Do you own either of the original Japanese Pokemon games, Red and Green?

Do you own either of the original Japanese Pokemon games, Red and Green?


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Pidgeot

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As we all know, the first Pokemon games were Red and Green, which were only released in Japan. But how many of you actually own one of them?

I now own the Japanese version of Pokemon Red (given to me by a friend today, actually :D).
 
I plan on owning both, sooner or later. And Pocket Monsters Blue (even though it's the same as English Red and Blue, I DON'T CARE).

The weeks I spend completing my Pokedex in Japanese? Priceless, and will be time and money well spent.
 
Some time last year I purchased Green on eBay. I'm currently playing through it... and taking advantage of glitches such as the Mew glitch that weren't known about back when I played the American first generation games. Which is how I plan on completing the Pokédex, since I don't have a copy of Red to trade with.
I actually prefer the Green Version graphics over most of the American Red Version graphics.
I don't know Japanese, but I can read the katakana since it's like English in most cases. I find some of the names hilarious... especially how the Lass is named "Miniskirt", lol
 
I would like to have Green Version, just because the game art is so awful.
Some of it is bad (Charizard and Mew come to mind), but some of it is better than the "improved" Red / Blue (for example, Koffing. In Red / Blue his pattern is on his forehead instead of his belly and it makes absolutely no sense).
 
I would like to have Green Version, just because the game art is so awful.
Some of it is bad (Charizard and Mew come to mind), but some of it is better than the "improved" Red / Blue (for example, Koffing. In Red / Blue his pattern is on his forehead instead of his belly and it makes absolutely no sense).

I like the art of Green. It's much more detailed than newer games. And I actually have nothing against Mew in Green, because it looks sort of mysterious and alien. The Mew in Blue looks cuter, but for some reason I prefer an ugly foetus to a little kitten. I agree on the Charizard, though, because the one in Green looks like a baby dragon, so the Blue one is better. I also prefer Keishii in Green.
 
I have green version. I admit that there are some sprites I like better in green than I do in the english red and blue. Golbat for example looks 10 times better in green. Not sure what they were thinking with Blue's Golbat.=/
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....

Have you played English Red/Blue? If so, you should be able to get through it without needing to understand Japanese. The only difficulties would be attacks and items, but an English list of moves a Pokemon learns and one for item locations will help you figure out what's what.
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....

Have you played English Red/Blue? If so, you should be able to get through it without needing to understand Japanese. The only difficulties would be attacks and items, but an English list of moves a Pokemon learns and one for item locations will help you figure out what's what.
Yeah... moves are no problem... just memorize the what each move does and the names aren't even important. You can even change the order of the moves so the useful one is always on top and then you won't even have to memorize the order. Also, learn katakana... it's helpful for some of the items (as some of the names are similar to English... like "Poké Ball" ("Monster Ball") is "monsutaabaru" and "PP UP" is "pipiappu" (I may have gotten the spellings wrong but it's something along those lines)). And some hiragana for attack names... like if the attack has "den" in it then it's some sort of electric attack (unless the attack Type is Normal... then it's "Quick Attack").
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....

Have you played English Red/Blue? If so, you should be able to get through it without needing to understand Japanese. The only difficulties would be attacks and items, but an English list of moves a Pokemon learns and one for item locations will help you figure out what's what.
Yeah... moves are no problem... just memorize the what each move does and the names aren't even important. You can even change the order of the moves so the useful one is always on top and then you won't even have to memorize the order. Also, learn katakana... it's helpful for some of the items (as some of the names are similar to English... like "Poké Ball" ("Monster Ball") is "monsutaabaru" and "PP UP" is "pipiappu" (I may have gotten the spellings wrong but it's something along those lines)). And some hiragana for attack names... like if the attack has "den" in it then it's some sort of electric attack (unless the attack Type is Normal... then it's "Quick Attack").
I don't have English Red, and the moves aren't the problem; I'm just completely lost on the part of the game I'm at.
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....

Have you played English Red/Blue? If so, you should be able to get through it without needing to understand Japanese. The only difficulties would be attacks and items, but an English list of moves a Pokemon learns and one for item locations will help you figure out what's what.
Yeah... moves are no problem... just memorize the what each move does and the names aren't even important. You can even change the order of the moves so the useful one is always on top and then you won't even have to memorize the order. Also, learn katakana... it's helpful for some of the items (as some of the names are similar to English... like "Poké Ball" ("Monster Ball") is "monsutaabaru" and "PP UP" is "pipiappu" (I may have gotten the spellings wrong but it's something along those lines)). And some hiragana for attack names... like if the attack has "den" in it then it's some sort of electric attack (unless the attack Type is Normal... then it's "Quick Attack").
I don't have English Red, and the moves aren't the problem; I'm just completely lost on the part of the game I'm at.

PM me and I'll try to help you figure it out. :)
 
I have Japanese Red.....I didn't make much progress since I couldn't understand any of it.....

Have you played English Red/Blue? If so, you should be able to get through it without needing to understand Japanese. The only difficulties would be attacks and items, but an English list of moves a Pokemon learns and one for item locations will help you figure out what's what.
Yeah... moves are no problem... just memorize the what each move does and the names aren't even important. You can even change the order of the moves so the useful one is always on top and then you won't even have to memorize the order. Also, learn katakana... it's helpful for some of the items (as some of the names are similar to English... like "Poké Ball" ("Monster Ball") is "monsutaabaru" and "PP UP" is "pipiappu" (I may have gotten the spellings wrong but it's something along those lines)). And some hiragana for attack names... like if the attack has "den" in it then it's some sort of electric attack (unless the attack Type is Normal... then it's "Quick Attack").
I don't have English Red, and the moves aren't the problem; I'm just completely lost on the part of the game I'm at.

PM me and I'll try to help you figure it out. :)
I think the game is almost out of power, and you can't charge old gameboy games, so I'm kinda stuck.....
If I can still play it......then I think I just beat L.T. Surge's gym, either that, or I'm about to. I haven't played it for a long, long, long, long.....time.
 
A used Pokemon Green complete with a box, instruction booklet and a world map - $17,50. The faces of your friends when you show them that legendary Pokemon game... priceless.
 
I don't own the original Japanese versions and I don't really want them to be honest. Blue and Red were the ones that I first received and they are pretty much the same apart from being in English and sprite differences.
 
A few years ago I was in town and went into my local second hand game shop. While browsing their Gameboy section, I saw a Japanese Pokémon Red Version (Cartridge only) for £3.

Has been mine ever since.
 
I only have the American Blue and Yellow version, and I don't have any plans on buy Japanese versions in fear of region locks.
 
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