Pokémon Gold and Silver/Route 32: Difference between revisions

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fishing update
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{{All Game Nav|game=Pokémon Gold, Silver and Crystal|custom=[[Pokémon/Pokédex|Pokédex]]}}
{{Header Nav|game=Pokémon Gold and Silver}}
__NOTOC__
'''''Many of the Trainers you'll meet up with on Route #32 will be using Water-type Pokémon, and the caves have lots of wild Rock-types, so it's best to move your Grass-type Pokémon to the top of your party.  That way, you'll always have the advantage when a battle begins.'''''


When you get here, go south and talk to the person, he will give you a Miracle Seed that increases the power of grass moves, then go south and continue to Union cove or go right for a detour in the Ruins of Alph. If you want there is a Pokémon Center here, inside there is a mn who will give you a fishing rod, it's a good catch for you to get it!
{| {{prettytable|float=right|style=text-align:center}}
|+ New Pokémon
! style="background-color:#f08000; color:#ffffff" | Gold
! style="background-color:#808080; color:#ffffff" | Silver
! style="background-color:#8080f0; color:#ffffff" | Crystal
|- valign="center"
|
[[File:Pokemon_072Tentacool.png|40px]]{{bp|Tentacool}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_129Magikarp.png|40px]]{{bp|Magikarp}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_179Mareep.png|40px]]{{bp|Mareep}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_187Hoppip.png|40px]]{{bp|Hoppip}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_194Wooper.png|40px]]{{bp|Wooper}}
|
[[File:Pokemon_023Ekans.png|40px]]{{bp|Ekans}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_072Tentacool.png|40px]]{{bp|Tentacool}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_129Magikarp.png|40px]]{{bp|Magikarp}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_179Mareep.png|40px]]{{bp|Mareep}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_187Hoppip.png|40px]]{{bp|Hoppip}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_194Wooper.png|40px]]{{bp|Wooper}}
|
[[File:Pokemon_023Ekans.png|40px]]{{bp|Ekans}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_072Tentacool.png|40px]]{{bp|Tentacool}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_129Magikarp.png|40px]]{{bp|Magikarp}}<br />
[[File:Pokemon_194Wooper.png|40px]]{{bp|Wooper}}
|}
{{-}}
==The game plan==
[[File:Pokemon-GSC-Johto-Route32.png|thumb|left|300px|Route 32]]
You need to cross the cave at the end of Route #32 to get Azalea Town.  On the way, we'll pass the entrance to the [[Pokémon Gold and Silver/Ruins of Alph|Ruins of Alph]].  For now, catch some Pokémon, do some fishing, and keep heading south. As you pass the corpulent man near the pokemon center, he'll stop you and offer a slowpoke tail at the astronomical price of one millon pokebucks! You can't even collect that much, so obviously refuse. It's just a scam, anyway; slowpoke tails are useless for anything but an actual slowpoke. Besides, it's cruel to even cut off a slowpoke's tail, despite the fact that they'll grow back.


==Pokémon found==
===The Miracle Seed and TM 05===
The first guy you encounter on the route will refuse to allow passage unless you have beaten Falkner and collected the Togepi egg. Once both tasks are done, he rewards your exploits with a '''Miracle Seed''' !  When equipped, this nifty item powers up your Pokémon's Grass type moves.  Come back when you learn Cut to get to the guy south of him on the ledge.  He will give you '''TM 05''' (Roar) for your trouble.


===Day===
===Calendar Event #2: Ms. Friday===
*Bellsprout
Every Friday, one of the Day siblings will be standing in the forest, waiting to talk to you.  She could also be at the bottom of the route behind the PokéCenter. Sometimes if you save and keep playing she changes spots.  Like her sister Tuscany on [[Pokémon Gold and Silver/Route 29|Route #29]], Frieda only appears once a week, on Fridays.  She will give you '''Poison Barb''' simply for talking to her.  When a Pokémon holds Poison Barb, the item powers up your Pokémon's Poison type moves.
*Ratatta
*Pidgey
*Hoppip
*Ekans
===Night===
*Ekans
*Wooper
*Zubat
*Bellsprout
*Mareep


==Trainers==
===Pick up the old rod and start fishing===
*Youngster Albert, Ratatta Level 6, Zubat Level 8, 91 EXP, [[Image:Pokébuck.png]]128
Talk to the fisherman closest to the healing machine inside the Pokémon Center.  He will offer you one of his fishing rods, the '''Old Rod'''.  With the Old Rod, you can walk up to water and start fishing for Water-type Pokémon.  Unlike the Old Rod in Red/Blue/Yellow, this Rod ''can'' catch something other than {{bp|Magikarp}} (although you will end up catching a ''lot'' of those).  If you fish here now, you can net a {{bp|Tentacool}}, and if you trade numbers with Ralph on Route #32, he'll give you a call when the {{bp|Qwilfish}} swarm.  Outside of swarms, these rare fish can only be caught with a Super Rod.
*Liz Picknicker(phone)
*Ralph Fisher (phone) - Qwilfish, Goldeen
*Camper Roland: Nidoran Male Level 9, 108 EXP, [[Image:Pokébuck.png]]180


==Items==
==Trainers and Items==
*Something Form Frideya (on Friday) near Pokémon Center
{| width="*"
*Repel
|-
*Great Ball (x2)
! colspan="3" align="center" style="background:#407040; color:#ffffff;" | Trainers
|-
|valign="top" rowspan="3" width="50%" |
{|
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Youngster.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Youngster Albert''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]128
*{{bp|Rattata|6|72}}
*{{bp|Zubat|8|91}} 
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Fisher.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Fisher Ralph''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]400 (Phone)
*{{bp|Goldeen|10|237}}
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Camper.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Camper Roland''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]180
*{{bp|Nidoran♂|9|115}}
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Fisher.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Fisher Henry''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]320
*{{bp|Poliwag|8|132}}
*{{bp|Poliwag|8|132}}
|-
|[[File:Pokemon GSC Bird Keeper.png|left]]
|'''Bird Keeper Peter''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]192
*{{bp|Pidgey|6|70}}
*{{bp|Pidgey|6|70}}
*{{bp|Spearow|8|99}}
|}
|width="50%" |
{|
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Picnicker.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Picnicker Liz''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]180 (Phone)
*{{bp|Nidoran♀|9|112}}
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Fisher.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Fisher Justin''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]200
*{{bp|Magikarp|5|21}}
*{{bp|Magikarp|5|21}}
*{{bp|Magikarp|15|63}}
*{{bp|Magikarp|5|21}}
|-
|align="center" valign="top" | [[File:Pokemon GSC Youngster.png|left]]
|valign="top" | '''Youngster Gordon''': [[File:Pokebuck.png]]160
*{{bp|Wooper|10|111}}
|-
! align="center" style="background:#407040; color:#ffffff;" colspan="2" | Items
|-
| colspan="2"|
*Miracle Seed
*Potion (G/S only)
*Repel (Crystal only)
*Super Potion (hidden in the grass before the bridge)
*Great Ball x2 (2nd hidden behind the Pokécenter)  
*Old Rod
*Old Rod
*Poison Barb (on Friday)
*TM 05 (Roar) - come back with Cut
|}
|}
{{-}}
{{sidebar|title=No more Mareep!|contents=Up to this point, Crystal players have had the luxury of being able to catch every Pokémon from both the Gold and Silver versions.  But Route #32 is the first area in which a Gold/Silver Pokémon has disappeared; {{bp|Mareep}}, the beloved electric sheep, no longer wanders Route #32, or anywhere in Crystal.


{{Footer Nav|game=Pokémon Gold, Silver and Crystal|backpage=Sprout Tower|nextpage=Ruins of Alph}}
You'll have to wait a long time before you get your first chance at an Electric Pokémon, so you might just want to trade for a Mareep with a friend who has Gold or Silver.  They're very easy to find in both of those versions.}}
 
==Pokémon Found==
{{PokemonGSC Header|Route #32}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Hoppip|187|10|10||10|10||15|15|}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Pidgey|016|||||||5|5|}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Ekans|023||||30|30|30|30|30|}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Rattata|019|35|40|30|5|10||30|30|30}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Bellsprout|069|30|30|20|30|30|20|20|20|20}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Mareep|179|20|20|10|20|20|10|||}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Wooper|194|4||35|4||35|||30}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Zubat|041|1||5|1||5|||10}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Gastly|092|||||||||5}}
{{PokemonGSC Encounter|Hoothoot|163|||||||||5}}
|}
{| {{prettytable|notwide=1}} style="font-size:larger; text-align:center"
|+ Route #32 Fishing
|
| style="background-color:#033" style="font-size:smaller; color:#33f" | Old Rod
| style="background-color:#066" style="font-size:smaller; color:#33f" | Good Rod
| style="background-color:#099" style="font-size:smaller; color:#33f" | Super Rod
|-
|[[File:Pokemon 129Magikarp.png|40px]]{{bp|Magikarp}}
| style="border:1px solid #99F" | '''85%'''
| style="border:1px solid #66F" | '''35%'''
| style="border:1px solid #33F" | '''20%'''
|-
|[[File:Pokemon 211Qwilfish.png|40px]]{{bp|Qwilfish}}<br /><span style="font-size:x-small">* Numbers increase during swarms</span>
| style="border:1px solid #99F" | '''0% *'''
| style="border:1px solid #66F" | '''0% *'''
| style="border:1px solid #33F" | '''10% *'''
|-
|[[File:Pokemon 072Tentacool.png|40px]]{{bp|Tentacool}}
| style="border:1px solid #99F" | '''15%'''
| style="border:1px solid #66F" | '''65%'''
| style="border:1px solid #33F" | '''70%'''
|}
{{-}}
{| {{prettytable}}
|-
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #23 Ekans
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #194 Wooper
|-valign="top"
| [[File:Pokemon 023Ekans.png|left]] Only Silver and Crystal players can catch an Ekans, but Gold players can buy one at the Goldenrod Game Corner.  Ekans learns a variety of fun moves like Wrap, Bite, and Acid, but never gets anything powerful enough to make it worth using.  One positive, it is good at facing Ghost types due to learning Bite.  Its token new move is Haze which restores altered stats and conditions at level 43.  Team Rocket seem to like this Pokémon, and they can have it.
| [[File:Pokemon 194Wooper.png|right]] Wooper's odd mix of Ground and Water types grants it limited resistance to Water, Fire, Poison, and Steel attacks, and complete immunity to Electric.  Its only weakness is to Grass, which absolutely wrecks it.  Wooper has some good moves like Water Gun (at start) and Earthquake (level 31), but generally poor stats.  When it evolves into {{bp|Quagsire}} at level 20, its stats nearly double, except Speed which drops drastically.
|-
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #179 Mareep
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #129 Magikarp
|-valign="top"
| [[File:Pokemon 179Mareep.png|left]] You'll definitely want a Mareep, since it's the only Electric Pokémon you'll be able to get for the next several hours.  As Electric Pokémon go, it's slow and doesn't learn many Electric attacks, but it evolves quickly and has a great Special Attack.  One tip: Never delay evolved form {{bp|Flaaffy}} from evolving into {{bp|Ampharos}} (its third stage), or you won't be able to learn Thunder Punch.
| [[File:Pokemon 129Magikarp.png|right]] Magikarp can now learn a third skill, Flail, at level 30.  Of course, you'd be insane to stick with Magikarp for that long, since it can evolve into a super-strong {{bp|Gyarados}} at level 20.  Gyarados can now learn Rain Dance, but is basically unchanged. It's probably a good idea to keep the Magikarp out of the way for now as you can catch a rare Gyarados later on in the game.
|-
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #72 Tentacool
! style="background-color:#000;color:#fff;" | #211 Qwilfish
|-valign="top"
| [[File:Pokemon 072Tentacool.png|left]] Tentacool is pretty much the same as it was in Red/Blue/Yellow.  It now starts with Poison Sting instead of Acid, but doesn't have any new moves or anything.  Tentacool and evolved form {{bp|Tentacruel}} are still under-appreciated Pokémon that are strong in Speed and Special Attack.
| [[File:Pokemon 211Qwilfish.png|right]] Like Tentacool, Qwilfish is a mix of Water and Poison types.  Like Tentacool, its best move is a late game Hydro Pump.  But it does differ in a few ways: It gets some nice defensive techniques like Minimize and Harden, and has a higher Attack score. It's a good idea to stick with Tentacool instead, however.
|}
 
{{Footer Nav|game=Pokémon Gold and Silver|prevpage=Sprout Tower|nextpage=Ruins of Alph}}
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