The Desert Cat
Good Boy
Thanks!
Rewrote the dream in Chapter 3 based on your feedback, I think it's much more consistent with the later ones, now. I was thinking about shifting them all around to be in chronological order, but...that would put the 8.5k word dream in Chapter 16.5 in Chapter 3, and I feel like that may be too much to drop on readers right away.
Rewrote the dream in Chapter 3 based on your feedback, I think it's much more consistent with the later ones, now. I was thinking about shifting them all around to be in chronological order, but...that would put the 8.5k word dream in Chapter 16.5 in Chapter 3, and I feel like that may be too much to drop on readers right away.
Oh boy, I was planning to stick to my slow and steady two chapter at a time diet, but our main trio are being drawn together and things are heating up. I read chapters 7-10. Here are some thoughts.
The world. I'm really enjoying how much you've embraced your setting--this world isn't advanced. Pokemon have incredible abilities, but they lack scientific knowledge. They can teleport, but they can't tell universal time--or at least, they couldn't. This is also an unknown world. Tyranitar thinks their village is one of the largest in the world, but he can't know, because no one does. Maps have blanks. Knowledge is passed down, but it's fragmented. But was it always that way? The solar system door certainly suggests past knowledge. I'm also interested to see how Arcanine's knowledge will factor into all this. You've carefully highlighted that he's been read science fiction, shown his inclination towards math. Despite having been the thick-headed lug of Mewtwo's crew, he may be one of the most scientifically minded pokemon around now.
IoC is post-apocalyptic, I suppose, or more like post-post-post-apocalyptic. When you have Legendaries and other eldritch entities trying to destroy the world every Tuesday, they're bound to succeed every once in a while. There's a bit more on this later, but for our purposes, it's mostly enough that the world is a big, mysterious place.
The law. Arcanine's capture raises some troubling questions about what the law and its enforcement look like in this world. Zorua calls what the rescue teams did kidnapping, and she's not wrong. Arrest is just, in a sense, state-sanctioned kidnapping. The key lies in the legitimacy of the state sanctioning it. So far, I haven't seen much that makes this system appear legitimate. Who determines when bounties are placed? What happens to those captured? Is there any kind of legal system here, or does might basically make right? What do those rescue badges really stand for? At the moment, it seems like the most organized authority out there is this Federation. Do they set the rules, as well as enforce them?
A lot of readers seem to jump to the conclusion of the Federation as a government. That's not unreasonable, both because the games, especially Super, imply some overarching authority, and because readers have a cultural expectation that there must be one. Inmy anarchist manifesto, IoC, there really isn't. More on Treasure Town, Officer Magnezone, and how far his authority goes, later.
Heroes. Absol and Zorua was a delightful chapter. Every scene underscored how different the two are. Zorua is brash and irreverent where Absol is meek and deferential. Absol waits for instructions; Zorua charges forward on her own path. Absol tries to see the best in everyone she meets; Zorua often sees the worst. Absol is self-sacrificing; Zorua is selfish, not monstrously so, but mundanely so. Both are fundamentally motivated by the people they care about, but where Absol broadens and extends that community to encompass the larger world, Zorua, like Arcanine, restricts it to the people that are hers. But that can be powerful. I'm reminded of a Terry Pratchett quote, "Then turn selfishness into a weapon! Make all things yours! Make other lives and dreams and hopes yours! Protect them! Save them! Bring them into the sheepfold! Walk the gale for them! Keep away the wolf! My dreams! My brother! My family! My land! My world! How dare you try to take these things, because they are mine!"
Somehow I've never read Pratchett. I probably should; I hear a lot of good things about his books.
Victims. I was pleasantly surprised by the Growlithe interlude. I like that you're fleshing out who lives in Pokemon Square beyond just the rescue teams. It also fits the emphasis so far on saving the world not being simple and direct like in stories. Here's a case where Team Mighty got the bad guy, but that doesn't retroactively heal Growlithe. Her struggle with loneliness and addiction is one that requires strength, but of a very different kind. And once again, companionship--banding together instead of staying apart--seems to be the suggested answer.
Growlithe was almost an accident. It started as a bit of filler, a delivery side quest for Absol, and kept growing. Wouldn't Absol try to check on her? They're both friends with Team Mighty, so they already have a connection - wouldn't Growlithe want some company? I mentioned Zorua's mom being an herbalist, wouldn't Zorua know something about this?
Now I have two unrelated Growlithe-line Pokemon with chronic injuries, and she's a major character.
The plot. Good stuff. I like how neatly the characters have become intertwined. Some threads I'm keeping an eye on--is Mewtwo here or was Mewtwo here at one point, searching for Arcanine? What are Easy and Gray? What happened to Team Go-Getters? Onwards!
I had to hide Team Go-Getters and Team Pokepals, because I had the idea early on that I didn't want to identify their species, because they're the reader's own team. Gengar had to go because Victory Fire did such a good job with him that I couldn't imagine anything else. Mewtwo and Team Easy/E.Z., well, we'll see.
With long lifespans, no war, and a high resistance to disease and injury, I figured they must have a low fertility rate to maintain such a small population.
Yeah, that went from action-mode to not-action-mode pretty fast
^^
Depends on how hungry you are.
I guess there's something to be said for both kinds of strength.
Trying to retcon in some of Zorua's past.
She was identifying that it must be a Zoroark's ability. Maybe this needs some clarification.
Yeah, that needs some work.
We'll see... Also, I can't believe I wrote 'super-powerful'. I'm gonna change that right now.
^^
This is a real phenomenon. Some people experience a 'taste' immediately when they start receiving I.V. medications.
Oops. In the original version of Chapter 2, she did.
IoC has a four-move limit. I don't know why I did it that way – it wouldn't be my choice if I was starting now.
...yes. They're squatting. It's been abandoned since the end of Rescue Team, and Team Mighty aren't the sort to have it fixed.
Science!
Yeah. Alakazam ought to at least answer.
^^
I need to go back and clarify that there's nothing unusual about Beldum, even if Zorua hasn't seen one before.
^^
I remember considering this for a while. I would write 'dragged', but I would say 'drug'. Maybe it's a regional thing? Is 'drug' uncommon?
Yeah. She actually had it pretty good in Meadow Town, even if she doesn't know it, but she learned to look out for her own interests, too. But, she also would have gone back to Meadow Town to fight the Ice-types alone, if Arcanine hadn't changed his mind.
I'll take another look at this.
I totally planned this.
Bit of a different explanation for ferals here--this one makes more sense to me. I wonder how many ferals there are, then, if they don't reproduce. Paints a different picture than the earlier one of, let's go to mystery dungeons and beat everyone up. Pretty tragic.
Yeah. Unfortunately, this can't be a compete explanation for where ferals come from, either. There wouldn't be nearly enough, unless they don't age and have been accumulating for a long time.
The world. I'm really enjoying how much you've embraced your setting--this world isn't advanced. Pokemon have incredible abilities, but they lack scientific knowledge. They can teleport, but they can't tell universal time--or at least, they couldn't. This is also an unknown world. Tyranitar thinks their village is one of the largest in the world, but he can't know, because no one does. Maps have blanks. Knowledge is passed down, but it's fragmented. But was it always that way? The solar system door certainly suggests past knowledge. I'm also interested to see how Arcanine's knowledge will factor into all this. You've carefully highlighted that he's been read science fiction, shown his inclination towards math. Despite having been the thick-headed lug of Mewtwo's crew, he may be one of the most scientifically minded pokemon around now.
IoC is post-apocalyptic, I suppose, or more like post-post-post-apocalyptic. When you have Legendaries and other eldritch entities trying to destroy the world every Tuesday, they're bound to succeed every once in a while. There's a bit more on this later, but for our purposes, it's mostly enough that the world is a big, mysterious place.
The law. Arcanine's capture raises some troubling questions about what the law and its enforcement look like in this world. Zorua calls what the rescue teams did kidnapping, and she's not wrong. Arrest is just, in a sense, state-sanctioned kidnapping. The key lies in the legitimacy of the state sanctioning it. So far, I haven't seen much that makes this system appear legitimate. Who determines when bounties are placed? What happens to those captured? Is there any kind of legal system here, or does might basically make right? What do those rescue badges really stand for? At the moment, it seems like the most organized authority out there is this Federation. Do they set the rules, as well as enforce them?
A lot of readers seem to jump to the conclusion of the Federation as a government. That's not unreasonable, both because the games, especially Super, imply some overarching authority, and because readers have a cultural expectation that there must be one. In
Heroes. Absol and Zorua was a delightful chapter. Every scene underscored how different the two are. Zorua is brash and irreverent where Absol is meek and deferential. Absol waits for instructions; Zorua charges forward on her own path. Absol tries to see the best in everyone she meets; Zorua often sees the worst. Absol is self-sacrificing; Zorua is selfish, not monstrously so, but mundanely so. Both are fundamentally motivated by the people they care about, but where Absol broadens and extends that community to encompass the larger world, Zorua, like Arcanine, restricts it to the people that are hers. But that can be powerful. I'm reminded of a Terry Pratchett quote, "Then turn selfishness into a weapon! Make all things yours! Make other lives and dreams and hopes yours! Protect them! Save them! Bring them into the sheepfold! Walk the gale for them! Keep away the wolf! My dreams! My brother! My family! My land! My world! How dare you try to take these things, because they are mine!"
Somehow I've never read Pratchett. I probably should; I hear a lot of good things about his books.
Victims. I was pleasantly surprised by the Growlithe interlude. I like that you're fleshing out who lives in Pokemon Square beyond just the rescue teams. It also fits the emphasis so far on saving the world not being simple and direct like in stories. Here's a case where Team Mighty got the bad guy, but that doesn't retroactively heal Growlithe. Her struggle with loneliness and addiction is one that requires strength, but of a very different kind. And once again, companionship--banding together instead of staying apart--seems to be the suggested answer.
Growlithe was almost an accident. It started as a bit of filler, a delivery side quest for Absol, and kept growing. Wouldn't Absol try to check on her? They're both friends with Team Mighty, so they already have a connection - wouldn't Growlithe want some company? I mentioned Zorua's mom being an herbalist, wouldn't Zorua know something about this?
Now I have two unrelated Growlithe-line Pokemon with chronic injuries, and she's a major character.
The plot. Good stuff. I like how neatly the characters have become intertwined. Some threads I'm keeping an eye on--is Mewtwo here or was Mewtwo here at one point, searching for Arcanine? What are Easy and Gray? What happened to Team Go-Getters? Onwards!
I had to hide Team Go-Getters and Team Pokepals, because I had the idea early on that I didn't want to identify their species, because they're the reader's own team. Gengar had to go because Victory Fire did such a good job with him that I couldn't imagine anything else. Mewtwo and Team Easy/E.Z., well, we'll see.
Oh wow, that's hardly any people at all! And like, considering how many rescue teams we've seen, it feels like about 10% of the town might be rescuers. I wonder why so few--do the pokemon just live very scattered? I'm getting the sense they don't have many children--there seem to be a lot of only children. Definitely a distinction between pokemon and irl animals.“In Pokémon Square?” Tyranitar considered for a moment, “maybe three or four hundred, depending on how far out you count. There are houses scattered through the woods to the north and west, plus another forty or fifty traders and travelers, at any time.”
With long lifespans, no war, and a high resistance to disease and injury, I figured they must have a low fertility rate to maintain such a small population.
She checked the bottle, found it empty, and laid it down between the rocks, where it could not roll down the hill and break, before starting back to the manor.
The jump from one sentence to another felt abrupt here.A flailing hoof caught Absol in the ribs as she stood, knocking her breath away. Rapidash and Jolteon were both limping.
Yeah, that went from action-mode to not-action-mode pretty fast
So the cold is beginning everywhere.Everyone had been doubtful when Natu predicted another snow; even the oldest Pokémon in Meadow Town could not remember seeing snow this late in the spring, but Natu was seldom wrong about the weather, and it appeared that he would be proven correct again.
^^
Oh boy, what are the ethics of pokemon eating other pokemon that they can presumably talk to?Arcanine tore another chunk off the roasted Sawsbuck and gulped it down.
Depends on how hungry you are.
This is a really interesting monologue. I wonder how that distinction carries over into PMD world. There's so much focus on teams, and now there's a federation organizing different towns. When Arcanine tries to egg Alakazam's team into a one-on-on fight later, they decline.#For Pokémon, strength is an individual quality; when I say that I am stronger than you, I mean that if we battled, I would probably win. For Humans, strength is a collective quality, measured in how many other Humans and Pokémon one controls. A Human becomes stronger not by training, but by forcing others to serve him. For years, I did everything he demanded of me. Eventually I admitted that he had never cared about me. I believed that I had learned everything that I could from him, so I left, and returned to Cinnabar. I thought that it was over; we had battled, a battle of wills, and I had won. That it how a Pokémon would think, it it not?#
Arcanine nodded in agreement.
#Arcanine, what if I was wrong?#
I guess there's something to be said for both kinds of strength.
I'm glad we aren't forgetting Treeko. Even though he's a character I never met, the fact that Zorua still cares about his death keeps that death feeling significant in the narrative.“There’s somewhere else I want to stop first, too,” Zorua said, “Arcanine, we…we buried Treecko by the stream, where we used to play when we were little. I know you didn’t know him, but I want to show you.”
“I want to see it, too,” Arcanine said. He didn’t have any feelings about Treecko himself, having never known the Grass-type as anything but a sad, bloody body on the floor, but if it was important to Zorua, he wanted to be a part of the mourning for her sake.
Trying to retcon in some of Zorua's past.
I didn't understand this. Does she use the evolved form name of her species like an invocation/curse?“Zoroark,” Zorua whispered.
She was identifying that it must be a Zoroark's ability. Maybe this needs some clarification.
This reads as a bit mechanical. He did this. He did that. Maybe a bit more variation, like, "The combined weight of the mightyenas drove Arcanine to the ground. He clenched his teeth, preparing to unleash a heat wave. But just as the flame spiked in his chest, Blastoise emerged from the bushes beside him, water cannons firing."The combined weight of the Mighyenas drove Arcanine to the ground. Arcanine prepared to unleash Heat Wave. Blastoise emerged from the bushes beside him, water cannons firing.
Yeah, that needs some work.
! of course my mind jumps to Mewtwo, but if it was Mewtwo it's hard for me to believe he would have failed, especially since the two are possibly psychically linked.There was a rumor that some super-powerful psychic no one had seen before was searching for him too.”
We'll see... Also, I can't believe I wrote 'super-powerful'. I'm gonna change that right now.
Oh boy. Arcanine, I don't think your big mistake was not slaughtering a whole town, though I can certainly see how that mindset might have arisen from his experiences; all of the pain he and Mewtwo suffered came, in a sense, from not being thorough enough in their destruction.He couldn’t remember killing five Pokémon in Treasure Town; just those two Magnemites; they’d deserved it, though. Maybe that had been his mistake, running away instead of going back for the rest of them, just like he should have finished off Bayleef, rather than expecting the coward to be grateful for his rescue.
^^
Mm, I really like this sensory detail. It sounds appropriately unpleasant.As strange as it was, the sensation had a flavor, a feeling like dirty, silty water in the back of his throat.
This is a real phenomenon. Some people experience a 'taste' immediately when they start receiving I.V. medications.
I like how this tale has already gotten warped and enlarged in the telling.He says you walked all the way from Mount Freeze to warn us.
Oops. In the original version of Chapter 2, she did.
This feels a little video-game-y. Why would she have to give up another move, exactly? If it's simple enough to relearn a move by practice, can a pokemon that practices a lot of moves stay fresh on them all?but she would have to give up something else, another move like Snarl or Dark Pulse for which she was better suited. Not permanently, of course; relearning a forgotten move was simple enough with a few days of practice, but it would make her less effective in a fight for now.
IoC has a four-move limit. I don't know why I did it that way – it wouldn't be my choice if I was starting now.
Is this basically the PMD equivalent of a frat house?Half of the poles holding up the top of the dome were broken. Chunks of plaster were missing from the walls, and there was a large puddle under the missing ear. Everything smelled like mold and dust. A pile of tangled blankets and cushions lay on the floor under the intact ear, as far as possible from the leaking roof.
...yes. They're squatting. It's been abandoned since the end of Rescue Team, and Team Mighty aren't the sort to have it fixed.
Ooh, super into communication and universal time telling being an important issue here, and nice to see practical steps being taken. So we're inventing hour glasses and rediscovering the solar system, huh?“The main problems was timing the contacts,” Delphox continued, “without a standard way of keeping time between towns, and the change in time moving east or west, they had to make the contact windows two hours long. Most Pokémon didn’t have enough power for more than two or three contacts each day, so it would have taken a lot of Psychic-types to implement.”
Alakazam nodded in agreement.
“Metagross from Team Victory has invented a solution; he calls it a sand-glass. I don’t know how they work, but he claims they’re accurate to within half an hour each day. Once the Time Gears were replaced, no one had much interest in implementing the system, so they’ve been in storage for years.”
Science!
This felt like a weird place for the chapter to cut off.“We would like to ask for your help as well, and permission to house the Pokémon Square sandglass and several more Federation Psychic-types in the manor.”
Yeah. Alakazam ought to at least answer.
Oof. Love Zorua's internal snarking here. She is royally pissed off.Obviously, kidnapping paid pretty well.
^^
I might have expected a little more comment on this. Is Zorua surprised or taken aback to see the pokemon from the cave here?Half an hour later, Metang and Beldum floated down to town, carrying an empty wooden crate between them.
I need to go back and clarify that there's nothing unusual about Beldum, even if Zorua hasn't seen one before.
Ah, so I was right! Fun to see how Zorua pegs this right away.There was something not quite right about how Grey moved, Zorua thought as Team Easy passed them on the way to the exit. Something very familiar; a biped’s interpretation of how a quadruped should walk. Just like her mother, when she’d disguised herself as Sylveon.
^^
* dragged (unless you want Zorua to come off as having a dialect accent here)We drug
I remember considering this for a while. I would write 'dragged', but I would say 'drug'. Maybe it's a regional thing? Is 'drug' uncommon?
I like that Zorua only latches on to the 'major catastrophe nigh' thing to the extent it might help her achieve her personal goals. She comes off as a selfish character--not in the pejorative sense of the term. It's just that when given a choice, she puts her own interests first. See asking Arcanine to save the town, even though it would endanger him. But that's not bad--most people are!Zorua was only half listening, though, because she was already busy plotting. This was something really big, much more important than her and Arcanine and even a million Poké. The two of them had the information for which Team ACT had been searching for weeks, or at least she thought she could bluff that they did. Maybe this was going to be easier than she had expected.
Yeah. She actually had it pretty good in Meadow Town, even if she doesn't know it, but she learned to look out for her own interests, too. But, she also would have gone back to Meadow Town to fight the Ice-types alone, if Arcanine hadn't changed his mind.
Not sure how Zorua's observation follows from the details given. If Growlithe sounded angry or disgusted while asking, or was averting her eyes, all of that would signal hating to ask for help to me, but asking something in a pleading voice doesn't.It was a simple request, but Growlithe’s voice was pleading and desperate. She absolutely hated having to ask for help, Zorua thought.
I'll take another look at this.
I hadn't paid much attention to Zorua's mom's job, so it was nice to see how it has influenced what she knows and how she reacts.“Growlithe, I’m sorry, but we need to talk, okay?”
Growlithe didn’t answer.
“My mother was an apothecary. I watched her make all kinds of potions for years. I wish I had paid more attention and learned from her when I had the chance, but I know enough to know that’s some really strong stuff, and the kind of dose you’re taking just isn’t safe.”
I totally planned this.
Hm, the mystery with those two both clears up and thickens. So Gray probably took on her form to help her understand him/what normal is.“Three years ago, I found an egg in Forgotten Woods. I’d never seen an egg in a mystery dungeon before; as far as we know, ferals don’t reproduce, so I took it with me. Pink hatched that night.”
Pink continued to groom, apparently totally unaware that she was now the subject of discussion.
“She didn’t look or act like a feral, but she wouldn’t talk, just ‘Eevee’ noises. I thought it might help if she heard other Pokémon talk, so I brought her here and read to her. I’m not sure how much she understood, but she enjoyed the pictures. This was one of the first things we read.”
That could explain Pink’s odd behavior, Absol thought. Pokémon who stayed too long in mystery dungeons began to lose their intelligence and sanity, and eventually went feral and became unable to leave. Sometimes Pokémon were rescued before going completely feral, but they never fully recovered.
Bit of a different explanation for ferals here--this one makes more sense to me. I wonder how many ferals there are, then, if they don't reproduce. Paints a different picture than the earlier one of, let's go to mystery dungeons and beat everyone up. Pretty tragic.
Yeah. Unfortunately, this can't be a compete explanation for where ferals come from, either. There wouldn't be nearly enough, unless they don't age and have been accumulating for a long time.
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