>only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing
>only use dual type moms
>only use 3 stage evolution and evolve everyone at the same time
What's some autistic shit you do when playing the games
>only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing
>only use dual type moms
>only use 3 stage evolution and evolve everyone at the same time
What's some autistic shit you do when playing the games
>only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing
I do this one too.
>catch everything in a regular Pokeball
>never use NFEs
>catch the gender I think is the most fitting for its final evolution
>autistically try to keep my whole party at the same level all the time
try to keep my whole party at the same level all the time
I hate how this is practically impossible with the new exp share system, thankfully you can now just box the mons that are overleveled temporarily
>only use dual type moms
why?
>only use 3 stage evolution and evolve everyone at the same time
why?
>never use NFEs
why?
>No overlapping types on my mons
why?
hardmode: no "my autism!"
>>only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing
is objectively a lot more autistic than not overlapping types or using NFEs. why didn't you quote that?
Because I can explain it. You want to try the new Pokemon and don't want to use the same old Pokemon, that makes sense, a lot of people do it. Overlapping types can be explained as having a balanced team but different types can all be weak to the same type so it defeats the purpose, so I don't get it. I don't get not using NFE, do you just find final evolutions, how do you get out of the Pokemon center, how do you get out of the first town, how do you make it through most of the game?
maybe I'm the autist
>You want to try the new Pokemon and don't want to use the same old Pokemon, that makes sense, a lot of people do it.
Have you used every single old Pokemon before? I doubt it. There is no gameplay advantage to this, it's literally just "my autism".
Overlapping types is about coverage, not just defensive, but offensive too. Two Pokemon might be weak to the same type but strong against different types. There is a gameplay advantage to that.
Not using NFEs I took to mean in your final party, like not using any eviolite mons or just keeping mons unevolved because you like their earlier forms, and evolving everything fully when possible. But maybe I misinterpreted that.
>There is no gameplay advantage to this, it's literally just "my autism".
Doing things only because they give you an advantage is the definition of autism, you understand that right? Sometimes people just want to use new Pokemon, it doesn't mean you have to use every single one.
I get wanting a balanced team, that makes sense. Having no type overlap alone is arbitrary. It actually makes more sense to do it because you like it than for an advantage. You can have Electric, Fire, Poison, Rock, Steel and they all die to Ground. You can have Bug, Dragon, Fairy, Flying, Grass, Ice, and they will get walled by Steel. You would be better off with a monotype team and coverage moves.
>I don't get not using NFE
If it's anything like me, I evolve my shit to final stage asap, using them but not intending to keep them NFE. But there's people out there will rock a litten all game because "incineroar's a cereal mascot but the kitty it coote".
I look up when they learn the moves I want and press B until they learn them.
>catch the gender I think is the most fitting for its final evolution
>autistically try to keep my whole party at the same level all the time
These
These days I just use a pokemon I've never used. Using anything twice slogs any playthrough
>I just use a pokemon I've never used
this, I just try to use new mons. or at least ones I haven't used in awhile. I try not to overlap types too but that's about it.
I get the "only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing" thing and I used to be like that too, but at some point it just feels limiting, and ultimately I think that mindset is unhealthy for the series. I do at least 5/6 new mons on my first playthrough of a region, but on replays it doesn't matter.
No overlapping types on my mons
I’ve been trying to break my habit for doing this crap but it’s been tough. I have made some progress at least, I finished Platinum with a Gyarados and a Staraptor recently.
Using pokemon I love even if they're clearly getting power crept by stronger pokemon
for example, I really love emolga, And I used it in both my white and white2 playthrough, Even if my emolga can't kill a frillish with a thunderbolt in the battle subway, I'm sorry but this emolga was with me the whole time once I got it, I'm supposed to box it forever now?
*Different if a pokemon's seriously underperforming (example a pokemon missing sleep powder every, goddamn, time)*
My autism works with me
>no overlapping types
>use new shit, then shit not used before before considering repeats
>dual-types preferred, not a necessity
My autism gets greatly soothed playing new pokémon games, that I can kid it off with the bare basic ruleset.
"Gotta Catch 'Em All!", remember? Especially now they added the shiny charm.
>Someone who actually does all of this besides me
Based OP thought I was the only one
>only use mons that were introduced in the region you're playing
This is the one I do on first playthroughs, keeps me from using the exact same 2-3 teams I would be using otherwise
>only use dual type moms
I try to use only MILFs, personally.
>version bleue
totally legit bros
I purposefully avoid evolving my Pokemon so that they can learn different moves (like Treecko learning Giga Drain when Sceptile can't learn it by level up)
I sure am glad i don't do any of the homosexual shit you listed.
I tend to prefer 3 stage mons though, but that's because they're usually stronger
Pokemon Y
>1 rep for each gen
>1 main-game Mega rep max
>1 of every type immunity
>1 of every status immunity
>1 of every field move
>No type redundancies
I couldn't figure it out but that's what I wanted, I'm not even sure it's possible
Never use a full party of 6.