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24 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pokemon Fire Red Review by: boesche15,
A Kid's Review
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
I am a fan of all pokemon games. I have bought every pokemon game that came out. This one is so far the absolute best pokemon game that has been made.I purchased the game right away. This is why I like it. Like in Ruby & Saphire version you also have runnig shoes which allow you to run instead of walk. You also gat a chance to battle the first 8 gym leaders. In this game you are able to catch almost any pokemon.Except for Ruby & Sapphire pokemon. But you are allowed to trade & battle between Ruby or Sapphire & Fire Red. Their are a lot of new awsome features like Battle Tower & The Sevvi & Rainbow Islands . It is a challenge to beat this game because you have to fill up your pokedex to 352 pokemon. But if you have Ruby or Sapphire it gets pretty easy. I purchased this game in September & I still have not beaten it.Even though I think its so fun that I play it every day. I reccommend this game to all pokemon fans. You will not regret buying it.
123 of 150 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pokemon Firered!,
By Elenchus (USA) - See all my reviews
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
Do you Pokemon fans miss the old days? The days of black and white pixelated graphics? The days of catching all 151? The days of...well, I think you get the point. If you miss the original pokemon games, then this is the game for you! But, before you buy, I'm sure you'll want to know a few facts first.
The graphics have been totally redone! In full color and extensive detail, the graphics are *much* better than the average GBA game! besides being the old game we all know and love, there is more than meets the eye! Natures (from the Ruby/Sapphire games) have been included! As well as Abilities, and the brand new moves from Ruby and Sapphire! Plus, two new forms of Deoxys, an upgraded Pokedex to show all 360+ Pokemon, and the most exciting addition, the Sevii Islands! A group of seven islands, the Sevii islands are a refrshing addition. And since Pokemon (Ever since Gold and Silver) Pokemon can breed! Oh yeah, did I mention that there is a girl character now? In fact, the female character is based on the conceptual designs that they had wanted to include in Pokemon red and blue, but due to technological limitations, they couldn't add a female character in. Oh yeah, you can also get Shiny pokemon. Shiny Pokemon are rare Pokemon, who are colored diffrently than usual. (I have a Golden Graveler, for instance) if u come across one, a thing of shimmery stars with appear around it. CATCH IT AT ALL COSTS! Plus, you can get Johto Pokemon now too! (on the Islands) Unfortunately, you can only reach them after you defeat the Elite Four, which I, sadly have not yet. And this is why, folks, you should not have a Charizard go up against Lorelei of the Elite Four (99 percent of her Pokemon are half water type! -_-;) Now, regarding the starter Pokemon. There are three starter Pokemon you can recieve at the start of the game. Squirtle, a water type, Bulbasaur, a grass type, and,Charmander, a fire type. Bulbasuar is a great choice for beginners, Squirtle is medium, and Charmander (Who evolves into Charizard) is hard. Unfortunately, I have a soft spot for Fire Types. Which, is slightly funny due to the fatc that I was a Grass type according to a quiz I took. Basically, it's all about your personal type preference, since, no matter who you choose, you can still beat the Elite Four, and win all your badges. I'd suggest a Squirtle. A well rounded Pokemon who fares well, is not too easy to use, which provides a challenge, and not difficult to use either. Plus, it's so kawaii! Now, before I end my review, I have a few noteworthy suggestions in creating a good Pokemon team. *Don't use all ubers, like Mewtwo. It's just not fun to battle a guy with a Mewtwo, a Kyogre, a Deoxys, A Lugia, A Ho-oh, and a Groudon. (The exception to this rule is Mew, since she's sooooo kawaii!! (cute) *Create a well rounded team. A good suggestion is to catch a Pidgey or Caterpie early in the game, and train, train, train! Currently, I have a Pidgeot named Jeannie(Lv 43) and a Butterfree named Aurora (Level 40) Who both kick seious butt. Oh yeah, and a Level thirty five Pikachu. Plus, my Charizard is at Level Seventy two. A completely uber team, without using ANY uber legendaries! * Train train TRAIN! How else do you think Blaze the Charizard is how strong he is? You must train to suceed! *DON'T use evolution stones early!! I made the mistake of giving one to my eevee, Now, he's a Flareon wit not many good moves. Train it first, then evolve it. It's VERY hard for Pokemon who used evolution stones to learn new moves. I'm waiting till Pikachu is level 45 or so to evolve her into a Raichu. *Constantly battle In game trainers! It gives your Pokemon Epirience Points(Sorry, I can't spell that word XD) Well, that's all you really need to know! Now, go out there and buy this great game!
16 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This game rocks!,
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
Pokemon Fire Red is a role playing game. The goal of the game is to catch and train Pokemon. New features to this game include the Sevi Islands. The Elite Four is harder than the ones in Pokemon Ruby and Sapphire. Other than that, it is a great game. It is definitely worth to buy. The game also comes with a wireless adaptor. By using the wireless adaptor, one is able to trade, chat, and battle wirlessly. It should be noted that the wireless adaptor can be used with other games. Buy it NOW!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Pokemon Addiction,
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
I had not played Pokemon games before--I was under the wrong impression that they were just for children and then there was a lot of media attention on Fire Red and Leaf Green--I was going on a long trip so I got Fire Red. It takes a lot of memorization skills to play Pokemon games WELL so adults can enjoy these games, in my opinion. For those who haven't played before, Pokemon are actually VERY intricate and there are different TYPES of Pokemon so you have to remember their abilities and what types can easily beat other types and you switch Pokemon in battle depending on their strengths and abilities. Of course the graphics on this game are very, very good. What I liked best was the ability to get ingame help and for some reason it just really tickles me to see the little hand pick up my Pokemon and move them to or from the storage boxes. I also like the fact that when I turn the game on it rehashes the last few things I did before stopping gameplay last time. This is really good for me because I don't get to play everyday and if too much time goes by, I do forget my last "moves". I also have Pokemon Crystal for GBC and, I think it is a little easier...so if you'd like to try Pokemon, maybe that is a better game to learn first...Both have been very fun and entertaining for this adult gamer. Gotta catch 'em all...
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Brings back lots of memories.,
By
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
I really enjoyed playing Pokemon Fire Red because it reminded me of playing the glorious Pokemon Blue almost 10 years ago. The good thing is that for the main part, the game hasn't changed. It has been updated with color, buildings have a different structure, 2 on 2 battles, and some new areas to be explored but for the main part it is the same game. I really enjoyed using it as a sort of expansion to go along with Pokemon Pearl because with Fire Red, Leaf Green, Sapphire, Ruby, and some other games, you can transfer those Pokemon to Pearl. So, get it, reminisce about the good old days and if you are new to the Pokemon franchise, where better to start from than the beginning? Enjoy the solid gameplay Fire Red has to offer and become the Pokemon Master once again!
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Nostalgia, anyone?,
By
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
I can't help but feel a little nostalgic when I see the younger gamers talk about Lt. Surge and Fuscia City. It brings back memories when I started playing 10 years ago. Wow, 10 years, and I got every main Pokemon Gameboy game. I'm sorry, I'm sorry, allow me a moment here. ...Okay, we're good. First of all, the graphics are just amazing for a GBA game, better than everything I'd seen so far. Secondly, if you're a Pokemon vet like me, you'll enjoy the return to the Pokemon roots, though the replay that occurs every time you turn the game back on gets annoying after a while. Also, if you're a Pokemon newbie, or are too young to know the original Pokemon games, FireRed and LeafGreen are a good place to start. A tip for the newbies, start with Bulbasaur. A wily old vet like me will pic Charmander and have that bad boy, or girl, (Pokemon gender, nature, and everything else that was introduced between Gold/Silver and Ruby/Sapphire is in these games FireRed/LeafGreen) know moves/be powerful enough to take out every oter type of Pokemon no problem. Now, back to the game itself. The inclusion of Johto region Pokemon like Lugia and Ho-oh and Suicune is pretty good, if you ask me, because it's not every game you get to catch every rare Pokemon, though, in true Pokemon spirit, you really can't on your own with only one version, but still, more rare Pokemon on one cart is definitely a good thing. To come to a close, would I reccomend Pokemon FireRed and LeafGreen to newbies and vets alike? Yes.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The best version yet,
A Kid's Review
= Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
This game is seriously awesome! Most of the gameplay is the same as the original red, blue, and yellow versions, except with way better graphics. The wireless trading system rocks, I have a friend who has leaf green and we trade a lot to get the pokemon we need. A nice addition is the Sevii islands, they offer a lot more things to do, and they also are home to the day care center where you can breed pokemon(I already have like 10 charmanders, and of course you can't breed legendaries).Another fun addition is the shiny pokemon (pokemon that are unusually colored) I haven't found any yet, but my friend has a golden machoke and a yellow magikarp.
It takes time to get a good team, (if you can beat the elite 4 then you already have a good team) I have Charizard (lvl 92) A blastoise (lvl 65, my friend traded it to me as a squirtle)Marowak (lvl 48) Pidgeotto (lvl 50) Moltres (52) and Mewtwo (lvl 71. It might not be the best team, but it works well for me :). The great thing about this game is that it includes all of the original pokemon, plus all the new ones. I also recommend buying a guide book, it can get tricky in some parts.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Pokemon Firered,
= Fun:4.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
Now before you "sterotypers" say, "it's a freakin pokemon game! That's for little kids" do yourself a favor and go slap yourself; Pokemon is like any other RPG, except it has nostalgia written all over it.
Firered is a remake of the first Pokemon game released on the Game Boy back in the late 90s. This "remake" features upgraded graphics, sound, and the same gameplay, which some other people may call linear, but it depends on how you play it. The only thing "new" about this remake is the fact that you can equip items onto pokemon like its previous predecessor (Ruby and Sapphire) and while veterans may get tired of "catching them all" hardcore gamers can now get the rest of their Pokemon collection now that this version and Leafgreen is released.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
It's Pokemon, what can you expect?,
= Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
Merely a rehash of the 1998 classic, Pokemon Red, Pokemon Fire Red uses the 3rd generation game engine and applies it to the older game. Nothing in this game is ground breaking or astounding, and the only reason you should get this is if:
1) You've never played Pokemon before 2) You need to complete your Pokedex 3) You love Pokemon. Elsewise, you are purchasing essentialy the same game from the past decade or so and you won't be very amazed. A better option would be the 4th generation pokemon games, but this is definitely a good alternative if looking for a less expensive endeavor.
5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
POKEMON'S attack continues... It's super effective!,
= Fun:3.0 out of 5 stars
This review is from: Pokemon Fire Red Version (Video Game)
You know, when I played Pokemon Red and Blue for the first time on the Gameboy, I admit that I kind of got into it. A hundred and fifty unique monsters, each with strengths and skills of a unique and oftentimes supernatural nature, and you had the responsibility of bringing them all together and training them like RPG characters. There's something about the concept that I find appealing, and while Pokemon is an RPG with very little plot (the main reason I like RPGs is that they tend to have pretty good plots,) it does have one other thing that attracted me, at least during its initial release; Pokemon gives you the chance and mission to collect and assemble data to form an encyclopedia on something that is arguably a very interesting form of life. This emphasis on collection is more obvious in Pokemon than in any other franchise, with "Gotta Catch 'em all!" being rammed down our throats from a hundred directions.
In the first game, there was a secret pokemon than couldn't be gotten (except through a game enhancer, or a nintendo event that may as well have been a lottery,) but it was the last in the pokemon encyclopedia, so if you missed out on it, there wasn't a hole in your pokedex or anything. Fortunately, back then, video game enhancers were simpler and more reliable than they are today, and I managed to get hold of Mew, although it wasn't easy, fun or fair, in my opinion, of Nintendo to put a pokemon in the game they didn't intend to let the gamer catch for themselves. This factor of Pokemon games has always infuriated me, particularly since the genre of catching and training strange animals is woefully small. Pokemon seems to be the only one of its kind that's made it to America. When I played Gold and Silver, the same sort of thing happened. Once again, Nintendo gave us a huge number of monsters to find and train, this time closer to 250, and once again, Nintendo stiffed the gamers, both on the chance to fill in Mew's slot legitimately and reliably, and on a new Pokemon as well; Celebi. Ruby and Sapphire was even worse, since they actually subtracted from the total number of pokemon available since the previous games, but then I heard news of two new pokemon games that promised to make it possible to complete the Pokedex, while returning the gamer to Kanto; the region I was most able to tolerate, of all the Pokemon games. Well, I had a feeling I was about to be suckered again, but I gave this game a shot. I don't have a working Action Replay, but I do have a reasonable-quality gameshark that works on Ruby and Sapphire, so I played through this game once. I got the first 150 and aquired the gemstones to enable trade with Ruby and Sapphire (a nice touch,) only to find that I couldn't get Mew. My gameshark worked on R&S, but not on FR&LG, and I thought I'd be able to just catch Mew in Ruby and trade it to Firered. Problem is, for whatever reason, Nintendo made Mew untradable. Once I found that out, the game was ruined for me. If Nintendo wanted to give gamers the chance to 'catch 'em all,' they could at least have had the courtesy to do the thing all the way. This makes me sad and disappointed with Nintendo and with the world of video games for failing to offer what I was hoping against hope for, but to be honest, I'm not terribly surprised. This is something like the hundred and twenty seventh time Nintendo has gipped gamers and fans they could easily have satisfied and I'm sick of it. As I said, the genre and layout of this game, and of all pokemon games are enticing at first, but unless they can permit the gamer to complete the mission set for them, I'm just not interested in them anymore. |
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Pokemon Fire Red Version by Nintendo (Game Boy Advance)
Used & New from: $23.99
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