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GameBoy : Pokemon - Blue Version Reviews

Below are user reviews of Pokemon - Blue Version and on the right are links to professionally written reviews. The summary of review scores shows the distribution of scores given by the professional reviewers for Pokemon - Blue Version. Column height indicates the number of reviews with a score within the range shown at the bottom of the column. Higher scores (columns further towards the right) are better.







User Reviews (11 - 21 of 140)

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Pokemon RULZ!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 6
Date: March 15, 2000
Author: Amazon User

Cool game! Catching them is fun, winning badges is fun, and beating the elite four is fun! There's only one problem with the game, Your eyes may hurt from constant playing.

Pokemon Blue is Cool

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 6
Date: May 14, 2002
Author: Amazon User

It is the best game I ever played.

Excellent game!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 7 / 8
Date: August 20, 2002
Author: Amazon User

Pokemon Blue is a fabulous game with a very original plot, and two main objectives. It starts off with you, in your house, and you're ready to start your adventure with Pokemon, creatures that you catch and raise. You try to leave town, but Professor Oak (a Pokemon expert) stops you and brings you to his lab. There, he has you choose one of three Pokemon. This is a very important choice. I'll evaluate each one for you:

BULBASAUR: A strong grass type Pokemon. The first two gym leaders are extremely vulnerable to his type, so he is undoubtedly a good choice. He also has a secondary type of poison, which can be a helpful feature. I highly recommend him if you are new to this game.

SQUIRTLE: A very strong water Pokemon. He is very good against the first gym leader, but not the second. He is my personal choice. Squirtle is the moderate choice. He's for either for experienced players who don't want Charmander, beginner players who don't want Bulbasaur, or people who's skill is in between easy and experienced. Ice moves can also be taught to him, which can be an advantage.

CHARMANDER: An exceptionally powerful fire Pokemon. He is not very good against the first gym leader, and terrible against the second. He seems to be the most popular choice, although he is the most difficult to train. He does become the best of the three in final form, because he obtains a secondary type of flying.

From there, you must catch more Pokemon. You need a party of Pokemon (you can have up to 6) and you raise them, moving from town to town, gaining experience, fighting trainers, obtaining items, and catching new Pokemon. The other objective is to catch all the Pokemon (150 in Red & Blue.) Some are easy to catch, some difficult, and some you must trade from Red. You see, the only diffrence between Red & Blue is the distribution of Pokemon (11 diffrent in each version.) Some only in Red, some only in Blue. You must use a link cable between two versions. With the link cable, you can also battle the other person (but you won't gain experience.) That's a part of the game.
I hope you found this helpful. Good luck on your game!

Great game!

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 11 / 17
Date: September 09, 2000
Author: Amazon User

I don't have GameBoy color, I only have the pocket one, so maybe it's not as nice. Anyhow, this is a pretty interesting game! It's challenging and fun, but it's time-consuming. I'm actually stuck at Mt. Moon, because I found NO exits! Anyway, I will keep trying. This is a great game and will entertain you for hours! The music can get kinda annoying though.

Not Just For Kids...

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 5
Date: September 07, 2001
Author: Amazon User

If you overlook this game because you think it is "kiddie" then you are missing out on a great RPG adventure. Go ahead, bite the bullet and play.

This is Where It All Began

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 5 / 5
Date: May 02, 2007
Author: Amazon User

The year was 1998. I was twelve years old, in middle school, and the Pokemon games debuted in the United States for the very first time. A game so simple and yet at the very same time: So complex. Nothing was more addictive, nothing was more fun than playing Pokemon. If you remember the craze (the REAL craze, presently it isn't nearly as strong as it was back then), then you remember what it was like to go to school back in those days. Suddenly EVERYONE had a Gameboy. Suddenly even those who didn't normally play games or even know what the hell a Gameboy was, had it. And you'd go up to your friends and you'd trade Pokemon, you'd taunt each other about who was the better champion when you battled. You got in arguments over who the best starter was. Then you learned of those glitches to get all your Pokemon to level 100 by duplicating the Rare Candies. You caught Missingno and M-Block and caught Safari Zone Pokemon by exploiting what may very well be one of the most widely known glitches in video game history. And of course, you went to catch them all, and you probably had that ONE friend who you deemed your rival and you had to catch 'em all before he did. If you remember all this, you're a true Pokemon fan. This isn't a myth, this game debuted, sold gazillions of copies and started a craze that--while it isn't as strong--still exists today. This was one of the heights of gaming period.

The Red and Blue versions may have seen stateside release in 1998, but the game was actually made in 1995. Before the television show came around. When the TV series took off in America, the games came next and as I said, they sold more copies than the latest installment of Harry Potter. I'm not kidding.

Red and Blue began almost everything you currently see in the series today. The game begins with you naming your character (you couldn't choose between a boy or a girl in this one) and then your rival. Again, if you had Pokemon fever you probably named your main character Ash and your rival was named Gary (even the strategy guides referred to them as such). It began with Professor Oak letting you have a Pokemon of your choice (between 3 starters) and then ultimately he'd send you on a journey with a Pokedex and have you document the Pokemon you'd find. Along the way, you'd have to deal with Team Rocket, the bad guys who are always causing trouble and stealing everyone's Pokemon, as well as gather eight badges so you could challenge the Elite Four and become a Pokemon League Champion. The entire formula began here, and just about everything mentioned above has been done in each and every main series Pokemon game hereafter.

What was perhaps the strangest thing about Pokemon is that the game was surprisingly deep in terms of combat. It was your traditional turn-based combat. Simple, yet it was so complex. For one, the game has a Rock/Paper/Scissors method to it. Every Pokemon has a type, and every type has its own strengths and weaknesses. For example, Water is strong up against fire but it is weak vs. Grass. Grass is weak vs. fire etc. etc. No Pokemon is invincible. They all have a weakness to some type. Though in these versions the psychics definitely have an unfair advantage as the type they're weak against (bug) is almost non-existent and there are hardly any bug type attacks.

In the battle menu you're given a list of commands. Fight, Item, PKMN, or Run. You can switch Pokemon you've caught in and out of battle on the fly, but it'll usually cost you a turn. It's the strategic portion of Pokemon that makes battling fun and addictive. As you go through the game you'll be challenged by trainers and you never know what they'll throw at you! It's completely unpredictable and some of them are tough. It's also interesting because with 150 different Pokemon, the amount of teams you can make are endless, and it really makes you think about what types you want in your roster. Because most of the Pokemon types are weak vs. more than just one type. It's also important that you give them a variety of moves, as the moves are also typed. On paper it doesn't seem like much, but when you actually play the game, you'll find a clog in your drain you didn't even know you had because you thought your team was perfect... but then that one Pokemon comes along and exposes your fatal flaw.

Pokemon was no short game. It was full of all sorts of side quests. From the Safari Zone, to catching the Legendary Birds, to the Unknown Dungeon. There was plenty to do, and even after the game was over there was STILL more to accomplish. Of course, your main accomplishment was getting them all. Pokemon could easily keep you busy for well over 60 hours. In 1998 this is an amazing feat seeing as how most RPGs of TODAY don't keep you busy that long. The main quest itself only took a measly 15 hours or so, but all the extra content kept you on your toes.

Even more, Pokemon was one of the few Gameboy Games that made excellent use of the link cable. Since Red and Blue versions had different Pokemon, some only appeared in certain versions. You couldn't for example, catch a Magmar in the Red version, but you could in Blue. How then, were Red players supposed to catch all 150? By trading. Until Pokemon came around, my link cable was collecting dust. Trading was usually a slow grueling process, though. Traded Pokemon also got an experience boost so they were easier to train.

Even more exciting than trading, however, was what really made Pokemon a blast to play: Battling. You and your friends could get together and battle one another! Test out your Pokemon teams against your friends. They were, more often not, far better to battle against than the games trainers. It's always interesting to see who your opponents heavy hitter is. With your friends it was always interesting. Imagine how embarrassed you were to say a certain Pokemon sucked only to discover that the trainer actually did a good job training?

As far as the game looks and sounds, it didn't really look all that great when it was released in 1998 (it was after all, a game made in 1995). On the original gameboy it was pretty grainy (but very clear on the Gameboy Pocket) and of course it was black or white (unless you played it on a Super Gameboy or Gameboy Color). For a Gameboy game, though, it actually wasn't too bad. It was annoying to watch a Pokemon simply flinch to attack, and some of the animations weren't all that great, but it was to be expected due to the Gameboy's limitations. The music, however, was fantastic. The tunes were catchy--particularly the trainer battles and gym leader battles. The only really annoying thing was the sound effects. They weren't all that great, and its a shame that Nintendo actually continues to use those exact same sound effects in Pokemon games today. Still, for what it's worth, this was the game you wanted on the Gameboy.

Pokemon is a classic. It'll always be a classic. No matter who you are, if you played Pokemon ten years ago, the craze was completely undeniable. If you got addicted like I did, chances are you're still playing today. Because in its core, the game was far deeper than you thought it was, and the series continues to use that same basic formula even today.

Pokemon for Game Boy Rules!

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 6 / 7
Date: June 21, 2000
Author: Amazon User

I'm not much of a pokemon fan, but the Game Boy game is awesome! You can catch 50 different kinds of Pokemon, battle other trainers, and do all sorts of things on the Pokemon Game Boy games. I wouldn't recomend you get all three games because they're all basically the same.

Pokemon Blue Entertaining and a lot of time

4 Rating: 4, Useful: 6 / 7
Date: December 03, 1999
Author: Amazon User

I enjoyed playing this game, it was fun catching all the different types but it took a whole lot of time. But for those who have time I recommend this game.

red or blue, no dif.

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 7
Date: December 26, 1999
Author: Amazon User

I have both red and blue and theres practicly no diff. its just in the pokemon and you really dont care because you can just trade a poke only in red for a poke only in blue. I reccomend this games to kids who are very patient or have a strategy guide because you get stuck in the game lots of times and dont know what to do.

I think that Pokemon Blue ROCKS!

5 Rating: 5, Useful: 6 / 7
Date: February 13, 2000
Author: Amazon User

I have all 151 pokemon on my blue version game and i think that the game was very fun. every time i got past the elite four and got 151 pokemon than i would start a new game. i think that this game is one of the best of all time.


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