Of course. You slit their throats and eat them after you knock them out. That's how you survive while never buying food.
Yes to both.Johnny Novgorod said:Do Pokemon eat Pokemon though? For that matter, do humans eat Pokemon? All I know is they eat Farfetch'd.Lieju said:Well, you beat up a wild animal until it fainted and left it alone in a place full of predators that will attack anything in sight, including humans...Johnny Novgorod said:I thought they just "fainted". Maybe it's a translation thing. Maybe in Japanese it's "Wild RATTATA is now fuckin' dead!".
There are a lot of references to Pokemon eating each other.Johnny Novgorod said:Do Pokemon eat Pokemon though? For that matter, do humans eat Pokemon? All I know is they eat Farfetch'd.Lieju said:Well, you beat up a wild animal until it fainted and left it alone in a place full of predators that will attack anything in sight, including humans...Johnny Novgorod said:I thought they just "fainted". Maybe it's a translation thing. Maybe in Japanese it's "Wild RATTATA is now fuckin' dead!".
Oh gawd that article ruined my gaming memories.DanielBrown said:Wasn't this in a Cracked article a few days ago?
Oh well; I guess they get eaten by other Pokemon. Probably doesn't end well for the trainers you defeat either. Without pokemon, surrounded by grass covered in wild pokemon waiting for their chance.
Like in the article.
Edit: Here's the one, in case someone is intrested!
http://www.cracked.com/article_20673_5-video-games-with-disturbing-implications-you-didnt-notice_p2.html
Well we don't know how do pokeballs exactly work. Maybe they can't know who really captured them unless they are conscious (but weak) when captured, so they won't serve you even if you had them in a pokeball. Or some other mumbojumbo.Maxtro said:If wild Pokemon just fainted, how come you can't catch them? That's how basically every wild animal is captured in the real world, you knock it out first.
"Can wild Pokemon die?" Did you play through X/Y version? The answer lies there, and the answer is definitively "yes". Without spoiling anything in case you haven't played it yet (or skipped through the dialogue/cutscenes), let's just say Pokemon X/Y gets pretty damn dark really, really quick.krazykidd said:Not sure if this should go in gaming or off-topic forums.
So we know pokemon can die ( hence the graveyard). And the pokemon used in competitive battle faint and have to go to the pokemon center . What about the pokemon we encounter on the field, the "wild" pokemon? Without a trainer to bring them to the center, are they just left for dead? I imagine a field filled with dead pokemon i just defeated and didn't catch . Is this accurate in any way?
When the battle is over, unless caught, a wild pokemon disappears or escapes back to wherever it was they appeared from, making "Fainted" capture impossible.Maxtro said:If wild Pokemon just fainted, how come you can't catch them? That's how basically every wild animal is captured in the real world, you knock it out first.
Wailord is lighter than air if you actually look at its weight compared to its size. It body slamming on a Skitty is just going to be like it playing with a balloon.Atmos Duality said:If a Wailord Body Slamming a Skitty only causes the Skitty to faint instead of being reduced to, at most, a tiny smear, then I don't think one should think too hard about the realism of mortality in the Pokemon universe.
That's even worse.Vausch said:Wailord is lighter than air if you actually look at its weight compared to its size. It body slamming on a Skitty is just going to be like it playing with a balloon.