Jump to content

User:Geneticrebel/sandbox

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Stadium

[edit]

There are 4 main stadium cups that the player can participate in.[1] There are 8 trainers to battle in each cup. Also in each cup a team of 6 Pokemon is assembled from either rental Pokemon or imported Pokemon from a Game Boy cartridge, with the exception of the Challenge Cup, and for each battle only 3 Pokemon are selected.[1] One cup that can be challenged is the Little Cup. In this cup unevolved level 5 Pokemon are used. Another cup that can be challenged is the Poke Cup. In this cup Pokemon that are level 50-55 can be used, and there are 4 different waves of 8 trainers to battle (Poke Ball, Great Ball, Ultra Ball, and Master Ball). The third cup that can be challenged is the Prime Cup. In this cup any Pokemon that is level 1-100 can be used, but the other trainers will always have level 100 Pokemon. The final cup that can be challenged is the Challenge Cup.[1] There are 4 different waves of trainers in this cup, just like for the Poke Cup, but each cup has a different level requirement.[2] The Poke Ball wave has level 30 Pokemon, the Great Ball wave has level 45 Pokemon, the Ultra Ball wave has level 60 Pokemon, and the Master Ball wave has level 75 Pokemon.


Gym Leader Castle

[edit]

The Gym Leader Castle has the same set up that it did in Pokemon Stadium. The difference is that it begins with the Johto region gym leaders[3], then the Elite Four can be battled[3], after that then your rival Silver[1] can be battled, next the Kanto region gym leaders can be battled[4], and the final trainer is the Pokemon Champion Red[4] . Each gym leader uses a specific type of Pokemon but in the Gym Leader Castle they have a few Pokemon that are a different type to cover some potential weaknesses.[3]

  • Johto region gym leaders[3]
    • Falkner: Uses Bird type Pokemon.
    • Bugsy: Uses Bug type Pokemon.
    • Whitney: Uses Normal type Pokemon.
    • Morty: Uses Ghost type Pokemon.
    • Chuck: Uses Fighting type Pokemon.
    • Jasmine: Uses Steel type Pokemon.
    • Team Rocket Executive (Male): The Team Rocket Executive is not a gym leader but he is a required battle. The Team Rocket Executive doesn't uses a specific type of Pokemon.
    • Pryce: Uses Ice type Pokemon.
    • Clair: Uses Dragon type Pokemon.
  • Elite Four[3]
    • Will: Uses Psychic type Pokemon.
    • Koga: Uses Poison type Pokemon.
    • Bruno: Uses Fighting type Pokemon.
    • Karen: Uses Dark type Pokemon.
    • Lance: Uses Dragon type Pokemon.
  • Rival battle with Silver: Silver does not use a specific type of Pokemon.[1]
  • Kanto region gym leaders[4]
    • Brock: Uses Rock type Pokemon.
    • Misty: Uses Water type Pokemon.
    • Lt. Surge: Uses Electric type Pokemon.
    • Erika: Uses Grass type Pokemon.
    • Janine: Uses Poison type Pokemon.
    • Sabrina: Uses Psychic type Pokemon.
    • Blaine: Uses Fire type Pokemon.
    • Blue: Blue does not use a specific type of Pokemon.
  • Champion Red: Red does not use a specific type of Pokemon.

Optional Features

[edit]

Mini-Game Park

[edit]

The Mini-Game Park is an area in White City where 12 Pokemon themed mini-games can be played, also every Mini-Game can have 4 players play at the same time.[5] The 12 different mini-games that can be played are: Gusty Golbat, Topsy-Turvy, Clear-Cut Challenge, Furret's Frolic, Barrier Ball, Pichu's Power Plant, Rampage Rollout, Streaming Stampede, Tumbling Togepi, Delibird's Delivery, Egg Emergency, and Eager Eevee.[5]

Transfer Pack

[edit]

The Transfer Pack is compatible with Pokemon Gold, and Silver.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Carle, Chris. "Pokemon Stadium 2 Is the sequel to Pokemon Stadium different enough to warrant a purchase? Our review has the scoop". Pokemon Stadium 2 Review. IGN. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  2. ^ "Pokemon Stadium 2 Challenge Cup Guide". Retrieved 30 March 2012.
  3. ^ a b c d e "Pokemon Stadium 2 Gym Leader Castle". Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  4. ^ a b c "Pokemon Stadium 2 Gym Leader Castle - Kanto Castle". Retrieved 13 February 2012.
  5. ^ a b "Pokemon Stadium 2: Mini-Game Park". Retrieved 2 March 2012.