
Reproducible chemistry
There have been many like that until now.
I’ve heard various things, but I quite like it.
It’s sad that there’s not even one decent thing.
I have a certain attachment because I was inducted into the Hall of Fame with Pachirisu.
Patchiragon-kun doesn’t have any noticeable handicaps, right?
Ragon is strong, but I don’t hear much about Chirdon.
What is it with fish that have the same head but different colors?
Snot dripping is cute.
Even though the cross-section is visible, it’s alive, so it’s probably been born as a completely different new Pokémon by the time it was restored.
The color is different because the upper body side can’t withstand the cold and is just turning pale.
Cruel
I decided to think of it as a Pokémon that changes with combinations, like a LEGO block of ecology.
Otherwise, it would be too painful.
The anime Wono Lagron is cute, strong, and the best!
Patchildon, let it out more, Gou.
The fact that it was designed by Hitoshi Ariga was unexpected.
Uochirudon is looking up, isn’t it… this?
I’m glad I was downsized in SV.
Honestly, I hope you never show up again.
There is also a possibility that what is thought to be a complete restoration doesn’t exist at all.
I haven’t heard any standout stories about Uochildon-kun…
Ecologically, Wochirudon is finished.
It was displayed with the head attached to the tail side, which is based on those real-life creatures, right?
Uonoragon can only breathe underwater too…
If it can be reproduced no matter how many times we try, then maybe it’s just the way things are… What do you think… I wonder…
The person who thought up the description for the encyclopedia seems to have no heart.
I wonder if the original form really exists.
It’s a hopeless body shape with a head stuck to the tail, but…
It looks so delicious, eating curry so eagerly makes everything else seem unimportant.
I wonder if they thought this would be well-received, according to the explanatory text.
That’s why it seems there’s no reason to feel constrained from the beginning.
I was impressed that even mistakes in restoration drawings could still turn into Pokémon, but then I was surprised to hear various opinions about it.
I only have the impression that the critics are always saying something absurd.
I just have to say I don’t like this! But I’m trying to justify it.
It’s one thing if it’s a fossil, but when it’s fleshed out, it evokes a sense of pity.
It’s possible that there are Pokémon with that kind of ecology from the start…
I think that if there were four species in a completely restored state, they would have a design that would normally fit into a Pokémon arcade game.
I think the fact that the description is a bit silly, along with the inability to breathe properly and the difficulty in eating, adds unnecessary hate.
Well, the issue of breathing feels somewhat overdue in Pokémon, but…
Regardless of the others, I don’t think you are doing it with the belief that putting your head on the end of the tail is definitely the right thing to do.
But it’s a bit interesting to think that the genes of these guys in this state have also entered Mew.
There is a possibility that restoration in the expected correct form may not go well.
The Woonopatch and Lagochelidon aren’t showing up either.
I would like to see how things would be if there were places in other regions that could restore it.
I feel like there are clearly missing parts when properly restored, but maybe they’ll use that part to increase it eventually?
But it seems that the head can’t be restored unless it’s facing this way…
If you can’t forgive these guys, aren’t there a lot of other Pokémon you can’t forgive either?
In the anime, they are shown to be living normally, so fossil Pokémon might not be extinct after all.
The idea of trying to restore fossils to living organisms is already problematic.
Even the Pteranodon that I think I’ve completely restored is just an imagined depiction.
Archeos is also restored by artisans with fine feathers, so it’s not like you can just throw it into a machine from another region and completely recreate the past.
Simply gross.
In Sword and Shield, as well as in SV, there are wild fossil Pokémon, you know…
Will the day come when Uonopachirudonragon becomes a reality?
Since only the head part of the Dunkleosteus has been found as a fossil, we can imagine it freely.
I hate Uonoragon because it’s too privileged! I hate it! I hate it!
Somehow, a crazy person is always angry.
The wild fossils in Sword and Shield aren’t really like that, I think…
Since the SV is that dome, it must be something that is managed.
They’re saying that Sword and Shield are influenced by the Ultra Wormholes.
It’s easy to understand because the usual guy is just rampaging for life.
I wonder what that fossil Pokémon from the Lucario movie is.
SV is a managed space, and the Ultra Wormholes are the cause for the Sword and Shield, but you can still see things like Ptera in Pokémon Snap, so in either case, they are breeding anyway.
What is the difference between a paradox and fossil Pokémon…?
I don’t dislike it, but I thought it was a bit of a waste to use motifs like Dunkleosteus and Stegosaurus here, which could potentially stand alone as Pokémon.
If we’re talking about whether they’re popular or not, these guys are totally killing it.
Moreover, the performance is good.
There is a question of why they don’t do proper reconstruction of this one, given that researchers can accurately reconstruct from a single fossil using their skills.
Seeing that Gachigoras Amamaruga is too plain to be a topic of discussion, although there are mixed opinions, I believe that it was a success to go down this route, which regularly generates conversation.
There are only places where you can’t make a ball from a single acorn…
There are people who are angry and those who are withdrawing or feeling pity, and the angry people inevitably stand out.
I was wondering how to connect those fossil Pokémon and ones that evolve with atomic power, but once the paradox story was revealed, it turns out there’s really no way to connect them.
The paradox might not even exist in this world line, so it’s completely different from a fossil.
How is Pokémon still working like this?
I wonder what the presence of Archeops and Abagoura is like.
The people I’m competing against are the mainstream only in terms of volume.
It is mentioned that fossils from other regions can be restored from fragments, but Galar fossils cannot be restored unless they are combined, indicating that they are really strange Pokémon from the beginning.
Archeos was used in battles at one time, so it’s fairly decent.
Abagoura is a bit…
Every time I see insults saying there’s no way those stupid reasons for extinction exist, I can’t help but laugh because it really hits home for Omstar, which evolved but went extinct because its shell was too heavy to catch food.
Since the upper body of Ragon and the lower body of Patch have not been discovered at all, if they can be revived from the thread’s image, we can only consider that they were extinct Pokémon with that kind of ecology from the start.
There are too many Pokémon in this world that seem to be struggling just to live.
Karayabu Abagora is great!
Originally, fossil Pokémon themselves seem like artificially created life forms made by researchers.
This was probably something Ukatsu skillfully created.
Even if mammals dominate the land, things like growing too big or dying from their own fangs still happen…
Archeops has performance around that of Regigigas, and if it were Weak Armor, it would have been acceptable.
It’s just a regular cross-section, so I don’t like it, but I wonder how it would have been treated if its performance was weak.
Ancient Pokémon that have normally gone extinct and turned into fossils.
What is the difference between Pokémon that have gone extinct yet continue to exist in the present day as ghost types?
Gachigoras is a Pokémon based on the very major motif of Tyrannosaurus, so why is it so plain?
Although Kabuto is classified as a fossil Pokémon, it seems that there are actually individuals that have been living continuously since ancient times, so it’s quite a loose classification!
Giant Snail………
Ragon is the strongest fossil type of all time, right?
Chirudon may not be major, but it’s still quite strong.
I think that living beings are just like that, even with their roughness.
I think it doesn’t match the cute, cute Pokémon theme.
I think it would have been better without that Ukats’ “Sore Gacchanco”-like thing.
Don’t insist when you have been confirmed to be alive.
As of 2025
It is said that the nameless has become extinct.
It’s often said that being restored added the Rock type, but Kabuto has always been that way, and Gyarados, a living fossil that has existed for a billion years, also has the Rock type.
In ancient times, it is believed that rocks were the trend at what we now call a normal level.
By the way, Ptera only had its genes left, so it is an artificial Pokémon completely imagined based on those genes.
If you’re saying you can’t stand this person on a physiological level, I can understand that, but I absolutely believe that those who are cursing and being harsh are just summary kids or people who are out of touch.
I’m not necessarily against fusion Pokémon as they are kind of interesting, but I do have a desire to see their original forms.
I want to see the patch running around.
There is a theory that Chigorasu might be different from the real thing.
Isn’t restoring from amber quite forced?
When it comes to the original, you could say that Lilyra and Ureidoll are also the originals that turn upside down.
What is with the people who treat Pokémon, which are normally surviving in a world with phones, TVs, and cameras, as if they are extinct?
It’s not even a matter of being pro or anti.
Even if you say there’s no route for making Pikachu a mascot, that’s just hypocrisy, isn’t it?
I wanted you to be here too.
There are not many fossil Pokémon in SV.
I wonder if the contents of the secret amber are now firmly decided.
It’s probably the sense of mismatch in appearance, after all.
No matter how much the ecology has ended, if it’s Omnite, it feels like it’s a creature that went extinct for that reason…
Isn’t it really unbalanced or upside down? And seeing the cross-section is honestly a bit scary…
It is a bit of a mystery why the Pteranodon, which has such a magnificent skeleton specimen in Niibicity and happened to have genes preserved in amber fossils, is not treated perfectly.
Let’s restore that skeletal specimen!
Pokémon are scary creatures, so they’ve always said not to go in with your bare body.
Are you listening, Mr. Briar!!
The theory that Pteranodon is the king of the skies is just a theory, after all…
The actual appearance of the Tyrannosaurus has also changed several times, and there is no perfect restoration.
Well, at first there were people insisting there were 151 Pokémon…
Such a suspicious Pteranodon can hybridize with modern birds and breed roughly!
Is everything okay with the existence of Pokémon?
If you’re in trouble, you can go to unexplored lands where fossil Pokémon can be found…
That said, if there’s a super technology that allows for regeneration from genes, then I think Ptera is perfectly fine as it is.
I used to like Pachirisu…
I want to use it if it comes out in ZA.
Since Blueberry Academy is in Paldea, I wanted not just Rampardos and Tridep but also fossils from the 5th generation.
When it comes to talking about eggs, there’s a theory that they aren’t actually laid but rather used as a cradle-like thing when some parent somewhere delegates responsibility, so fossil Pokémon become even harder to understand.
Maybe it’s a place where you don’t need to think too much.
Eggs are a mysterious substance made of soil or grass that appears suddenly.
I think it’s a genuinely interesting idea to use fossils that have been restored incorrectly as a motif.
It’s not a type of joke that can be understood twice.
The current eggs just get added in if you’re having a picnic.
It’s confirmed that I wasn’t born by my parents…
I’m surprised that there are people who seriously criticize the Pokémon settings.
Even in the era of Jade when the concept of eggs had not been discovered, there are still descriptions of newly born Pokémon.
Eggs are probably a mysterious phenomenon separate from reproduction.
The fact that restored individuals like Omanyte escape and become wild is becoming a social issue.
What was it restored for…
It seems that the bad humor in the settings and the critical nature of the descriptions are being disliked.
I like that Patchilagon has a silhouette like a failed creation of a Dark Souls enemy.
If you take it seriously, it would be impossible to even live, let alone battle; it’s a mistake to take that explanation at face value…
It’s just those guys who mistake Pokémon for cute characters that are hating on it.
I find the theory that they became extinct because they were too strong and overexploited the food within their range quite convincing and appealing.
I feel like they’re not putting much effort into the encyclopedia, or maybe they’re not making it seriously.
If you value the elements of the encyclopedia, it won’t end up like the specifications of the SV encyclopedia.
It’s scary that while the Pokédex description of Yureidoll suggests it’s still around, Lilligant is clearly said to be extinct.
In the natural world, is a Yureidol born from the very beginning?
The fact that the Anops, which has been around longer than this one, loses its vitality when released into the current ocean due to the difference in water quality, yet is not mentioned at all, shows the power of popularity.
It’s so sad, so sad, just fossil Pokémon.
Be kinder to Baneary and Gigiart.
I think it’s really impressive that the SV encyclopedia has images attached.
The UI is terrible, but
I think there’s a charm in wanting to catch more the moment you’re catching and burying them in the SV Pokédex.
After being buried, it’s just debris.
Regarding the encyclopedia, it looks like the text is patched together like a patchwork, so I feel like there are original sentences for each part.