Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs

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Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs
ポケモンレンジャー 光の軌跡
File:Pokémon Ranger GS cover.png
Artwork and logo of Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs
Basic info
Platform: Nintendo DS
Category: Action RPG
Players: 1-4
Connectivity: Nintendo Wi-Fi Connection
Developer: HAL Laboratory
Creatures, Inc.
Publisher: Nintendo
Part of: Generation IV side series
Ratings
CERO: A
ESRB: E
ACB: N/A
OFLC: N/A
PEGI: 3+
GRAC: N/A
GSRR: N/A
Release dates
Japan: March 6, 2010
North America: October 4, 2010
Australia: November 25, 2010
Europe: November 5, 2010
South Korea: TBA
Hong Kong: N/A
Taiwan: N/A
Websites
Japanese: Official Site
English: Official Site
Japanese boxart
File:PokemonRanger3Cover.jpg
Pokémon Ranger: Locus of Light boxart

Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs (ポケモンレンジャー 軌跡 Pokémon Ranger: Locus of Light) is an action-adventure game for the Nintendo DS, the third in the Pokémon Ranger spin-off series and the sequel to Pokémon Ranger: Shadows of Almia. The game was first revealed in CoroCoro on January 13, 2010, and officially announced by Nintendo Japan two days later, with screenshots and artwork. It was released in Japan on March 6, 2010 and in North America on October 4, 2010.

The game follows the same pattern as previous instalments in the series, following the story of a new Pokémon Ranger in a new region named Oblivia as he or she investigates a villainous team known as the Pokémon Pinchers and works against their plot to control the region.

Gameplay

As with the previous Pokémon Ranger games, the player uses a Capture Styler to befriend Pokémon by drawing loops around them on the DS's touchscreen. Each loop raises the Pokémon's Friendship Gauge by a certain amound, depending on the Styler's Power, and the Pokémon is captured when the Gauge is filled entirely. The player may lift the stylus between loops, as in Shadows of Almia. If the Capture Line is hit by a Pokémon's attack, the Styler loses Energy, and if the Energy Gauge is depleted entirely, the player loses. The Styler gains experience points with each successful capture and levels up, raising its Energy and Power.

Up to seven captured Pokémon may follow the player as Friend Pokémon, and can use their abilities to help the player in the form of Field Moves on the field and Poké Assists during a capture. The player is partnered with a Pichu carrying a ukulele, nicknamed Ukulele Pichu (Japanese: ウクレレピチュー), who follows the player around in addition to any Friend Pokémon.

The player must complete various Missions as a Pokémon Ranger over the course of the game. In addition, the player may help the citizens of Oblivia in 51 shorter, optional Quests. Completing Missions and Quests rewards the player with Ranger Points, which may be used to raise the Styler's Energy and Power.

New features

  • Ranger Signs allow the player to summon various Pokémon, including the legendary bird trio, the legendary beast trio, and the Eon Pokémon corresponding to the player's gender.
  • Friend Pokémon are placed on the field for Poké Assists, and are released if they take damage during this time rather than being automatically released afterwards. After a short recharge period, the Poké Assist may be used again.
  • Certain targets now require the use of Field Moves by multiple Pokémon.
  • Up to four players may tackle Missions together via a multiplayer mode. These Missions are accessible after Celebi takes the player into Oblivia's past for the third time.
  • Certain Pokémon now have the Fly Field Move, which allows the player to roam Oblivia's Sky and capture various Template:Type2 Pokémon. By speaking to Supurna in the Aqua Resort, Pokémon captured in the Sky can be added to the player's party. It is also possible to fly directly to locations that the player has already visited.
  • Occasionally, the DS must be held vertically to chase certain people and Pokémon underwater.
  • Sometimes, wild Pokémon will be "agitated" and the player will need to deplete an agitation meter with the stylus or the Poké Assists before it can be easily captured with the Capture Styler.
  • Previously encountered boss Pokémon can be captured again by speaking to Nema in Rand's House. She will use her invention, the "Many Times Any Time Capture Machine", which brings the player to a model of Dolce Island.

Special Missions

Main article: Ranger Net

Special downloadable missions allow players to receive a Deoxys, whose form is determined by how quickly it is captured (multiplayer only), a Manaphy egg, a Shaymin met in a fateful encounter, and a Heatran with Eruption, which can be transferred to any Generation IV game only once.

Plot

The game takes place in the Oblivia region, a peaceful archipelago. The Pokémon Pinchers, who capture and control Pokémon using devices called Control Gauntlets, have been operating individually in the region for some time, but have recently started to act as a group. Professor Hastings sends two new Rangers, Ben and Summer, to Oblivia to investigate the Pinchers' actions, and stop them if necessary. Either one may be chosen as the player character; the other will appear as an NPC with his or her default name.

Several characters from the first two Ranger games make appearances, including Professor Hastings, Murph, and the Go-Rock Quads. The legendary beasts, the legendary birds, the Eon duo, Celebi and Ho-Oh play important roles in the game.

Synopsis

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Spoiler warning: this article may contain major plot or ending details.
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While flying to Oblivia, the player and their partner encounter two Pinchers chasing Latias or Latios, depending on the player's gender. The player stalls them long enough to let the Pokémon escape, but the Pinchers' leader, Red Eyes, appears and attacks the player's partner with his plasma cannon. The player intercepts the blast and is knocked off his or her Staraptor into the ocean.

The player washes ashore on Dolce Island, in southwest Oblivia, where the Pokémon Pinchers have just captured many Pokémon. He or she meets Ukulele Pichu and a shipbuilder named Booker, who witnessed the event from afar, explaining that he came when he saw the "UFOs"—Z.Z. Flyers—and was worried about the Pokémon. He invites the player back to his home in Cocona Village, on Renbow Island to the north, and Ukulele Pichu, worried about its captured friends, joins them.

Back at Booker's house, shortly after the player explains the situation, a village boy named Ralph rushes over and says that the "UFOs" have returned, headed towards Teakwood Forest, and that a local lumberjack named Arley pursued them and has not returned. The player and Ralph head after them as well and find the Pinchers in Rasp Cavern, stealing a piece of a stone monument. An angered Raikou appears and chases the Pinchers away.

The piece of the monument is revealed to be something known as an Involith. The Pokémon Pinchers plan to retrieve Involiths from monuments around Oblivia in order to awaken the legendary birds. Once the three Legendary birds awaken, a strong Pokémon will appear and help them in their scheme to control the Oblivia region. However, this angers the legendary beasts. The player must calm down the legendary beasts, while trying to foil the Pinchers' plan. Although the player manages to prevent Blue Eyes and Red Eyes from completing the Pinchers' plan, the leader Purple Eyes does not want to give up on controlling the Oblivia region.

After the three Legendary birds awaken, the player encounters the Societea, a group of four retired thieves behind the actions of the Pokémon Pinchers. They decided to revive their group and took control of the Pokémon Pinchers in hopes of obtaining eternal youth. The Societea revives the ancient Sky Fortress that was the power source of an Ancient Ruler, and vaporize Dolce Island to show the citizens of Oblivia their power.

Before the player can infiltrate the Sky Fortress, he or she must find the Rainbow Grail and take it to the Rainbow Dais on the seafloor to summon a Ho-Oh. After he or she captures Ho-Oh, it destroys the barrier around the Sky Fortress. The player may now enter the fortress, which acts as the game's final dungeon, and challenge the Societea. After capturing the Mewtwo controlled by the leader of the Societea, Edward, Purple Eyes appears again and takes control of Mewtwo. After defeating Mewtwo again, the Sky Fortress begins to fall, which would destroy Oblivia. However, Ho-Oh lends the player its power again, making the fortress land safely in the ocean.

Reception

Guardian Signs sold 360,000 copies during the first month of its release.[1] It was met with somewhat positive reviews, receiving an average rating of 69% on Metacritic[2] and a score of 70 from Nintendo Power.[3] However, its story and gameplay were criticized, with IGN warning that "if you've played the previous versions and hated them, there isn’t much here that will change your mind",[4] and GamePro commenting on "the repetitive puzzle solving and uninteresting story" and stating that it "isn't much of a departure from the last two titles in the series."[5]

Trivia

  • The localized versions of this game use the Japanese terms for the legendary Pokémon: "maboroshi" and "densetsu" are translated as "rare" and "legendary", the first being the ones only obtainable through events, such as Celebi and Shaymin, while all of the others are "legendary".
  • This game brought the final proof of Phione's lack of legendary status, due to it being found in the wild just as any other common Pokémon, also without the "rare" or "legendary" denomination.

In other languages

Language Title
France Flag.png European French Pokémon Ranger: Sillages de Lumière
Germany Flag.png German Pokémon Ranger: Spuren des Lichts
Italy Flag.png Italian Pokémon Ranger: Tracce di Luce
Spain Flag.png European Spanish Pokémon Ranger: Trazos de Luz

References

  1. IGN: Etrian Odyssey 3 Tops Japanese Charts (retrieved December 24, 2010)
  2. MetaCritic: Pokémon Ranger Guardian Signs Critic Reviews (retrieved December 24, 2010)
  3. Nintendo Power magazine. Issue 260; page 89. November 2010.
  4. IGN: Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Signs Review (retrieved December 24, 2010)
  5. GamePro: Pokémon Ranger: Guardian Sign review (retrieved December 24, 2010)

External links

Project Sidegames logo.png This article is part of Project Sidegames, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on the Pokémon Sidegames.