bested him. In Generation IV, he also distributes {{TM|92|Trick Room}} to those who win the Earth Badge, but does not give a TM out in Generation II. | |||
===Pokémon | ===Pokémon=== | ||
In | ====In Red, Blue, and Green==== | ||
:''For all of Blue's teams in {{game2|Red|Green|Blue}}, see [[Blue (game)/Red, Green, and Blue]]'' | |||
====In Yellow==== | |||
:''For all of Blue's teams in {{game|Yellow}}, see [[Blue (game)/Yellow]]'' | |||
====In Gold, Silver, and Crystal==== | |||
{{Party | {{Party | ||
|color={{blue color}} | |color={{blue color}} | ||
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}} | }} | ||
=== | ====In FireRed and LeafGreen==== | ||
For Blue's | :''For all of Blue's teams in {{game|FireRed|LeafGreen|s}}, see [[Blue (game)/FireRed and LeafGreen]]'' | ||
=== | ====In HeartGold and SoulSilver==== | ||
===== | =====Initial battle===== | ||
{{Party | {{Party | ||
|color={{leafgreen color}} | |color={{leafgreen color}} | ||
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|move4cat=Status}}}} | |move4cat=Status}}}} | ||
===== | =====Rematches===== | ||
{{Party | {{Party | ||
|color={{leafgreen color}} | |color={{leafgreen color}} | ||
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|move4cat=Physical}}}} | |move4cat=Physical}}}} | ||
=== | ====In Stadium and Stadium 2==== | ||
For Blue's Pokémon | :''For all of Blue's teams in both [[Pokémon Stadium]] and [[Pokémon Stadium 2]], see [[Blue (game)/Stadium series]]'' | ||
===Quotes=== | ===Quotes=== | ||
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|} | |} | ||
==== | ====Generation I==== | ||
Before the Champion battle: | Before the Champion battle: | ||
''Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, {{player|[Player]}}! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for powerful Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now! I am the Pokémon League Champion! {{player|[Player]}}! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!'' | ''Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, {{player|[Player]}}! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for powerful Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now! I am the Pokémon League Champion! {{player|[Player]}}! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!'' | ||
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After being defeated: ''NO! That can't be! You beat my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.'' | After being defeated: ''NO! That can't be! You beat my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.'' | ||
==== | ====Generation II==== | ||
''Yo! | ''Yo! Finally got here, huh? I wasn't in the mood at Cinnabar, but now I'm ready to battle you. ... You're telling me you conquered all the Gyms in Johto? Heh! Johto's Gyms must be pretty pathetic then. Hey, don't worry about it. I'll know if you are good or not by battling you right now. Ready, Johto Champ?'' | ||
''What? | ''What? How the heck did I lose to you? ... Tch, all right... Here, take this -- it's {{Badge|Earth}}.'' | ||
''... | ''... All right, I was wrong. You're the real deal. You are a good Trainer. But I'm going to beat you someday. Don't you forget it!'' | ||
==== | ====Generation III==== | ||
Before the Champion battle: | Before the Champion battle: | ||
''Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, {{player|[Player]}}! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now... I am the Pokémon League Champion! {{player|[Player]}}! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!'' | ''Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, {{player|[Player]}}! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now... I am the Pokémon League Champion! {{player|[Player]}}! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!'' | ||
After being defeated: ''NO! That can't be! You beat me at my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.'' | After being defeated: ''NO! That can't be! You beat me at my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.'' | ||
<!--====Generation IV====--> | |||
==In the anime== | |||
Blue himself does not make an appearance in the anime, however, he was the second game character to receive an [[cross-canon counterparts|anime counterpart]] in [[Gary Oak]], [[Ash Ketchum]]'s rival. Much like Blue, Gary was initially very arrogant, but mellowed out after he was defeated by his rival. Unlike Blue, however, Gary has not been shown to have taken over Viridian Gym, instead he has decided to become a Pokémon researcher like his grandfather, and is currently working with [[Professor Rowan]] in Sinnoh. | |||
==Trivia== | ==Trivia== | ||
*Blue is the only Champion who does not induct the player into the [[Hall of Fame]], with Professor Oak doing so instead. | |||
*Blue is | *Blue is likewise the only Champion who uses an {{type2|Electric}} Pokémon in battle ({{p|Jolteon}} or {{p|Magneton}}, in Yellow only). | ||
*Blue is the only Champion | *Because the method of deciding which of the [[Eeveelutions]] Blue obtains in Yellow is not connected to the player's choice of a starter (being that it is able to be only Pikachu), Blue is the only rival whose starter is able to be weak to the player's, which occurs if the player does not beat him in the first two battles. | ||
*Blue is the only rival whose | *Blue's Generation II team is based on his team from Red, Green, and Blue, minus the starter Pokémon, which is replaced with the Pokémon that he has if another starter was chosen. His Generation IV team is the same, however, he has a Machamp instead of Alakazam, and his rematch team is not based on FireRed and LeafGreen's rematch team except in having Tyranitar. | ||
* | *Blue has the most in-battle sprites in the series, with ten total, due to the fact that his sprite changes as the player progresses through the Generation I and Generation III games, and his appearance as Gym Leader in Generation II and Generation IV. | ||
**He is also the NPC Trainer that appears with the most different Pokémon species, with 43 of the 493 appearing under his control at one point or another. | |||
*Blue | |||
**He is also | |||
*Blue is one of only two NPCs who has been both a Gym Leader and a Champion. The other is [[Wallace]] (though Wallace was a Gym Leader before becoming Champion, and Blue does the reverse). Both of them were the eighth Gym Leader and Champion of a region introduced in an odd-numbered generation. | *Blue is one of only two NPCs who has been both a Gym Leader and a Champion. The other is [[Wallace]] (though Wallace was a Gym Leader before becoming Champion, and Blue does the reverse). Both of them were the eighth Gym Leader and Champion of a region introduced in an odd-numbered generation. | ||
*All Japanese games that feature Blue as the rival has at least one of his default names derived from key people in the Pokémon franchise. | *All Japanese games that feature Blue as the rival has at least one of his default names derived from key people in the Pokémon franchise. | ||
*When fighting Blue for the final time in Generation I, | *When fighting Blue for the final time in Generation I, battle animations are automatically turned on, even if the player has disabled them in the options menu. | ||
*When rematching Blue, he replaces two of his Pokémon with a Tyranitar and a Fighting-type Pokémon. In FireRed and LeafGreen, he replaced his Pidgeot and Rhydon with Tyranitar and Heracross. In HeartGold and SoulSilver, he replaced his Gyarados and Alakazam with Tyranitar and Machamp. | *When rematching Blue, he replaces two of his Pokémon with a Tyranitar and a Fighting-type Pokémon. In FireRed and LeafGreen, he replaced his Pidgeot and Rhydon with Tyranitar and Heracross. In HeartGold and SoulSilver, he replaced his Gyarados and Alakazam with Tyranitar and Machamp. | ||
*The reasoning behind Blue's taking of Viridian Gym during Generation II and HeartGold and SoulSilver may not merely be in the fact that he was formerly Champion, and thus a skilled Trainer, but also in the fact that the badge earned there is the ''Green Badge'' in Japanese, the same as his name. | *The reasoning behind Blue's taking of Viridian Gym during Generation II and HeartGold and SoulSilver may not merely be in the fact that he was formerly Champion, and thus a skilled Trainer, but also in the fact that the badge earned there is the ''Green Badge'' in Japanese, the same as his name. |
Revision as of 11:10, 25 November 2009
- For the game titled "Pokémon Blue Version", see Pokémon Blue Version (Japanese) and Pokémon Red and Blue Versions.
Blue グリーン Green | |
[[File:|{{{size}}}]] Art from Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen | |
Gender | Male |
---|---|
Eye color | Brown |
Hair color | Brown |
Hometown | Pallet Town |
Region | Kanto |
Relatives | Professor Oak (grandfather) Daisy (sister) |
Trainer class | Gym Leader, former Champion, Rival |
Generation | I, II, III, IV |
Games | Red, Blue, Yellow, Gold, Silver, Crystal, FireRed, LeafGreen, HeartGold and SoulSilver, Stadium, Stadium 2 |
Leader of | Viridian Gym |
Badge | Earth Badge |
Anime counterpart | Gary Oak |
Counterpart debut | EP001 |
Blue (Japanese: グリーン Green) is the rival of the player in the Generation I games as well as in Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, their Generation III remakes. He is a very cocky and somewhat unfriendly young man, typically bidding Red/Leaf farewell with "Smell ya later!", and his primary motivation throughout the game is to become the greatest Trainer. He eventually accomplishes this, defeating the Kanto Elite Four and becoming the Champion, but is quickly defeated by the player, losing the position.
Three years later, during Generation II and Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, the Generation IV remakes, he is the Gym Leader of Viridian City, having taken that position after Giovanni disbanded Team Rocket and went into solo training. In this position, he is notably the only Gym Leader to not focus on one specific type. He has not lost his nature as a traveling Trainer, however, and frequently leaves his Gym, creating problems for Trainers who wish to challenge him.
Professor Oak, his grandfather, deems Blue to have not realized how to care for Pokémon, which he commends Red or Leaf for on their becoming Champion. This is evident in the state Blue leaves Silph Co. in, still under Team Rocket control, leaving Red or Leaf to take out Giovanni.
In the games
In Pokémon Red, Green, and Blue, Pokémon Yellow, and Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, Blue is the player's rival: he will meet up with the player as he or she journeys across the Kanto region, challenging him or her every once in a while to test their skills. Like the player, he receives a starter Pokémon from Professor Oak, his grandfather: the one he chooses will be of the type which weakens the type of the player's choice, except in Yellow, where he will instead take the Eevee Oak intended for the player.
Eventually, Blue becomes the Champion at Indigo Plateau, though he is defeated by the player before Professor Oak arrives to congratulate him. Frustrated, he journeys to the Sevii Islands at Professor Oak's request, obtaining new Pokémon to use in his matches against the player at the Indigo Plateau (as all in-game Champions return to their position on the player's return to their hometown).
In Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal and Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver, however, it is revealed that, after he was defeated at the Indigo Plateau by Red (Leaf does not appear and is not mentioned in the remake games, and did not exist at the time of Generation II), Blue returned to Pallet Town. As Viridian Gym's Leader, Giovanni, had abandoned it on his defeat at the hands of Red, Blue took the position, now handing out the Earth Badge to Trainers who bested him. In Generation IV, he also distributes TM92 (Trick Room) to those who win the Earth Badge, but does not give a TM out in Generation II.
Pokémon
In Red, Blue, and Green
- For all of Blue's teams in Pokémon Red, Green, and Blue, see Blue (game)/Red, Green, and Blue
In Yellow
- For all of Blue's teams in Pokémon Yellow, see Blue (game)/Yellow
In Gold, Silver, and Crystal
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In FireRed and LeafGreen
- For all of Blue's teams in s, see Blue (game)/FireRed and LeafGreen
In HeartGold and SoulSilver
Initial battle
Rematches
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In Stadium and Stadium 2
- For all of Blue's teams in both Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Stadium 2, see Blue (game)/Stadium series
Quotes
File:RBBlue.png | File:RB Rival2.png | File:RBChamp.PNG | |||||||||
First sprite from Generation I |
Second sprite from Generation I |
Champion sprite from Generation I | |||||||||
File:Y Blue.png | File:Y Blue2.png | File:YellowChampionBlue.png | |||||||||
First sprite from Pokémon Yellow |
Second sprite from Pokémon Yellow |
Champion sprite from Pokémon Yellow | |||||||||
File:Blue1.png | File:Blue2.png | File:FL Blue.png | |||||||||
Title sprite from Generation III |
First sprite from Generation III |
Second sprite from Generation III |
Champion sprite from Generation III | ||||||||
File:Rival Blue.gif | File:Blue 02.png | File:BlueHGSS.gif | |||||||||
Credits sprite from Generation III |
Sprite from Generation II |
Leader sprite from Generation IV |
VS sprite from Generation IV |
Generation I
Before the Champion battle: Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, [Player]! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for powerful Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now! I am the Pokémon League Champion! [Player]! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!
After being defeated: NO! That can't be! You beat my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.
Generation II
Yo! Finally got here, huh? I wasn't in the mood at Cinnabar, but now I'm ready to battle you. ... You're telling me you conquered all the Gyms in Johto? Heh! Johto's Gyms must be pretty pathetic then. Hey, don't worry about it. I'll know if you are good or not by battling you right now. Ready, Johto Champ?
What? How the heck did I lose to you? ... Tch, all right... Here, take this -- it's Earth Badge.
... All right, I was wrong. You're the real deal. You are a good Trainer. But I'm going to beat you someday. Don't you forget it!
Generation III
Before the Champion battle: Hey! I was looking forward to seeing you, [Player]! My rival should be strong to keep me sharp! While working on my Pokédex, I looked all over for Pokémon! Not only that, I assembled teams that would beat any Pokémon type! And now... I am the Pokémon League Champion! [Player]! Do you know what that means? I'll tell you! I am the most powerful Trainer in the world!
After being defeated: NO! That can't be! You beat me at my best! After all that work to become LEAGUE champ? My reign is over already? It's not fair! Why? Why did I lose? I never made any mistakes raising my Pokémon... Darn it! You're the new Pokémon League Champion! Although I don't like to admit it.
In the anime
Blue himself does not make an appearance in the anime, however, he was the second game character to receive an anime counterpart in Gary Oak, Ash Ketchum's rival. Much like Blue, Gary was initially very arrogant, but mellowed out after he was defeated by his rival. Unlike Blue, however, Gary has not been shown to have taken over Viridian Gym, instead he has decided to become a Pokémon researcher like his grandfather, and is currently working with Professor Rowan in Sinnoh.
Trivia
- Blue is the only Champion who does not induct the player into the Hall of Fame, with Professor Oak doing so instead.
- Blue is likewise the only Champion who uses an Template:Type2 Pokémon in battle (Jolteon or Magneton, in Yellow only).
- Because the method of deciding which of the Eeveelutions Blue obtains in Yellow is not connected to the player's choice of a starter (being that it is able to be only Pikachu), Blue is the only rival whose starter is able to be weak to the player's, which occurs if the player does not beat him in the first two battles.
- Blue's Generation II team is based on his team from Red, Green, and Blue, minus the starter Pokémon, which is replaced with the Pokémon that he has if another starter was chosen. His Generation IV team is the same, however, he has a Machamp instead of Alakazam, and his rematch team is not based on FireRed and LeafGreen's rematch team except in having Tyranitar.
- Blue has the most in-battle sprites in the series, with ten total, due to the fact that his sprite changes as the player progresses through the Generation I and Generation III games, and his appearance as Gym Leader in Generation II and Generation IV.
- He is also the NPC Trainer that appears with the most different Pokémon species, with 43 of the 493 appearing under his control at one point or another.
- Blue is one of only two NPCs who has been both a Gym Leader and a Champion. The other is Wallace (though Wallace was a Gym Leader before becoming Champion, and Blue does the reverse). Both of them were the eighth Gym Leader and Champion of a region introduced in an odd-numbered generation.
- All Japanese games that feature Blue as the rival has at least one of his default names derived from key people in the Pokémon franchise.
- When fighting Blue for the final time in Generation I, battle animations are automatically turned on, even if the player has disabled them in the options menu.
- When rematching Blue, he replaces two of his Pokémon with a Tyranitar and a Fighting-type Pokémon. In FireRed and LeafGreen, he replaced his Pidgeot and Rhydon with Tyranitar and Heracross. In HeartGold and SoulSilver, he replaced his Gyarados and Alakazam with Tyranitar and Machamp.
- The reasoning behind Blue's taking of Viridian Gym during Generation II and HeartGold and SoulSilver may not merely be in the fact that he was formerly Champion, and thus a skilled Trainer, but also in the fact that the badge earned there is the Green Badge in Japanese, the same as his name.
- Blue is the only Gym Leader whose team consists of six Pokémon the first time he is faced. All others who gain six Pokémon only do so on their rematch teams.
In other languages
- French: Blue
- German: Blau
- Italian: Blu
- Spanish: Azul
- Korean: 그린 Geurin, Hangul phonetic of Green
Optional names for Blue
Language | Red | Green | Blue | Yellow | FireRed | LeafGreen |
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