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EON Ticket: A promotional card given away at E3, at Toys R Us during the EON Ticket Summer Tour in 2003 and in issue 173 of Nintendo Power. This card was used to get Latias or Latios on Pokémon Ruby or Pokémon Sapphire by allowing the player access to the Southern Island location. Latias was given in the former and Latios was given in the latter.
Pokémon Emerald Version [b] is a 2004 role-playing video game developed by Game Freak and published by The Pokémon Company and Nintendo for the Game Boy Advance. It was first released in Japan in 2004, and was later released internationally in 2005.
Pokémon Emerald, an enhanced version of Ruby and Sapphire, is third with sales of more than 7 million units. [2] The top five is rounded out by Mario Kart: Super Circuit and Super Mario World: Super Mario Advance 2, each of which sold over 5.5 million units. [3]
The Eon Ticket could be scanned in by the e-Reader to go and catch either Latios or Latias, depending on the game. Ruby and Sapphire have limited e-Reader support. Nintendo released Battle-e Cards, a set of e-Reader cards that contained trainer battles in which the player could see previously hidden Pokémon. [12]
It is the other half of the Eon Duo, along with its female counterpart Latias. Its abilities are mostly identical to those of Latias, though it is slightly larger, faster, and worse at making sharp turns. It prefers compassionate trainers, and does not enjoy fighting. It and Latias gained mostly visually identical Mega Evolutions in generation VI.
Pokémon Hunter J (ポケモン ハンター J, Pokemon Hantā J, Pokémon Hunter J) Voiced by: Takako Honda (Japanese); Shannon Conley [62] (English) J was a ruthless and cruel Pokémon Hunter around Sinnoh region who captured and stole Pokémon to sell them on the black market to her clients for money.
EX Emerald, [14] released in May 2005, is the 25th set of cards in the Pokémon Trading Card Game and the 9th set released by Pokémon USA. Its symbol is a gemstone, presumably an emerald. It has a set of 106 cards. Nintendo released six 15-card packs, known as Quick Construction Packs – one pack for each type of Basic Energy.
Pokémon Dream Radar (ポケモン ARサーチャー Pokemon AR Sāchā, literally meaning: "Pokémon Augmented Reality Searcher") is the second downloadable game in the series and it featured Augmented Reality view to capture Pokémon, collecting Dream Orbs and Items in the Interdream Zone.
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