Pokemon Do younger kids know/understand the old generations?

slickmario said:
...seriously?

So being 6-8 years old just starting Pokemon has nothing to do with it. Got it.

6-8 years old might not know about 1st-3rd generations yet and they will star wth gen 4 or gen 5 when they start out. When they become a bit better and know abit better then they will know. Most will not know unless they can watch the episodes online or watch them on Boomerang. It is the only way now. CN only does them once every 10 years XD.:)
 
I started with firered and leafgreen. both of them. I was six and i am 12 now. At first, i absolutely hated the games. than, my squirtle evolved to a wartortle and i evolved all the starters. Than my friends showed me cerulean city. my bestie showed me pokemon cards and he had a dazzling, sparkling groudon ex. i was absoloutely hooked than. I didn't find out about 2nd gen until D/P.
 
I was thinking about this the other day, actually. Nice idea for a thread!

Back when Pokemon first hit the US, there was less information about it than there is today. Heck, that was in 1998, wasn't it? I was about 11 years old! The internet wasn't quite so ubiquitous or reliable as it is today, and because of that, the entire Pokemon franchise was able to maintain an aura of mystique. This is no longer the case, of course. Now all you have to do to learn about the cards in a set or an aspect of one of the video games is punch your question into google. Pick from one of the thousands of hits and you're all set. Back in the day though, you had to learn about the games/cards by word of mouth, or you had to find a reliable site where you could read up on things- which wasn't always an easy task. Guidebooks were a lot more popular back then than they are now; there were tons of guides printed and sold concerning all parts of the fandom. It was an exciting time to be alive, so far as being a Pokemon fan goes.

These days, like someone said upthread, the magic is gone. Well, I wouldn't say it's gone, perse, but it is slightly diminished. There have certainly been trade-offs; it's very easy to get reliable information about cards/games these days, but a lot of the excitement and intrigue that surrounded the franchise when it initially launched has totally dissipated, making it less mysterious and a lot more commonplace.

Now, considering the passage of time, it's really no wonder that a lot of kids these days don't recognize the older generations of Pokemon. The older generations are harder to get in the newer games; quite often, you have to import them from your previous games- which younger fans may not have played. What's more, the older Pokemon made their debut in games that were on platforms that no longer have any relevance. Try showing a young kid an original GameBoy and they'll look perplexed. "You used to play games on that?" Modern kids don't seem to realize that video games haven't always been as glamorous as they are now. There was a time before the internet. There was a time when you'd be made fun of for playing video games after a certain age. Heck, there was a time when you had to stand next to your friends to trade Pokemon via a link cable! No wireless communication stuff! It really was a different age, and I don't think it's fair for us to expect young kids to understand. In time, TPCi will recycle the old Pokemon; I'm sure we'll get another remake of Red and Blue before too long, and newer fans will be able to acquaint themselves with the older Pokemon that way. But their connection with those older Pokes won't be like the connection that the older fans have with them. Us older fans had the privilege of getting to know them first. :)
 
Or, of course, you can watch it in a bargain theater a few months later. That's what I do now, now that I've located such a theater near home. The real reason they don't show these things in theaters anymore is because a theater run costs too much. They get the ratings they want on TV.

Anyway, I think Pokémon fans, past and present, are most familiar with the generation they're at when they came in. It must be interesting to see someone get nostalgic for a generation from the third or onwards, as I don't think I've ever seen that.
 
Shadow Arceus said:
Are you serious? That how I say them....I was under the impression that that's the correct way, or at least close enough to not matter.
No it's ar-kee-us. The c is actually pronounced as a hard k for some reason...
 
The hard 'k' in Arceus is from the movie...
Arceus with a soft 's' sound follows its name origin from aureus (gold), and a possible mixture of the names of the gods Zeus and Ra...
Arkeeus just don't sound right...
 
Why are we arguing about the correct pronunciation of Arceus again?
 
Ok, I dont know if this is just experience, but kids don't seem to care about artwork... Strategy... All they serem to care about is the amount of HP and Attack damage. I got a Legend piece, 3-4x Primes, just by trading higher HP and attack cards... Its messed up what kids nowadays see in Pokemon cards...


And don't get me started on the conditions of half the cards I see... >_<
 
Its a glitch Pokemon from gen 1. The reason nobody said it was missingno is because catutie posted the kabutops fossil sprite, which is also one of missingno's forms, so people said it was Kabutops.
 
I know what Missingno is. The signature glitch, infinity 6, etc.

The only thing I don't get about the older generations is why [almost] everyone is all giddy, and refuses to acknowledge that their are new pokemon and new regions, but they still stand by the first one and everything else is lame.

Extremely Slightly exaggerated but still.
 
I think that "old" people should learn about gen 5 too. Its the same thing as wanting younger people to know about the original 151.
 
BlastBurn said:
Ok, I don't know if this is just experience, but kids don't seem to care about artwork... Strategy... All they serem to care about is the amount of HP and Attack damage. I got a Legend piece, 3-4x Primes, just by trading higher HP and attack cards... Its messed up what kids nowadays see in Pokemon cards...


And don't get me started on the conditions of half the cards I see... >_<

It's always been like this. That's why Charizard and Chansey in the Base Set are the most valuable ones in that set. (That's also why those two Pokémon gained notoriety too, especially Charizard.) The kids see the big numbers and think they must be the best cards. For the same reason, Wailords tend to be disproportionately expensive compared to other cards in their sets too.

Try observing kids playing Pokémon cards who don't know the rules. They play it much like War.
 
Ophie said:
Try observing kids playing Pokémon cards who don't know the rules. They play it much like War.

Exactly! My brother, who hates Pokemon, once was forced to play it with his friend, and since I know the rules, I taught him how to play, and you could hear them arguing the entire game.:)
 
Zyflair said:
Why are we arguing about the correct pronunciation of Arceus again?

Because somebody felt the need to bring it up, and suggested something bad about pronouncing it as Ar-see-us.
 
AllInAPackage said:
Exactly! My brother, who hates Pokemon, once was forced to play it with his friend, and since I know the rules, I taught him how to play, and you could hear them arguing the entire game.:)

Heh, I was actually referring to the card game War, but yeah, I've definitely seen incessant arguing too.
 
i'm going to make sure my kids know the older generations. it saddens me when i ask kids what they think about any older pokemon and they'd dumbstruck and ask "What's that?"
 
frostwind said:
I think that "old" people should learn about gen 5 too. Its the same thing as wanting younger people to know about the original 151.

This..if younger should be tought the oringinl,., then older should be taught nw gen. I hat old fans he got out of pokemon who hate the new ones just bcause thy are not pokemon fans anymore. or grew out of it but the old school is ok. I wanna kick those who say there are only 150 pokemon.
 
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