Site Notice

We have a limited coverage policy. Please check our coverage page to see which articles are allowed.
Please no leaked content less than one year old, or videos of leaks.
Content copied verbatim from other websites or wikis will be removed.

Difference between revisions of "Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen Versions"

From NintendoWiki, your source on Nintendo information. By fans, for fans.
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m
m (Development)
 
(8 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 23: Line 23:
 
|pegi=3+
 
|pegi=3+
 
|oflc=G8+
 
|oflc=G8+
|grb=N/A
+
|grac=N/A
 
|no_pricing=true
 
|no_pricing=true
 
|niwa=Bulbapedia
 
|niwa=Bulbapedia
Line 33: Line 33:
 
==Story==
 
==Story==
 
==Gameplay==
 
==Gameplay==
 +
 +
==Development==
 +
*According to [[Junichi Masuda]] on [https://www.gamefreak.co.jp/blog/dir_english/2004/08/index.html Hidden Power of masuda of the official Japanese Game Freak website], [[Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen]] were released rather than FireRed and WaterBlue because:
 +
<pre>
 +
- A leaf is a symbol of peace
 +
- Fire and water are opposing concepts so it seems like a conflict
 +
- on the jacket we wanted to have a colorful drawing of Bulbasaur
 +
- A leaf may not be immediately familiar to Japanese kids but
 +
for kids overseas it is an easy concept to grasp
 +
- in this world of conflicts we wanted to give a name
 +
that is suggestive of a peaceful world
 +
</pre>
 +
 +
==Release data==
 +
{{Cleanup}}
 +
*The original Japanese versions
 +
*The localizations of the games. The (possibly non-English) European versions would also fix a Nugget Bridge oversight from Japanese and North American versions, allowing for infinite Nuggets if the player loses the battle against Team Rocket.
 +
*The version 1.1 revision of the Japanese versions, with unknown changes.
 +
*The version 1.1 revision of international versions, which fixes a missing "PRESENTS" word in the Game Freak intro and a Pokédex category text error where only the first word of the category is shown.
  
 
==Related Games==
 
==Related Games==
Line 43: Line 62:
 
* {{pver|Emerald}} on the original [[Game Boy Advance]]
 
* {{pver|Emerald}} on the original [[Game Boy Advance]]
 
* [[Pokémon Colosseum]] on the [[Nintendo GameCube]]
 
* [[Pokémon Colosseum]] on the [[Nintendo GameCube]]
* [[Pokémon XD:Gale of Darkness]] on the [[Nintendo GameCube]]
+
* [[Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness]] on the [[Nintendo GameCube]]
 
}}
 
}}
  
Line 62: Line 81:
 
[[Category:Games developed by Game Freak]]
 
[[Category:Games developed by Game Freak]]
 
[[Category:Games published by Nintendo]]
 
[[Category:Games published by Nintendo]]
 +
[[Category:Nintendo games with internal revisions]]

Latest revision as of 15:07, 30 November 2022

Bulbapedia logo.png This article is a short summary of Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen Versions.
Bulbapedia features a more in-depth article.
Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen Versions
Pokémon FRLG boxart EN.jpg
Developer(s): Game Freak
Publisher(s): Nintendo
Platform: Game Boy Advance
Category: RPG
Players: 1
Predecessor: Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire
Successor: Pokémon Emerald
Release dates
N. America: September 9, 2004
Japan: January 29, 2004
Europe: October 1, 2004
Australia: September 23, 2004
S. Korea: N/A
Ratings
ESRB: E
CERO: 全年齢 (all ages)
PEGI: 3+
ACB: G8+
GRAC: N/A
Bulbapedia has more information on this game:
Read it now!

Pokémon FireRed Version and Pokémon LeafGreen Version are a set of video games for the Nintendo Game Boy Advance. They are remakes of the original games in the series, Pokémon Red and Green (see #Related Games for more info). Alongside the original storyline, the games also included the new semi-region of the Sevii Islands.

Blurb

Story

Gameplay

Development

- A leaf is a symbol of peace
- Fire and water are opposing concepts so it seems like a conflict
- on the jacket we wanted to have a colorful drawing of Bulbasaur
- A leaf may not be immediately familiar to Japanese kids but
for kids overseas it is an easy concept to grasp
- in this world of conflicts we wanted to give a name
that is suggestive of a peaceful world

Release data

Chiritorie 2.png This article may be improved with a cleanup. You can help NintendoWiki by improving readability, reorganising content, or adding any existing dedicated templates.


  • The original Japanese versions
  • The localizations of the games. The (possibly non-English) European versions would also fix a Nugget Bridge oversight from Japanese and North American versions, allowing for infinite Nuggets if the player loses the battle against Team Rocket.
  • The version 1.1 revision of the Japanese versions, with unknown changes.
  • The version 1.1 revision of international versions, which fixes a missing "PRESENTS" word in the Game Freak intro and a Pokédex category text error where only the first word of the category is shown.

Related Games

Related Games
is a remake game of
exchanges information with

References

External links


Pokémon series logo
Main series
Generation I

JP: Pokémon Red and Green • Pokémon Blue • Pokémon Pikachu
NA: Pokémon Red and Blue • Pokémon Yellow

Generation II

Pokémon Gold and Silver • Pokémon Crystal

Generation III

Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire • Pokémon Emerald
Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen

Generation IV

Pokémon Diamond and Pearl • Pokémon Platinum
Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver (Pokéwalker)

Generation V

Pokémon Black and White • Pokémon Black 2 and White 2 (Poké Transfer • Pokémon Dream World)

Generation VI

Pokémon X and Y
Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire

Generation VII

Pokémon Sun and Moon • Pokémon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon
Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!

Generation VIII

Pokémon Sword and Shield
Pokémon Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl • Pokémon Legends: Arceus

Generation IX

Pokémon Scarlet and Violet

Side series
Arena games
Pokémon Snap series
Mystery Dungeon series Red Rescue Team / Blue Rescue Team (Rescue Team DX) • Explorers of Time / Explorers of Darkness / Explorers of Sky • Mystery Dungeon WiiWare • Gates to Infinity • Super Mystery Dungeon
Pokémon Ranger series Pokémon Ranger • Shadows of Almia • Guardian Signs
TCG games
Pokémon Battle Chess series Pokémon Battle Chess BW Version (Pokémon Battle Chess WEB demo)  • Pokémon Battle Chess  • Pokémon Battle Chess W
Pikachu games
Pokémon Pinball Pinball • Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire
Puzzle games
Pokémon Rumble series Rumble • Rumble Blast • Rumble U • Rumble World • Rumble Rush
Other games
PC games Project Studio • PokéROM • Play It (Version 2) • Masters Arena • PC Master • Team Turbo
Pokémon mini Pokémon Party mini • Pokémon Pinball mini • Pokémon Puzzle Collection • Pokémon Zany Cards • Pokémon Tetris • Pokémon Puzzle Collection Vol. 2 • Pokémon Race mini • Pichu Bros. mini • Togepi no Daibouken • Pokémon Sodateyasan mini
PICO software
Self-contained (non-Pokémon mini) Pokémon Pikachu • Pokémon Pikachu 2 GS  • Pokémotion  • Eevee × Tamagotchi
Applications
e-Reader applications/games Berry Tree • Construction: Action • Construction: Melody Box • Ditto Leapfrog • Diving Corsola • Doki Doki Kakurenbo • Dream Eater • Fire Hoops • Flower Power • Fruit Daisakusen! • Flying Journey • Follow Hoothoot • GO, Poliwrath! • Gotcha! • Harvest Time • Here Comes Gloom • Hold Down Hoppip • Imakuni?'s Ball • Jumping Doduo • Kingler's Day • Leek Game • Lifesaver • Machop At Work • Magby and Magmar • Make A Dash! • Metronome • Mighty Tyranitar • Night Flight • Pika Pop • Punching Bags • Ride the Tuft • Rolling Voltorb • Sneak and Snatch • Sweet Scent • Time Travel • Tokotoko Truck • Watch Out! • Wooper's Juggling Game
Other
Publications
Gekkan Coin Toss: Pokémon Card Magazine (via Satellaview) • Shin Game Design • Satoshi Tajiri: A Man Who Created Pokémon (book) • Game Freak Asobi no Sekai Hyoujun o Nurikaeru Creative Shuudan • Ken Sugimori Works • Satoshi Tajiri: A Man Who Created Pokémon (manga)
Related NIWA Wiki: Bulbapedia icon English Bulbapedia icon • Pokémon Central Wiki logo Italian Pokémon Central Wiki logo
NintendoWiki logo.png This article is a stub. You can help NintendoWiki by expanding it.