Pokémon Sun/Moon:
Part 1 –
Part 2 – Part 3 – Part 4 – Part 5 – Part 6
Pokémon Ultra Sun/Ultra Moon : Part 1 – Part 2 – Part 3 – Part 4
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Even the tone seems to differ between these two sets. |
For this blog’s 12th anniversary, I will be doing something special. This is going to be two game reviews, and you can already tell what the concept will be. Yep! I’m doing a Pokémon Special! Full coverage of Generation 7’s Pokémon Sun/Moon and their updated rereleases, Ultra Sun/Ultra Moon. Two sets of games so intrinsically linked that I couldn’t review them apart. There’s just too much going on across four games.
Sun/Moon and Ultra Sun/Ultra Moon (S/M & US/UM) are weird beasts in the Pokémon mainline series. We’ve seen similar stuff before, but not to that extent; games that are remade within the same Generation, with a different plot, wider pool of Pokémon, and more stuff to check for. Even previous remakes I covered (FireRed/Leafgreen and HeartGold/SoulSilver) were separated from their originals by one Gen, and had plenty of changes due to the transformations the franchise had seen in that time. (Also, those remakes are considered good. Same can’t be said for the Gen 4 remakes, from what I heard!)
It's also different from the situation of Pokémon Black/White and Black 2/White 2. In that case, the latter were sequels to the former, not the same story with changes. Game Freak has never done that again; but, in all fairness, it did allow for B2/W2 to correct some of the more glaring issues of the original B/W. I can’t help but think that this may have helped inspire Gen 7's Ultra versions.
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Also, wat a pretty setting it is for the adventure. |
A major aspect of Pokémon Sun and Moon, released on November 18th, 2016 in North America, is that desire of change from Game Freak. A wish to experiment with a formula which, let’s be honest, had gotten stale. Leave home with your starter, go through eight Gyms, beat up the evil gang, defeat the Elite 4. Well! In Alola, based on the islands of Hawaii, you don’t fight Gym Leaders; instead, you partake in an Island Challenge made of several Trials, which generally involves battling, but may add more. Totem Pokémon are introduced, and perhaps more importantly, this is the first Generation to have Regional Variants of past Pokémon families.
That was a whole lot of getting ahead of myself, wasn’t it? How about we jump in? (For the record, I played Pokémon Sun, but I’ll mention Pokémon Moon wherever relevant.)