Pokémon Blue - Full Game (No Commentary)

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Duration: 9:56:42
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A full no commentary playthrough of Pokémon Blue
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00:00:00 Prologue
00:01:24 Pallet Town
00:07:41 Pokedex Delivery
00:15:27 1st Rival Battle
00:25:22 Vermillion Forest
00:34:17 Gym Leader Brock - Boulderbadge
00:41:07 Route 3
00:53:51 Mt Moon
01:14:35 Meeting Bill
01:44:21 Gym Leader Misty - Cascadebadge
01:51:40 Route 4
02:01:51 Exploring verlimillijon
02:08:20 S.S. Anne
02:37:31 Cut Pokemon
02:44:55 Gym Leader LT. Surge - Thunderbadge
02:53:26 Getting HM05 Flash
02:58:58 Getting the Bycycle
03:02:55 Route 9
03:15:18 Rock Tunnel
03:33:59 Exploring Lavender Town
03:40:18 Route 11
03:50:27 Exporing Celedon
04:03:20 Gym Leader Eureka - RainbowBadge
04:16:01 Team Rocket Hideout - Shilp Scope
04:43:35 Lavender town tower - Poke flute
05:09:46 Super Rod
05:18:11 Cycle Road
05:33:40 Exploring Phushia
05:43:44 Safari Zone - HM03 & Gold Teeth
05:51:31 Gym Leader Koga - Ninja Badge
06:02:53 HM04 Strength
06:07:07 Route 15
06:26:59 Exploring Safron
06:30:02 silph co building - Master Ball
07:27:41 Fighting Dojo
07:36:27 Gym Leader Sabrina - Psychic badge
07:49:57 Route 0
07:59:54 Exploring cinebar Island
08:05:14 Pokemon Mansion
08:24:30 Gym Leader Blaine - VolcanoBadge
08:38:58 Gym Leader Giovanni - EarthBadge
08:53:55 Preparing for the Pokemon League
08:58:34 Indigo Platoe
09:04:09 Victoiry Road
09:26:28 The Elite Four
09:48:05 The Final Battle
09:51:38 Hall of Fame/Ending
09:54:34 Credits

Game: Pokémon Blue
Release Date: February 27, 1996
Developer: Game Freak

Pokémon Red Version and Pokémon Blue Version are 1996 role-playing video games developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo for the Game Boy. They are the first installments of the Pokémon video game series. They were first released in Japan in 1996 as Pocket Monsters: Red and Pocket Monsters: Green, with the special edition Pocket Monsters: Blue being released in Japan later that same year. The games were later released as Pokémon Red and Pokémon Blue in North America and Australia in 1998 and Europe in 1999.

Pokémon Yellow, an enhanced version, was released in Japan in 1998 and in other regions in 1999 and 2000. Remakes of Red and Green, Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen, were released for the Game Boy Advance in 2004. Red, Blue, and Yellow–in addition to Green in Japan–were re-released on the Nintendo 3DS Virtual Console service in 2016 as a commemoration of the franchise's 20th anniversary.

The player controls the protagonist from an overhead perspective and navigates him throughout the fictional region of Kanto in a quest to master Pokémon battling. The goal of the games is to become the champion of the Indigo League by defeating the eight Gym Leaders and then the top four Pokémon trainers in the land, the Elite Four. Another objective is to complete the Pokédex, an in-game encyclopedia, by obtaining the 151 available Pokémon. Red and Blue utilize the Game Link Cable, which connects two Game Boy systems together and allows Pokémon to be traded or battled between games. Both titles are independent of each other but feature the same plot, and while they can be played separately, it is necessary for players to trade between both games in order to obtain all of the original 151 Pokémon.

Red and Blue were well-received with critics praising the multiplayer options, especially the concept of trading. They received an aggregated score of 89% on GameRankings and are considered among the greatest games ever made, perennially ranked on top game lists including at least four years on IGN's "Top 100 Games of All Time". The games' releases marked the beginning of what would become a multibillion-dollar franchise, jointly selling over 300 million copies worldwide. In 2009 they appeared in the Guinness Book of World Records under "Best selling RPG on the Game Boy" and "Best selling RPG of all time".

Pokémon Red and Blue are played in a third-person view, overhead perspective and consist of three basic screens: an overworld, in which the player navigates the main character; a side-view battle screen; and a menu interface, in which the player configures his or her Pokémon, items, or gameplay settings.







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