Discussion Thread and Characters
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This was a weird place to have a tournament.
Pokemon training was dangerous. It was fascinating how the warnings evolved as she'd gotten older, Corene thought. When she was a kid it was all "stay in groups" and "stay on the path" and "don't go alone with someone with stronger pokemon". Then it was "you can back out of a trade for any reason" and "you don't have to follow unfair battle bets".
The one that applied here was "if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is".
It had sounded reasonable at first; rich collectors sometimes hosted tournaments with the intent of inserting themselves and/or their rare pokemon into the proceedings at some point, and there were prize money rewards at every level. Corene had already racked up a not-unimpressive purse, and if she walked away from the tournament, she forfeited it.
But the chartered ship had brought her to an island where her pokedex didn't always get signal, and the other battlers...
Corene had been a tournament trainer for several years now, and she knew quite a lot of the usual contenders and their playstyles. She knew the pokemon, some of them heavyweights that jumped from team to team as their fancy took them. But these trainers, well.
How the hell had she never heard of them?
Oh, some of them she'd known, but as they'd been eliminated and bid farewell, the more her misgivings had grown. Almost all of them had mega pokemon or battle bonds, and those weren't abilities that stayed under wraps for long. You had to move into the professional sphere to find equal, satisfying matches for your pokemon at this level. A few of them, now eliminated, had even had legendaries.
Who were these trainers?
Still. The host's majordomo had, not to put too fine a point on it, buttered her up pretty expertly when she'd expressed her concerns. So, she was still in--but the thought of throwing the next match had crossed her mind more than a few times, not that her pokemon would ever let her do that. Sunny, Bloom, Star, and Kirk had too much professional pride, and Fab and Uni would dive a little too dramatically to be believable.
There was nothing to it but to prepare for her next match. And if she thought she saw ghosts out the corner of her eye, or the sky seemed to flicker now and then like a bad connection, well...
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This was a weird place to have a tournament.
Pokemon training was dangerous. It was fascinating how the warnings evolved as she'd gotten older, Corene thought. When she was a kid it was all "stay in groups" and "stay on the path" and "don't go alone with someone with stronger pokemon". Then it was "you can back out of a trade for any reason" and "you don't have to follow unfair battle bets".
The one that applied here was "if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is".
It had sounded reasonable at first; rich collectors sometimes hosted tournaments with the intent of inserting themselves and/or their rare pokemon into the proceedings at some point, and there were prize money rewards at every level. Corene had already racked up a not-unimpressive purse, and if she walked away from the tournament, she forfeited it.
But the chartered ship had brought her to an island where her pokedex didn't always get signal, and the other battlers...
Corene had been a tournament trainer for several years now, and she knew quite a lot of the usual contenders and their playstyles. She knew the pokemon, some of them heavyweights that jumped from team to team as their fancy took them. But these trainers, well.
How the hell had she never heard of them?
Oh, some of them she'd known, but as they'd been eliminated and bid farewell, the more her misgivings had grown. Almost all of them had mega pokemon or battle bonds, and those weren't abilities that stayed under wraps for long. You had to move into the professional sphere to find equal, satisfying matches for your pokemon at this level. A few of them, now eliminated, had even had legendaries.
Who were these trainers?
Still. The host's majordomo had, not to put too fine a point on it, buttered her up pretty expertly when she'd expressed her concerns. So, she was still in--but the thought of throwing the next match had crossed her mind more than a few times, not that her pokemon would ever let her do that. Sunny, Bloom, Star, and Kirk had too much professional pride, and Fab and Uni would dive a little too dramatically to be believable.
There was nothing to it but to prepare for her next match. And if she thought she saw ghosts out the corner of her eye, or the sky seemed to flicker now and then like a bad connection, well...