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Since I often put animals in PMD stories, I felt it worth thinking of some ways to actually justify that choice from a worldbuilding perspective (from a personal perspective, the justification is that I think animals are cool). So I wrote up some possibilities. I don't think these possibilities really invalidate anyone for feeling weird about animals in PMD, since it breaks canon and clashes with the fantastical elements of the series, but I hope I can at least provide some inspiration or maybe open some minds.
Anyway, here's what I wrote.
It's worth considering how animals could fit into a PMD setting, since it is commonly supposed that pokemon would drive them to extinction. I think there are ways to poke holes in this idea, many of which don't explicitly break canon:
1) Perhaps the simplest and most effective: pokemon just don't have as strong a drive to reproduce as humans and other animals. Sure, they *could* kill all their competitors, but there just aren't enough of them.
1a) Or perhaps they have long life cycles. A pokemon may take many years to reach sexual maturity, or perhaps they have very long pregnancies. The latter could also be a reason why they wouldn't *want* to reproduce as much. However, I believe it would break canon.
2) Pokemon can only sustain themselves off of in-universe food (berries, seeds, etc). This may be because these foods are much more energy-dense than irl foods, so eating real plants and animals would basically be a waste of time. There may have been evolutionary pressure on animals to be less powerful than pokemon because, indirectly, this would result in them being less worthwhile to eat, and allows them to survive off different food sources. This idea would justify pokemon not hunting animals for meat, but one could still object that pokemon might hunt animals for other resources, like fur or bones. It also is arguably contradicted by the presence of Apples, Bananas, and Chestnuts in PMD, which restore a lot of hunger. Are these to be considered different from their real life counterparts? If not, do they still have the same pollinators, and why haven't said pollinators been hunted to extinction...
3) Pokemon live in a post-scarcity world. There's no point in eating animals; it would be needlessly cruel. Plant food is abundant. Overpopulation may or may not be imminent. Pokemon may have to cull animals to keep populations in check. Could present some interesting animal welfare problems.
4) Pokemon may have advantages, but some animals still outcompete or evade them. Prey that can't overpower or escape predators can succeed by concealing themselves, being toxic to eat, being spiky, etc.
5) Pokemon can overpower animals or use their special abilities to hunt them, but it's not worth it because these abilities burn immense amounts of calories. So they use special abilities for self-defense or generally rely on weaker moves. Pokemon might also have higher basal metabolic rates that put them at a survival disadvantage.
6) Like humans, pokemon *are* driving animals to extinction. They're just not finished yet.
7) As in Those Who Will Inherit the Earth: there is a finite store of poke-energy which pokemon can draw from (I guess it's like Infinity Energy in the canon?) The more pokemon are born, the weaker their abilities become. This keeps their advantages in check to some degree.
8) Animals are entering from another world (the human world?) due to space-time distortions/mystery dungeon fuckery.
9) You could also accept that pokemon don't even make sense to begin with and you might as well just say fuck it and add animals to the mix. It's not like all pokemon are powerhouses anyway. Magikarp comes to mind.
I'm sure there are other justifications one could come up with, and there are probably ways to poke holes in my hole-poking. An issue with the above ideas is that they can be tricky to exposit in a story. Like, maybe there are certain facts about the universe or biology that keep pokemons' advantages in check, but who are you going to have talk about them? How are you going to show it? Maybe it's easier for those with amnesiac protagonists, because then your character can just ask.
Anyway, here's what I wrote.
It's worth considering how animals could fit into a PMD setting, since it is commonly supposed that pokemon would drive them to extinction. I think there are ways to poke holes in this idea, many of which don't explicitly break canon:
1) Perhaps the simplest and most effective: pokemon just don't have as strong a drive to reproduce as humans and other animals. Sure, they *could* kill all their competitors, but there just aren't enough of them.
1a) Or perhaps they have long life cycles. A pokemon may take many years to reach sexual maturity, or perhaps they have very long pregnancies. The latter could also be a reason why they wouldn't *want* to reproduce as much. However, I believe it would break canon.
2) Pokemon can only sustain themselves off of in-universe food (berries, seeds, etc). This may be because these foods are much more energy-dense than irl foods, so eating real plants and animals would basically be a waste of time. There may have been evolutionary pressure on animals to be less powerful than pokemon because, indirectly, this would result in them being less worthwhile to eat, and allows them to survive off different food sources. This idea would justify pokemon not hunting animals for meat, but one could still object that pokemon might hunt animals for other resources, like fur or bones. It also is arguably contradicted by the presence of Apples, Bananas, and Chestnuts in PMD, which restore a lot of hunger. Are these to be considered different from their real life counterparts? If not, do they still have the same pollinators, and why haven't said pollinators been hunted to extinction...
3) Pokemon live in a post-scarcity world. There's no point in eating animals; it would be needlessly cruel. Plant food is abundant. Overpopulation may or may not be imminent. Pokemon may have to cull animals to keep populations in check. Could present some interesting animal welfare problems.
4) Pokemon may have advantages, but some animals still outcompete or evade them. Prey that can't overpower or escape predators can succeed by concealing themselves, being toxic to eat, being spiky, etc.
5) Pokemon can overpower animals or use their special abilities to hunt them, but it's not worth it because these abilities burn immense amounts of calories. So they use special abilities for self-defense or generally rely on weaker moves. Pokemon might also have higher basal metabolic rates that put them at a survival disadvantage.
6) Like humans, pokemon *are* driving animals to extinction. They're just not finished yet.
7) As in Those Who Will Inherit the Earth: there is a finite store of poke-energy which pokemon can draw from (I guess it's like Infinity Energy in the canon?) The more pokemon are born, the weaker their abilities become. This keeps their advantages in check to some degree.
8) Animals are entering from another world (the human world?) due to space-time distortions/mystery dungeon fuckery.
9) You could also accept that pokemon don't even make sense to begin with and you might as well just say fuck it and add animals to the mix. It's not like all pokemon are powerhouses anyway. Magikarp comes to mind.
I'm sure there are other justifications one could come up with, and there are probably ways to poke holes in my hole-poking. An issue with the above ideas is that they can be tricky to exposit in a story. Like, maybe there are certain facts about the universe or biology that keep pokemons' advantages in check, but who are you going to have talk about them? How are you going to show it? Maybe it's easier for those with amnesiac protagonists, because then your character can just ask.