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I want SoulSilver so bad, but first I need a DS.

I'm so tempted to buy a DS just to play Pokemon, but I did the same thing when Pokemon FireRed was released and wasted the money (finished the game and the GBA SP is collecting dust).

If only someone gave me $160 :)

The Global Trade is kinda' silly. It seems like everyone wants unrealistic trades for all their pokemon. All I wanted was a weak little Larvitar, but for a lvl 1-10, obviously they wanted a lvl 100 mew in return, etc. So ridiculous lol. I've yet to see just a normal trade...

The Global Trade is kinda' silly. It seems like everyone wants unrealistic trades for all their pokemon. All I wanted was a weak little Larvitar, but for a lvl 1-10, obviously they wanted a lvl 100 mew in return, etc. So ridiculous lol. I've yet to see just a normal trade...

Thats 12 year olds for ya eh?

I want SoulSilver so bad, but first I need a DS.

I'm so tempted to buy a DS just to play Pokemon, but I did the same thing when Pokemon FireRed was released and wasted the money (finished the game and the GBA SP is collecting dust).

If only someone gave me $160 :)

A used DS chunky is like $60, you could then trade it and SoulSilver back for like $40-$50 total. Loss of money but at least you can get some back and get to play the game.

I grabbed SoulSilver today and just playing a little of it reminded me of why Silver is one of my all time favorite games.

Only 10 hours :p

I forced my way though everyone. plus I only train 1 pokemon, my starter then I give exp share to red gyarados and caught lugia, so was very easy, just like I remembered it. my old silver had around 200hrs on it before it's battery died

I've pre-ordered both HeartGold and SoulSilver.

My fiance is going to have SS, I'll have HG... since we both owned the originals of these :)

Really looking forward to picking them up on March 25th.

I have no doubt they will be game of the year for DS.

Only 10 hours :p

I forced my way though everyone. plus I only train 1 pokemon, my starter then I give exp share to red gyarados and caught lugia, so was very easy, just like I remembered it. my old silver had around 200hrs on it before it's battery died

LOL. I did that with pokemon red. Trained Charizard... He basically beat the entire league on his own. Haha, that made me remember when I first discovered the daycare man in Red, I gave him an oddish at the beginning of the game. I COMPLETELY forgot about it. After i had already beaten the pokemon league a few times, I just started wandering around the map and stumbled upon his little house. "What's this?"

Walked in and remembered... ... It cost me a fortune to get him back. Level 52 oddish became part of my team LOL.

I've put about 34 hours in Soul Silver so far... Crazy. I've got all the badges, but my pokemon are too weak for the league, so I'm going to train them all to level 50 before I try. By the way, when do you get Exp. Share again? Is that after you beat them?

after you get red gyarado go to mr. pokemon and he give you exp share in exchange for the red scale. you reminded me I have a pidgey and a togpie in the day care, bet that's going to expensive

Wow, thanks. I got Red gyrados ages ago and didn't even think of going to Mr. Pokemon.

I got mine preordered; bought Platinum to get up to speed in the meantime! So many rares from the GS games just common in the wild! There are events coming up around the world, giving away a free Arceus that unlocks a mini sidequest in GS/SS that shows a bit of storyline background. Check out the event list around the world: http://www.serebii.n...entevents.shtml

EDIT

Also, if you connect using Mystery Gift to Nintendo Wifi to check for tickets, you can get a Pikachu-coloured Pichu (its just shiny, still cool) that if you also trade to HG/SS also unlocks a sidequest that allows you to get a Dialga/Palkia/Giratina, one of your choice.If you choose the Giratina in this quest, you get an item attached that allows another sidequest to happen. Bonus footage!

I got mine preordered; bought Platinum to get up to speed in the meantime! So many rares from the GS games just common in the wild! There are events coming up around the world, giving away a free Arceus that unlocks a mini sidequest in GS/SS that shows a bit of storyline background. Check out the event list around the world: http://www.serebii.n...entevents.shtml

EDIT

Also, if you connect using Mystery Gift to Nintendo Wifi to check for tickets, you can get a Pikachu-coloured Pichu (its just shiny, still cool) that if you also trade to HG/SS also unlocks a sidequest that allows you to get a Dialga/Palkia/Giratina, one of your choice.If you choose the Giratina in this quest, you get an item attached that allows another sidequest to happen. Bonus footage!

Good info. How would one transfer that to HG / SS if you only have one DS, though? I checked mystery gift on HG / SS (Didn't even know it was an option until you mentioned it lol) and it didn't find anything. Serebii says it's just for pearl, platinum, and diamond... But I don't happen to have another DS to trade with myself.

I honestly didn't know it would be this good. I'm so glad my brothers have a Nintendo DS. Saves me from buying one, haha. Gold version is my favourite Pokemon game of all time. I still remember how much fun I used to have when it was first released in North America. Ah, the good old days of playing it on my lime green GBC.

I honestly didn't know it would be this good. I'm so glad my brothers have a Nintendo DS. Saves me from buying one, haha. Gold version is my favourite Pokemon game of all time. I still remember how much fun I used to have when it was first released in North America. Ah, the good old days of playing it on my lime green GBC.

If you loved the original you will love the re make, Gold was my fav back in the day too, I remember playing and completing some bad Japanese translation over a year before it came out here. When my mate told me some shop in our town would import the US version for £30 i went down the next day and got a copy 6 months before it was out in the UK! :D

Fast forward about 10 years and mine and my mates US imports from Play-Asia has just been delivered today, I actually had no idea this is been released over here next friday... :whistle: lol but hey its worked out at £25 delivered each, which appears to be cheaper than anywhere else selling it in the UK, plus we have it a week early :)

hg-ss1.jpg

hg-ss2.jpg

Good info. How would one transfer that to HG / SS if you only have one DS, though? I checked mystery gift on HG / SS (Didn't even know it was an option until you mentioned it lol) and it didn't find anything. Serebii says it's just for pearl, platinum, and diamond... But I don't happen to have another DS to trade with myself.

You need D/P/Pt, Cant use HG/SS to get it. Thats the point I think, that you need to know someone/buy both and trade it over, so its more "exclusive" lol.

Oh and Platinum is way better than Diamond/Pearl, the battle speed has been fixed - battles now feel quick, searching for rare Pokemon is not nearly as annoying! I highly recommend it if you liked D/P but got put off by the slowness or anything else. I like the storyline better as well, its easier to train up throughout the game while not hanging about too long in one place. Good for a Pokemon game!

I think you can trade with yourself between the Sinnoh/Johto regions, via the GTS - befriend yourself in both games, and send from one to the other. I've never actually traded over the GTS before but I think its set up so you don't have to be online at the same time - it's "sent" from your "outbox" and they just "receive" it in the "inbox", and vice versa, and both Pokemon are "gone" for 1-3 hours or so. Hence, if you have both HG/SS and a Sinnoh game, you can just trade with yourself. Long-winded but it might work! Or just borrow another DS :D

I'm going in town in a few hours to grab an Arceus download. Ooo this brings back old skool memories!

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    • Why it's almost impossible to produce a smartphone in the United States by Hamid Ganji If you look at the back of some Apple products, you can see the famous phrase “Designed by Apple in California, Assembled in China.” This phrase appears on products from one of the largest smartphone brands in the United States. These products are designed in the U.S., but their manufacturing takes place in China, India, Vietnam, or even Brazil. But why can’t Apple, as one of the largest American tech companies, produce its iPhones on U.S. soil? The idea for this topic came to me after the Trump Foundation launched a smartphone called the T1 and claimed that it was designed and built with American values in mind. However, this claim did not last long, as it was revealed that Trump’s phone was actually a rebranded HTC U24 Pro, with only a gold case and minor internal component changes. You see? Even a phone that is supposed to represent American values is manufactured in China. With a gross domestic product (GDP) exceeding $32 trillion, the United States is currently the world’s largest economy, while China ranks second with around $20 trillion. On the other hand, the United States is by a wide margin the global leader in various technological fields, and American companies spend hundreds of billions of dollars annually on research and development. From Apple and Google to Microsoft, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, and others, American tech and industrial giants lead their foreign competitors in many sectors. The United States also has no shortage of smartphone brands. Apple, Google, and Motorola are among the major brands in the smartphone market, collectively holding a significant share. However, the vast majority of their products are manufactured outside the United States. So why is it that the world’s largest economy, home to the most advanced technology companies and industrial powers, cannot produce a smartphone on its own soil? Let’s explore this question together. Even threats to impose tariffs won’t work After Trump entered the White House as the 47th President of the United States, his administration adopted strict tariff policies. One of these policies was the imposition of a 25% tariff on smartphones manufactured outside the United States. Trump said he “had a little problem” with Apple CEO Tim Cook over producing smartphones outside the U.S. So he thought that threatening a 25% tax on imported phones might force Apple to bring manufacturing back to the United States. “I have long ago informed Tim Cook of Apple that I expect their iPhones that will be sold in the United States of America will be manufactured and built in the United States, not India, or anyplace else,” Trump wrote on Truth Social. Image via The White House Although Apple currently manufactures some of the iPhone’s chips in the United States with TSMC's help, it still shows no willingness to shift full iPhone production to the country. At the time, renowned Apple supply chain analyst Ming-Chi Kuo wrote on X, “In terms of profitability, it’s way better for Apple to take the hit of a 25% tariff on iPhones sold in the US market than to move iPhone assembly lines back to the US.” However, manufacturing a smartphone in the United States is not as easy as it might seem, and many technical and economic barriers are involved. The lack of necessary manufacturing hubs There is a clear reason why many companies prefer to manufacture their products in China. China has established itself as the main global manufacturing hub for international companies, and over the past few decades, large contract manufacturers have emerged there, allowing companies like Apple to outsource production. One such example is Foxconn, which also manufactures some Apple products in India. Building the infrastructure required to produce smartphones in the United States would require tens of billions of dollars in new investment. Factories would need to be built, essential manufacturing equipment would have to be installed, and, most importantly, a skilled workforce capable of operating these systems would need to be recruited and trained. The United States currently lacks the core infrastructure needed to manufacture smartphones, and for this reason, many companies prefer to outsource production to Chinese contractors rather than spend tens of billions of dollars to build that infrastructure, which is significantly more economically efficient. Additionally, building such infrastructure in the United States could take up to a decade, ultimately leading to a significant increase in the product's final price for consumers. Shortage of trained labor in the U.S. compared to China Decades of serving as a global manufacturing hub have allowed China to build a massive talent pool in the production sector that is almost unmatched worldwide. Today, if a company chooses to manufacture its products in China, it can be confident that the workers involved in production have years of experience in their respective roles and are capable of producing high-quality goods with minimal errors. Even if we assume that tens of billions of dollars were invested in building smartphone manufacturing infrastructure in the United States, finding skilled workers would remain highly challenging. Apple CEO Tim Cook visiting the iPhone 6 assembly line in China in 2014. Image: Tim Cook on X In a 2015 interview on CBS’s 60 Minutes, Tim Cook said the main reason Apple isn’t producing in the US is a lack of skills. "China put an enormous focus on manufacturing, in what you and I would call vocational kind of skills. The US over time began to stop having as many vocational kinds of skills. I mean you could take every tool and die maker in the United States and probably put them in the room that we're currently sitting in. In China you would have to have multiple football fields,” Cook said. Also, in 2017, at the Fortune Global Forum in Guangzhou, Cook once again emphasized the importance of highly skilled Chinese workers. “China has moved into very advanced manufacturing, so you find in China the intersection of craftsman kind of skill, and sophisticated robotics and the computer science world. That intersection, which is very rare to find anywhere, that kind of skill, is very important to our business because of the precision and quality level that we like. The thing that most people focus on if they’re a foreigner coming to China is the size of the market, and obviously, it’s the biggest market in the world in so many areas. But for us, the number one attraction is the quality of the people,” Apple CEO said. 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    • Cheers everyone for the replies. It's been very useful. 👍
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