The flow and spacing of the screenshots will be a bit wonkier from here on out, as I'm now usually taking them while playing the game instead of recording the game and taking screenshots of the recording. The need to wait for the pause/play interface to fade away whenever I wanted to rewind to grab a screenshot with the latter method was incredibly annoying.
After some Voltorb Flip grinding, I finally have enough coins to buy what I came here for.
Why am I choosing Porgyon in a single player run? You'll find out soon.
Okay, I came here for Porygon, but man, an Exp. Share really would be handy to have.
Back to the tables!
Some Voltorb Flip grinding later...
That Rare Candy is a surprise tool that will help us later.
Now, on to why I chose Porygon...
This guy is somehow in the first floor of both of the department stores at the same time. You can trade a Pokemon to him, and as his name implies, he'll trade it right back.
Hello, BST 515 Pokemon! Porygon-Z doesn't exist yet, sadly, but Porygon2 is more than strong (and chonky) enough for our purposes.
I teach Digimon Barrier from the EVENT TUTOR and Hyper Beam from that Hyper Beam TM I picked up earlier. Barrier + Leftovers (+ Recover) will be a very potent combo later, but for now, I give Digimon an Exp. Share so I won't have to risk its life while training it in the next few fights.
That Voltorb Flip grinding really didn't take much time at all, as evidenced by the short time gap between this save and my previous one.
I forgot to take a screenshot of it, but I accidentally got a Morning encounter in Dark Cave instead of a Night one, resulting in me rolling a 5% Teddiursa encounter instead of the Geodude or Zubat encounter I wanted to get there. Said Teddiursa then proceeded to run away before I could catch it.
Yes, certain species of Pokemon can do that in Gen 2, even if they're not a roamer, although none of them have a 100% chance to try to flee in any given round like roamers do.This is... a pretty sizeable annoyance. While I don't plan on putting Geodude or Zubat on my team, I
do want them to block other Geodudes and Zubats from counting as my first encounters in various cave areas. Because there are a limited number of cave areas with small encounter pools in Gen 2, this is going to throw off my encounter routing a bit.
I catch an Unown in the Ruins of Alph so that I can catch an actually good static Pokemon in a certain area that I'll enter several gyms from now.
In Unown's defense, Crystal Clear adds a special Unown-only move tutor to the Ruins of Alph that can teach Unown various moves, mostly utility ones.
Sadly, a STAB Psychic move isn't among those tutorable moves, and even if there was, Unown's base stats still wouldn't be good enough to make it a viable team member past the early game.
I suppose now's a good of a time as any to mention Crystal Clear's enhanced Pokedex. It has an in-game tutorial that you should definitely read if you want to actually play Crystal Clear for yourself, so I won't go too in-depth about its features. Suffice it to say that it can show me the encounter tables for an area I'm in, tell me everywhere I can find a certain Pokemon, etc. Sure, I could try to use Bulbapedia or the like for that, but quite a few of the encounter tables of Crystal Clear have been changed from vanilla Crystal, and Crystal Clear even adds some extra areas of its own to the game (that of course wouldn't be on Bulbapedia).
My current objective is reach the BATTLE TUTOR, which, according to the documentation, can be found either somewhere in Dark Cave or in one of the exits to Mount Moon.
Since I'm in the area, I try to catch a Rattata or a Raticate in Route 4 to make Gastly a guaranteed catch in Sprout Tower, but find a Pidgey there instead, which normally can't even appear on that route. As I said before, many of the encounter tables have been tweaked.
Mount Moon is much larger in Crystal Clear than in vanilla Crystal (in which it's pathetically small), and much more closely resembles its Gen 1 version than its Gen 2 version.
I catch a Sandshrew there.
And rescue our lord and savior.
There's an extra exit in Mt. Moon Square. Beyond it lies...
Ace Trainer HQ, the place that all of those Ace Trainers apparently come from.
Also here is Grizz's Lab. Seems perfectly safe to me.
Grizz is the BATTLE TUTOR, and also the guy who maintains the remote tutor access part of the PC. The BATTLE TUTOR can teach your Pokemon moves that they didn't have access to in vanilla Crystal, but probably should have had access to. Y'know, stuff like Tri-Attack for Magneton. These "illegal" moves can and will be used by the teams of some of those miniboss NPCs, so don't be ashamed to teach 'em to your Pokes.
You can also battle (and re-battle) Grizz, and his team changes drastically after each badge, from what I've heard on the Crystal Clear Discord server. I donk him with Arcanine here since Dragon Rage is still ludicrous, but I don't think that coming back after future badges would be a good idea- his lab is
explosion-themed, after all, and Self-Destruct and Explosion are incredibly scary in Gen 2, as they halve the defending Pokemon's Defense just before they deal their damage.
Ace Trainer HQ is apparently not fully set up yet, so there's not much we can do here.
It does have a healing machine and a PC, though, which I use to teach my Pokemon some very spicy BATTLE TUTOR moves.
I fly back to Goldenrod to do some off-screen shopping, as well as to visit this guy. In vanilla Crystal, he's only available in the lategame and charges coins for his services instead of Poke, but here, he'll accept cold, hard cash in either Goldenrod or Celadon.
What does he do, you may ask?
He teaches the beam moves (Flamethrower, Ice Beam, and Thunderbolt) at a price of 4K a pop. Remember how I said in the second part that it didn't really matter that Arcanine couldn't learn Flamethrower by level up after evolving? This is why.
In search of a Rattata, I visit some of the low-leveled routes and meet a legend in one of them.
I was worried for a moment that he'd have an overleveled Rattata or something, but no, he fell just as easily as the rest of them.
Hoothoot!
On to Pallet Town.
For some reason, Red's mom lets me play on her son's N64.
Oak sadly doesn't have any Pokemon for us, but he does have some research data on his computer that I can add to my Pokedex (not that I actually need any of it).
Finally, on Route 1, I catch a Rattata. Which means that in Sprout Tower...
... I find a
Bellsprout.
Fuck.Crystal Clear added them to the encounter pool of Sprout Tower (which makes sense), and I forgot to check my Pokedex before trying to get an encounter.
Missing Teddiursa earlier was an inconvenience. Missing Gastly here is pretty huge. Not only is Gastly VERY good on its own (it has a base Sp. Atk stat of
100 and a base Speed stat of
80... BEFORE evolving), it's also pretty essential to a plan I have to catch a VERY powerful, metagame-defining Pokemon that I currently have access to without risking it wiping my entire team.
I can catch a Gastly or a Zubat on Route 31, but they have very low encounter rates compared to these two Barneys, so I'll need to find a way dupes clause my way around them. I'll focus on Poliwag first.
I have pretty good odds of encountering one on Route 22, so let's try there.
Damn.
Well, Gligar's not, like,
awful, but its stats are mediocre and it does have a particularly glaring issue that'll probably keep it from finding long-term success on my team.
That issue being that Gliscor doesn't exist yet, so it can't evolve.
Ironically, Gligar's vanilla non-event moveset being so dogshit actually helps it quite a bit here, as it allows the EVENT TUTOR and BATTLE TUTOR to teach it Earthquake and Rock Slide, respectively.
Because of its decent typing for pivoting, the aforementioned access to some solid moves (in Crystal Clear), and my lack of many other good candidates, Gligar earns itself a temporary spot on my team. I give it a Berry instead of Leftovers, though, since I don't want it taking something valuable with itself if I decide to sac it to give an actually important 'mon a free switch in. Maybe Gligar will prove itself in some future battle, but until then, it's staying a disposable "it", not a "he".
I have some decent odds of finding a Poliwag on Route 44, and the only other 'mon that I can encounter there at night that I don't already have is Tangela. Even after catching Tangela, the levels of the Route 44 Poliwags will still be too high for me to safely catch one of them at my team's current level, but I can wait a gym or two to make the fight less risky.
Tangela's a bit of a pain to consistently encounter, but there's a nice little patch of grass that Crystal Clear added just south of Pallet Town that you can find 'em in.
God. Fucking. Damnit.
Screw this, let's grab something else, like the best Water-type move in the game.
Ah, that's better. Don't worry, the lady in this house said that we could take anything we wanted to from these boxes.
While there are some places that have pretty decent surfing encounter rates for Poliwag (like, 90%), no one in my party or box can currently learn Surf. *sigh*
The fishing guru of Vermillion City... doesn't give me a better fishing rod. Huh. I'll look into this later.
After doing a bit of research in my Pokedex, I found that Zubat has a pretty darn good encounter rate in Slowpoke Well. With a Zubat and the Bellsprout that I caught earlier, I think I can use one of my previously discarded species clause chain routes to get myself a Haunter a few gyms from now- and with it, safe access to that incredibly powerful Pokemon I mentioned earlier.
C'mon...
YES.
Crobat
is actually available in Gen 2, but this Zubat's DVs are kind of eh (00 Speed DV, yikes), its final form is a friendship evolution, and its typing won't complement the team I plan to make well.
Fun Agonizing Crobat Fact: In Fire Red/Leaf Green, you can't evolve Golbat into Crobat into after you obtain the National Pokedex. Why? Whyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyyy?
Let's check in on the Underground Path, since IIRC, you can get a Pokemon there. Who knows, it might be one of the ones I'm looking for.
The two Underground Paths are connected to each other in Crystal Clear, and the stairway in their crossing point leads to The Arena, the battle facility of this game.
Sure enough, some Pokemon are available for sale here. Unfortunately, the currency used here is Battle Points, not Poke, which I'll need to fight at least some arena battles to get. While scaled battles are available here, they scale to the highest leveled Pokemon in your party, not your badge count. The usage of Dragon Rage is also forbidden here, so I can't just cheese all of the fights with it. While I can tap out of any arena fight at any time, actually losing a Pokemon here does count as losing them in Crystal Clear's Nuzlocke ruleset.
Without the crutch that is Dragon Rage or consistent heals between battles, it seems that most of the stuff that costs BP is off of the table, as there's not a chance in Hell that I'll risk an important 'mon here.
... Maybe I can run Gligar and some other rejects through The Arena later, actually.
Copycat offers mirror matches here. Heeeeeeeeeeeeeeell no.
AND ATHATH JUMPS INTO THE RING!
AND THEN HE JUMPS RIGHT OUT AGAIN BECAUSE HE HAS THINGS TO DO!
LIKE CHALLENGING THE CIANWOOD CITY GYM!
Wait... Oh no.
These two Blackbelts normally have a Hitmontop and a Hitmonchan. But because they've been scaled down to be of a level appropriate for the first gym, they have Tyrogues instead.
They're just KIDS.
Nuke, wait-
ohmygodwe'resettingchildrenonfire
Okay, something nonhumanoid, thank god.
STOP MAKING ME FEEL BAD FOR PUTTING THIS OFF FOR SO LONG.
Chuck confronts us for our sins.
oh no he's cool
Definitely, that was a really sick flip.
Oh, right.
Mm, yeah, you're right, flipping ability doesn't really carry over to battling ability as a trainer.
His ace isn't even a Fighting-type at this level. Oof.
Really?
Because it looks like you have.
Well, that looks like a good a place as any to end the update at. I think I'm gonna gun for some more gyms next update, since I wanna get Haunter and some of the other powerhouses I've been eyeing soon if possible. Hopefully the fights of these next few updates will become a bit less one-sided as Dragon Rage's effectiveness starts to taper off.