You know, for kids!
Every Pokemon game is self-contained, and Omega Ruby/Alpha Sapphire is just as good a starting point for a fledgling Pokemon fan as any, and just as good a continuation/remake as any. The series has been refined and updated extensively since the first game, but the formula remains largely untouched and completely accessible. You catch Pokemon and keep up to six in your team at a time, each with four moves and its own unique stats and passive abilities. You fight wild Pokemon and rival trainers with your team, playing a game of elemental Rock-paper-scissors with different Pokemon types and moves. The Fairy type from Pokemon X/Y has been added, which adds a new category of both Pokemon and moves to the mix.
From Kalos to HoennOur review of Pokemon X/Y goes deeper into the updated graphics and mechanics for the current Pokemon iteration, Generation VI. Everything in the game is now a 3D model rather than sprite-based, and that means lots of colorful, animated Pokemon replacing the pixel blobs of the first few generations. Pokemon Super Training and Pokemon-Amie mini-games from X/Y are also added, so you can develop your Pokemon past basic leveled stats and have direct control over the once-obfuscated Effort Values and extra attributes. Pokemon ORAS also includes the Mega Evolutions introduced in X/Y, which can turn a Pokemon into an even more powerful version of its most evolved form once per battle. ORAS has even more Mega Evolution Pokemon than X/Y . You can only Mega Evolve one Pokemon per battle, so you have to be judicious in using the option correctly; you can't just Mega Evolve your entire party at once.
There's also the Battle Resort, ORAS's version of the Battle Tower/Battle Subway/Battle Frontier/Battle Maison from previous Pokemon games. This lets you fight an endless stream of trainers under different battle conditions, temporarily increasing or decreasing all Pokemons' levels to 50 to make matches more strategy-based than the raw power grind you can use to play through the main story.
Secret Bases and MultiplayerThe "secret base" feature first used in the original Ruby/Sapphire returns, with plenty of enhancements. You can dig out your own secret base in specific points on the map and decorate with furniture, and then share your secret base with passersby over StreetPass, or online by showing a QR code the game can generate. The more secret bases you get from other players and flags you collect from other bases, the more things you can do with your own secret base. You can even eventually populate it with trainers and become a leader of your own mini-gym.
You can transfer Pokemon from Black/White, Black 2/White 2, and X/Y if you buy a Pokemon Bank subscription for $4.99 a year. It lets you store up to 3,000 Pokemon from those games and ORAS, and transfer them to ORAS at will. It's a nice way to keep your generations-old collection of Pokemon together on the latest game, but it can easily break the main storyline playthrough. Once you pull a level 100 Kyurem from your Black 2 save and take it out of the storage computer from the first Pokemon Center you encounter, the already easy campaign becomes impossible to lose. After you beat the game the first time and are ready to take your Pokemon to the Battle Resort or online, however, it's a handy feature.
ConclusionPokemon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire are, like every other main series Pokemon game, excellent Pokemon games. They update the third-generation Ruby/Sapphire games with all of the great-looking, polished enhancements added to the series through the sixth generation, producing a game that's just as fun, pretty, and big as Pokemon X/Y.
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