🩵💙❤️🐉~MEGA CHARIZARD X~🐉❤️💙🩵
• I finished this Mega Charizard, yay, and I also went to a website where you can create custom cards, and I think it looks really cool!❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥✨️✨️✨️

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seen from Switzerland

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seen from United States

seen from United Kingdom

seen from Malaysia
🩵💙❤️🐉~MEGA CHARIZARD X~🐉❤️💙🩵
• I finished this Mega Charizard, yay, and I also went to a website where you can create custom cards, and I think it looks really cool!❤️🔥❤️🔥❤️🔥✨️✨️✨️
Creator: Unknown Sorry ;3;
Pokémon Origins
So I've just finished watching Pokémon Origins and I must say...I expected so much more from this. Being a bit of a Pokémaniac myself (went to prom in pokémon outfit, currently studying Japanese to get a little bit closer to the Pokémon company) I was really looking forward to a story, which is supposed to copy the excellent marvellous journey I spent reliving in my favourite game hundreds of times (that's not an exaggeration). Yet what I got was not even close. I don't really understand all the explaining in the first episode. Is that really necessary? As far as I know this was made primarily for those who "played the first game". Well, those already know everything about types and strategies, the no-no-no on catching other people's pokémon et cetera. If you only have 4 episodes does the first one really have to be about something most of the viewers know? And what is Red even trying to achieve? What of his motivation? How can he be all: Yay, life long journey...but where to? Ash at least knew of Gyms. Red just went running into the dark. Seriously, how did he grew up in the world of Pokémon not getting any kind of information on types, gyms and characters of Pokémon? Ugh, this makes me so mad. I honestly knew I'm gonna dislike Red the moment he said, why he chose Charmander at the begging. I know he's just a ten year old and he doesn't obviously know much about Pokémon, but hey I was even younger when choosing my first Pokémon and even then I knew this is a life long decision and needs to be thought through. Even Ash ran into the lab with his mind set. And then there's the thing with Blue. I wanted to smack him when I played the game for always loosing and still calling himself a better trainer than me, but in the anime I honestly wish it was about him. The great point of loving your Pokémon sounds heartbreaking when coming from someone who was shown to us as willing to do everything or suffer for his Pokémon, from someone who had to struggle and we saw him struggle but get up again for his Pokémon. What Red did was throw one Pokémon into battle after another not even trying to think it properly through and hell after 4 episode I still don't know what his real motivation was. I didn't entirely believe his love for Pokémon. Not as much as I believe it to Ash and most of his companions. And I don't take the 4-episode excuse, I knew how Ash loves Pokémon after the first on his show. We all did. But Red? Not really. And that's what makes it so weird at the end with Oak dragging Blue down for not loving his Pokémon enough. There's no real comparison is there? As far as I know Blue might love his Pokémon even more than Red, at least he thinks his moves through and shows better skills in fighting which are still growing. Red just throws an attack after attack and believes. Well, great, but that should not be enough. And if he does grow we don't really know, because hey there's no time for a real battle, when we are so desperately trying to make the biggest villain in the Pokémon world turn to the good side and force in a quick Mewtwo show to justify a blackblue spicy Charizard. What I did like was the change in approach to Pokémon. What really makes Ash and his story a fairy-tale is the fact that Pokémon are more or less human in their minds. The bit more animal kind of feeling you get from Pokémons in Pokémon Origins is much more interesting and believable. And seeing only the old set of Pokémon was also somehow appealing.
So the Pokémon Origins were a huge disappointment to me. I can only hope one day a real complex story will develop around a much more psychologically mature and intelligent trainer, who meets similar trainers but with different minds and fighting styles and even mixed set of Pokémon from all kinds of regions. I know a story that would go deeper than the "Team Rocket bad, Protagonist good" system would in the end crash on the very same logic it would be build on - that people are more complex than that and there would be people abusing their powers through Pokémons, there would be crimes and wars and no journeys for ten years old, no ten years old with a Charizard. But hey I think it's worth a try, right?