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This article is about Pocket Monster II. For games with a similar title, see Pocket Monster (disambiguation).

Pocket Monster II is a platform game for the Sega Mega Drive and a direct sequel to Pocket Monster, both probably developed by ex-workers from Chuanpu Technology and perhaps published by X Boy.

Overview[]

This game shows significant improvements over the original, as both the artwork and audio have been improved, though the former is still mostly stolen from other games and it still shows all the previous glitches, in addition to a new one. The music is mostly remade from the Japanese Pokémon TV series, with songs including the original Japanese opening theme (Stage 1 and Stage 4) and the song 'Hyakugojyuichi' as the ending theme of the Japanese pilot as the boss theme in the game.

This game is incredibly short overall, as it only contains four levels with a sole final boss at the end of the final one.  However, the length of the game comes in punishing slightly careless actions with a very large amount of leaps of faith and overall blind jumps, in combination with the lack of checkpoints. Also, despite the game has very few stages, they're incredibly long, so all of this makes the game aggravating at times. Falling down is almost a guarantee if you don't have the map completely memorized. However, the plentiful extra life pickups, which regenerate upon death, keep you from getting a Game Over too soon. The four levels themselves are also incredibly generic. They have no names, but their themes are the following: forest, canyon/valley, castle, and power plant. The only one of the four levels with a specific mechanic is the third, with a button-activated door.

Controls[]

Here you move with the control pad and jump with the 'C' button. Unlike in Pocket Monster, Pikachu cannot use a screen-wide electric attack.  Instead, he can toss Poké Balls with the 'B' button when they are collected. You can kill enemies with them, but are rather useless thanks to their lacking range and the fact that you drop all of your Poké Balls when you get hit.

Music[]

Name Description Source Audio
Title Theme / Ending Theme
Nyaasu No Uta (Meowth's Song)
Japanese second ending theme for Pocket Monsters anime. [1]
Stage 1 / Stage 4
Mezase Pokémon Master (Aim to be a Pokémon Master)
Japanese first opening theme for Pocket Monsters anime. [2]
Stage 2 / Boss - Weezing
Hyaku-Gojuu-Ichi (One Hundred Fifty-One)
Japanese first ending theme for Pocket Monsters anime. [3]
Stage 3
Oyasumi Boku No Pikachu (Goodnight, My Pikachu)
A song for Pocket Monsters anime. [4]
Unused Track #1
Rocket-Dan Yo Eien Ni (Team Rocket, Forever)
A song for Pocket Monsters anime. [5]
Unused Track #2
Lucky Lucky
A song for Pocket Monsters anime. [6]
Unused Track #3 [7]

Glitches[]

  • Pikachu can only control the height of his jump while standing perfectly still, making it incredibly difficult to dodge certain enemies while progressing through the stage.
  • On that same note, Pikachu can jump down from vertically moving platforms (moving up) if he jumps too low.
  • The aforementioned moving platforms can sometimes disappear if they are by the edge of the screen, due to objects being programmed to disappear if they scroll off screen.
  • Pikachu can jump again after jumping on a Pokémon, which also applies to whenever Pikachu is damaged.
  • When a Poké Ball is tossed and on-screen, it moves as Pikachu does.
  • Sometimes, when you throw a Poké Ball to an enemy, the game freezes. It seems to happen both on emulators and on real hardware.

Trivia[]

  • Some music tracks from this game were reused in Fengkuang Dafuweng (aka Crazy Richman / Crazy Monopoly) by Vast Fame.
  • The level graphics from level 2 seem to be taken from Mega Man X's (SNES) Sting Chameleon stage.
  • The level graphics from level 3 are taken from Pink Goes To Hollywood.
  • The level graphics from level 4 are taken from Sparkster on the SNES and some of the enemies are taken from a variety of Mega Drive games including Mega Bomberman and Magical Taluluto (the latter, fittingly, was developed by Game Freak, the creators of Pokémon.).
  • The crab and the blue monkey from the first level were stolen from an original licensed Sega Genesis game Wonder Boy in Monster World by Westone.
  • The title screen Pikachu with his back turned is adapted from the cover of the second Japanese volume of The Electric Tale of Pikachu (or Electric Tale! Pikachu), an official Pokémon manga. Curiously, the Famicom version of Pocket Monster uses artwork based on the English cover of the same volume.

Gallery[]

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External Link[]

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