A Pokémon Scarlet & Purple player uses Tygnon to recreate a mini-game

2023-12-26 17:21:00
Gaston Cuny

❘ Published: 2023-12-26T10:28:24 ❘ Updated: 2023-12-26T10:28:30

Pokémon players have found a way to play a version of rock, paper, scissors via Tygnon vs. Tygnon battles. Here’s how it works.

The game rock, paper, scissors has long been associated with the Pokémon franchise thanks to the way type affinities work in the series.

The fact that certain types are weak or strong once morest others is central to Pokémon battles. The starting types of Grass, Water, and Fire are a perfect introduction to this mechanic, each being strong once morest one and weak once morest another.

Article continues following ad

Article continues following ad

However, Pokémon Scarlet and Purple players have taken this to the next level, with some Japanese players inventing a way to play rock, paper, scissors in real Pokémon battles using Tygnon.

Pokémon players use Prio-Parade, Mach Punch and Mitra-Fist to recreate the classic game

Competitive Pokémon player Jeudy Azzarelli shared a video of Japanese players having fun with their “mini-game” on Twitter.

The fan-made mini-game uses the attacks Prio-Parade (which was recently added in The Indigo Disc DLC), Mach Punch and Mitra-Fist, which have unique characteristics making them perfect for recreating rock, paper, scissors .

Article continues following ad

Article continues following ad

Prio-Parade has a priority of +3 and knocks the target back, but fails unless that target also plans to use a priority attack. Mach Punch has +1 priority, meaning it is canceled by an opponent using Prio-Parade. Finally, Mitra-Fist has a decreased priority and fails if the user is hit between starting to focus on the attack and executing it.

Sign up for free at Dexerto and receive:

See fewer ads|Dark mode|Deals on gaming, TV & movies, and technology

When used together, this creates a rock, paper, scissors dynamic where Prio-Parade beats Mach Punch, Mach Punch beats Mitra-Fist, and Mitra-Fist beats Prio-Parade.

Tygnon is one of the few Fighting-type Pokémon that can learn all three of these attacks, making it an ideal choice for this game.

Article continues following ad

Article continues following ad

Fans seem to like the idea of ​​such a mini-game, wanting something similar to be officially implemented in the future. “This is why we need to integrate stadium-style mini-games into the main titles”said one of them, referring to the mini-games present in Pokémon Stadium and its sequel.

Others have suggested a tournament in which players are limited to these three moves.

Whether Tygnon’s Rock, Paper, Scissors (or should we say Prio, Mach, Mitra) or something similar becomes a canon minigame or not, it’s a great example of fans finding new and creative ways to enjoy the world of Pokémon.

Article continues following ad

Article continues following ad


1703612171
#Pokémon #Scarlet #Purple #player #Tygnon #recreate #minigame

Leave a Replay