All 151 original monsters have now been caught by thousands of players controlling a single game of Pokémon on Twitch. It's the sort of impressive feat that most Pokémon players will never accomplish, despite having full control of the game.
As we reported earlier this year, the latest round of Twitch Plays Pokémon is a special one. The stream went back to where it started, by letting players go through Pokémon Red. A modified version of Pokémon Red,
that is. In this version of the game, not only are all the battles more
difficult, but the only way to beat the game is to catch all 151 Pokémon. The game was built so all Pokémon could
be encountered in it, without having to trade. Today, after 39 days of
playtime, the stream finally caught Mewtwo—the last Pokémon they needed to complete the Pokedex.
Or more
specifically, a player called Bhuhbhu threw the exact great ball that
caught the Mewtwo for the stream. You can watch the battle here, in this
upload by Twitch Plays Anniversary—it starts around the 14:45 mark:
What makes this especially awesome is that, by the time TPP caught Mewtwo, it only had a couple of Pokémon
who had HP left: a level 100 Cloyster, and a level 100 Slowbro. It was
Slowbro who was deployed into battle when Mewtwo was caught, which makes
the entire thing all the more hilarious.
Naturally,
after completing the Pokedex, the stream went ahead and collected the
diploma that the game awards you with for catching them all:
They also got their Pokedex rated by Professor Oak himself:
To give you an idea of how long this entire thing took, here's an infographic uploaded by Redditor TieSoul,
which compares current playtime to previous TPP runs. It also tells you
when the stream caught specific Pokémon. Click on the top left
magnifying glass to see the image in full:
Damn. Given
all the craziness around this run, as you might expect, things have
gotten a little emotional for the people who are still playing Twitch
Plays Pokémon. Some players weren't actually sure they could
pull it off. But they did. "Its been an incredible journey and I
wouldn't have asked for a better group of people to do it with," one Redditor wrote.
And yes, there's fan-art to celebrate the occasion—like this piece, which had 18 different artists collaborate on it:
I guess the only question now is: where will Twitch Plays Pokemon go next? That, and...what's under the bed??
SOURCE: KOTAKU
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