The Top 10 Mistakes that New Pokemon Trainers Make

03. Hacked Pokemon

File this under 'Really don't see the attraction?'

Actually that is not entirely accurate - in a way we do see the attraction. After all the way that the system is set up you have to not only stay aware of what is going on in terms of Event and Legendary Pokemon give-aways, but you have to BE there for them.

Nothing sucks worse than having missed a distribution by days, especially when it was an e-distro in which all you had to do was remember to use the game to log into the Internet server and collect that Pokemon.

Eventually, that happens often enough - and you see your mates having Pokemon you don't - that you start thinking to yourself, well, I would have had that if I had remembered. And besides it is not really cheating since it is a Pokemon that they gave away anyway. So what is the harm in getting one from one of those guys online who offers to custom-generate Pokemon for you? For free? For the asking?

No harm right? Despite the fact that it is understandable it is still a significant mistake.

The reason for that is simple enough - walking through this door slowly eats away at you. The hacked ones are not worth as much as the ones you earned and the ones you got legitimately. It is not something that you decided - it just is the way it is.

Sadly the one thing that they don't tell you, and you don't get warned about, is that the presence of those illegitimate Pokemon taint the game and game play experience.

They color it in a negative way and in the end that free Pokemon ends up forever altering what was once one of the pleasurable parts of your gamer existence.

That's just the effect on normal players. The impact it has for competitive trainers is far worse.

For that level of player there is real risk involved - and not just because if it ever gets out that they're using hacked Pokemon it costs them their reputation. Walking down this road requires them to develp a healthy measure of paranoia!

Part of the reason is very simple: they cannot use a hacked Pokemon in tournament play.

What is worse, they have to ensure that the cartridge they are using for tourney play does not have any tainted Pokemon on it - because the organizers have a system for verifying the legitimacy of each Pokemon that is registered for battles and, even more harmful they will flag and ban an entire cartridge when a single hacked Pokemon is found on it.

Ships Passing in the Night

The serious tourney trainers who opt to choose hacked Pokemon as their shortcut usually make the choice in order to complete their Pokedex, never having any intentions of using a hacked Pokemon in tourney play - or even allowing a hacked Pokemon anywhere NEAR a tourney.

What they do is obtained the Pokemon that are required to complete their Dex and then they either delete the Pokemon - in the case of Legendary ones that cannot breed, or they breed it with a Ditto to create a legitimate Pokemon and then delete the original hacked one to destroy its tainted trail.

That way the one on their cart has the proper creds. Using hacked Pokemon to add the Dex entry also pays dividends in that it then permits the trainer to search for trades for legitimate ones of that type.

Bottom line is the mistake that New Trainers often make is not so much getting Hacked Pokemon as it is keeping them - which is a very big mistake and the reason that it lands at Number 3 on our Top 10 Countdown of Mistakes New Trainers Make!

Posted: 16th Apr 2015 by CMBF
Tags:
Pokemon Omega Ruby,