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He had caught a level 70 Mewtwo. Except… it wasn’t Mewtwo. When he checked his party, the sprite was a blur of green and red—a Rayquaza . The name was written in kanji he couldn’t read: レックウザ. But the sprite was unmistakable. The ROM, being an early Japanese dump, had a glitch where legendary Pokémon names were mislabeled. For a week, Leo believed he owned the rarest Pokémon in existence: a Mewtwo that looked like a sky serpent.
He beat the Elite Four using that Rayquaza, spamming a move he thought was Dragon Claw but was actually Fly. Wallace’s Milotic went down to a single, accidental Fly that missed and hit on the second turn. He didn’t understand the victory text. He just saw the Hall of Fame screen, his name in hiragana, and felt a triumph that needed no translation. pokemon emerald japanese rom
For the first few hours, Leo played by iconography. A speech bubble with a Poké Ball meant a Pokémon Center. A red roof meant a Mart. He memorized the position of moves in battle: top-left was Tackle, top-right was Growl. He accidentally taught his Mudkip, now a Marshtomp, a Normal-type move he thought was Water Gun. It was, in fact, Sand Attack. He lost to the first Team Magma grunt three times. He had caught a level 70 Mewtwo