Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Pokémon Blue Glitch: All Three Starters

Hello!

This is very unrelated to the rest of my blog, but I felt possessed to write a guide due to the dearth of how-to on this topic. That being said, welcome Pokéfans! Today I will walk you through how to obtain ALL THREE STARTERS on Red and Blue cartridges within the first 5-10 minutes of gameplay!



Continue at your own risk. This is a process that begs much patience and precision. If you'd like to get your feet wet with a video, I used this one to lay a foundation: Getting all three starters (YouTube) Keep in mind, though, you will likely need the visual as well as my directions that follow. The video is unfortunately not thorough or clear, but at least you have something to follow with your eyes.

Got your cartridge? Console? Extra patience? Then let's go!

I used my GBA SP with a legit Blue cartridge, but I've read that you can pull this off via VC on 3DS as well as emulators on computers/other devices. ALSO be aware that this is a GLITCH, not a CHEAT - the distinction is important!

1. Turn on your console and select new game (*yes, if you have a pre-existing game, the only way to utilize this glitch is to start fresh - if you've got a well-played save file, I'd recommend doing some research on the Ditto glitch)


2. Blah blah, what's your name, blah, suddenly you're in your bedroom!

3. Walk up to the grassy area as if you're leaving Pallet Town - Prof Oak will stop you and drag you back to his lab


4. Oak offers you a choice of ONE Pokémon - if you're like me, it matters that you choose one of your top two choices. I chose Charmander.

5. Save the game! 

6. Reset the console once the save is successful.


7. Now...here comes the tricky bit. Don't continue your game. First I will take a minute to explain how this next portion works: you just created a save, right? You will need to start a new game again, and here's why: the Charmander (or first Pokémon selected) contained in the first save will be traded to the new save file. We will do this very carefully. It is almost guaranteed not to work on the first or second try, so don't get discouraged.

8. Here's what you do...start a second new game (the first save isn't modified until you try to overwrite it), go through the intro, tell Oak your name, etc etc...you will probably be doing this a lot so hone in that superhuman patience! Okay, once you arrive back in your bedroom, you are going to do a sneaky, partial save right in front of your SNES system.


9. Like in the screenshot above taken from the video linked in the intro, when you go to save this second time it will register the first save and ask if it's okay to overwrite it with this second save. This Yes/No box is incredibly important. You will say yes and then immediately after the box disappears, before "now saving..." appears, you will turn off your console. Yep, I said it. The thing you don't do. Timing here is critical, which is why it will probably take at least several tries. You will memorize Oak's and your rival's dialogue, this I can promise. To recap: you click "save" and this overwrite text comes up, along with yes/no. You click yes and as soon as the box disappears you turn off your console.

There is a spectrum of responses here, and the one we want is in a very small plain at the center. On the one side, if you click yes and shut off too quickly, the previously saved file will corrupt and you are back to square one without even a "continue" option at the start menu. On the other side, if you wait too long to turn off after hitting yes, the previous file will be overwritten with this new save, also essentially putting you back at square one, without your first Pokémon selection. It took me hours to finally get Charmander and Squirtle on the same save (admittedly I tried for Bulbasaur twice and totally toasted my saves both times, and had to start all over. I wanted all three, but pulling off the precise save timing twice in a row is such a gamble. Acquiring all three is for the patient and mighty, and I am not among you). If you're watching the video, you'll notice this process messes up numerous times. It's definitely a feat.

The only way to check and see if you did right is to boot up your console. If the message "The file data is destroyed!" pops up, this indicates you shut off too quickly and should retry with that in mind. "Too quickly" or "too late" can mean milliseconds, folks. The timing is no joke.

If that message does not pop up and you are offered the options of continue and new game, don't celebrate just yet. There's one more step before we know it was done right. Press continue, and you should be back in your bedroom. Press start and try to click into Pokémon at the top of the menu. It will merely make clicking sounds if the transfer didn't work; if it did work, you will be able to open your party, with your first selected Pokémon bouncing around in the top slot. Once you arrive at the latter result, you will rejoice. It is a sweet feeling to know you hit the timing perfectly. If this isn't your result, repeat until successful.

10. Already with one Pokémon in your party, you need to repeat the steps that got you to that first Pokémon: namely, walking up into the grass and having Oak drag you back to his lab. Here you will select your second starter. Hurrah! Two out of three ain't bad. (My Charmander gained a level from defeating my rival in Oak's lab in this photo, btw, which is why he's lvl6 and not 5.)



At this point it is wholly up to you if you want to attempt getting the third and final starter. I would recommend against it unless you have an emulator in which you can toggle time to speed up and get past all the fluff. If you're like me, with a hard copy cartridge and don't have a million hours to grind through this process fifty thousand times (and don't like Bulbasaur anyway), then upon obtaining your second starter, save for good measure. Then you can resume game-play as normal, fighting your rival in Oak's lab and playing delivery boy with Oak's parcel, etc.

A note of importance: the Pokémon you "trade" over from the first save(s) will act like a traded Pokémon, meaning its EXP will be boosted and after certain levels it will not obey you if you don't have the badge to properly "tame" them. Keep this in mind when choosing the order of your starters - for instance, I chose Charmander as my traded Pokémon so I could level grind my Squirtle in order to blast Brock out of his own gym; I believe Charmander will stop respecting me after level 10 until I get the Boulder Badge.

It is astounding to me the lack of guides on this glitch. As far as I can see, there are only two videos on YouTube, neither of which are incredibly helpful, and no real written instruction. In any case, hopefully this guide is helpful to you! I am supremely excited to have Charmander and Squirtle in my team, without having to cheat :) These older cartridges are a lot of fun because of their inherent glitchiness.

Enjoy your fortified team! Now I'm off to level grind in the Viridian Forest, yay me...

Toodles.
V

Friday, August 11, 2017

Engagement Journal: 22 Days to Go!

 Thoughts of a Bride-to-Be
        Twenty-two days left. It doesn’t even feel real. Counting down to the one-month-left mark didn’t feel real, either, and then all of the sudden it’s 30 days until. That felt as real as getting the wind knocked out of me, and only because the pressure of things yet undone was finally crushing down. Once I had my intensely productive week while house-sitting at Mimi’s getting bookmarks done, gifts ordered, and letters written, that pressure eased significantly. And now we’re approaching the three-weeks-left mark. I think it’s this odd sense of calm consuming me that makes it surreal.
        The other things contributing to the surreality of it all are the fact that I just moved my dresser to Pentwood two days ago, the only piece of furniture going with me. I shared the realization of the moment with my girls in a group chat: “I'm here in Baltimore to see Joseph for a couple days, and on this trip I borrowed my family's truck and brought my dresser (sans clothes) since it is the only piece of furniture that will move with me, and we're trying to be smart about using these trips now to our advantage in order to cut down on the back and forth trips after the wedding. Everything else of mine will fit in boxes in my car. It is definitely surreal, because for the first time in my life I am moving without my family. When we packed up and went to Peru, it was all of us. When we got back and moved into our old house in VA, it was all of us. When we moved to Orange County, VA, it was all of us. And now, it is just me, the first child to officially move out. College was different because we all knew it was temporary, that I had a bedroom in my parents' house to come home to, but this is not. This is real. This is permanent. This is forever.”
        Very, very much is about to change, and all at once. Whatever semblance of a routine I had while at my parents' house will be left behind, my understanding of the roads in my hometown deemed useless almost 100 miles away. All of my church family no longer easily accessed on a banter-filled Sunday. I will instantaneously go from seeing my parents and brother every day to seeing them during big holidays at the very least. In saying yes to marrying Joseph, I have simultaneously launched myself into an adventure where the only friend I will have at first is my husband, my understanding of the area is a shallow year of driving through it bee-lining for the highway, and a new job. New living arrangements (exclusively sharing a bed, bathroom, and general living space with someone else; contending for closet space; cooking dinner and lunches for the house), new people, a new town, a new church, new friends, and new routines.
        The only thing remotely close to this sensation is moving to Peru - there I could add the fact that I had to learn a new language in a painfully practical sense, not just within the realm of a classroom, on top of the things just listed above. However, in those circumstances I was able to bring a team with me of people who knew me well - my family. Subtract that, and I can almost expect this move to be very much the same, although I really should give myself some credit. I have come a long way from the skittish, isolated, cynical girl I was back then. I am much more confident in myself as a young adult, and having the security of my husband to hold me, plus the promise of God to always have my best interest in mind, I will be well taken care of. I expect it to be a journey of undulating joys and frustrations; as of this very moment, I am much more excited than nervous, and with the love of my family as well as my husband-to-be backing me...bring it on!

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

Fun Facts About the Happy Couple

     Hello duckies! Been a while.
     Today is mine and Joseph's first (and only) dating anniversary, and I figured we could celebrate by publishing a "fun facts" post for kicks and giggles, since I believe there are some tickling things people don't actually know about us or our story. Therefore, read on, be amused, and celebrate with us! We're so grateful for the love and support of our families and friends. Only 172 days to go until I'm officially a Winnard!
     With love,
     V
  • It is a common misconception that Victoria chooses weight lifting for exercise because Joseph did it first. Actually, Victoria had been lifting weights regularly, on her own, for 5 months before she met Joseph. He has been a positive influence in propelling her to continue lifting, but her initial decision to start was completely independent - weight lifting was one of the topics of excited discussion that drew them together when they met
  • They met in NYC at a psychology conference while Victoria was standing by a poster of research, though Joseph went to school in Maryland and Victoria in Virginia
  • A candid photo exists, courtesy of Dr. Buchholz, of the couple mere minutes after initially meeting
  • The second day of their quickly blossoming friendship, they ran into each other again and spent three hours talking nonstop about sundry topics of intense interest
  • Victoria was the one to initiate swapping contact information
  • A week after meeting, Victoria drove from Virginia to Maryland to spend the day with Joseph
  • Ten days after they first met, they decided to date
  • A month into dating, they took time individually to write out relationship goals, before coming together to share and swap them
  • Victoria's parents' wedding anniversary falls on Memorial day weekend - Victoria and Joseph's will fall on Labor day weekend
  • Victoria is approximately 2 and a half months older than Joseph
  • Their first vacation consisted of Joseph surprising Victoria with a trip to Ocean City for a few days
  • Three months after meeting, they attended another psychology conference together in Nova Scotia, Canada, and plan to go back for visit in the future
  • The place they had their first kiss (the terrace-like 12th floor of the UB law building) is also where Joseph proposed
  • On one of the coldest days of this winter season, they successfully replaced the power steering pump on Joseph's car by themselves (and a little help from Joseph's dad). Earlier in the season, they replaced the power steering hoses with the help of Victoria's dad. Neither have any qualms about getting their hands dirty and learning new skills!
  • Between starting to date and their engagement, they attended three weddings
  • In proposing, Joseph went the traditional route and spoke to Victoria's parents about it beforehand, asking for their blessing (and knowing he was going to get it!)
  • Both Joseph and Victoria felt led to tell each other "I love you" for the first time on the same day
  • During the first month of dating, 3-5 hour phone calls at night became a common and frequent occurrence

For more details and fun stuff about our relationship, you can visit these posts: 
http://thewritersinkworld.blogspot.com/2016/10/alma-led-me-here.html
http://thewritersinkworld.blogspot.com/2016/03/addressing-skepticism.html