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Let's Play Pokemon SoulSilver - #30: Fake Director

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Just after exiting the Mahogany Gym, Prof. Elm gives us a call about activities in Goldenrod City. Team Rocket is up at it again!
Since I couldn't do the Mt. Mortar adventure yet due to the lack of Waterfall HM, we fly to Goldenrod to find out what's going on.
Team Rocket has taken over the Radio Tower! We can't get past the guard, but after getting a suit in the underground tunnel, we try again.
Silver appears and foils our plan before he leaves. We battle our way to the top floor and we find the director of the Radio Tower.
Nope, it was just Rocket Admin Petrel in disguise. We beat him in a battle and he reveals that the real director is in the underground warehouse.

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Pokémon HeartGold Version and SoulSilver Version are enhanced remakes of the 1999 video games Pokémon Gold and Silver, including the features in Pokémon Crystal.
The games are part of the Pokémon series of role-playing video games, and were developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo for the Nintendo DS.
First released in Japan on September 12, 2009, the games were later released to North America, Australia, and Europe during March 2010.
HeartGold and SoulSilver take place in the Johto region of the franchise's fictional universe, which features special creatures called Pokémon.
The basic goal of the game is to become the best Pokémon trainer in the Johto and Kanto regions, which is done by raising and cataloging Pokémon and defeating other trainers.
Game director Shigeki Morimoto aimed to respect the feelings of those who played the previous games, while also ensuring that it felt like a new game to those that were introduced to the series in more recent years.
Reception to the games was highly positive, with the two being amongst the highest rated DS games of all time on Metacritic.
As of March 2014, the games' combined sales have reached 12.72 million, putting the titles amongst the best selling Nintendo DS games.
Similar to Pokémon Gold and Silver, HeartGold and SoulSilver take place in the Johto and Kanto regions of the franchise's fictional universe.
The universe centers on the existence of creatures, called Pokémon, with special abilities. The silent protagonist is a young Pokémon trainer who lives a small town referred to as New Bark Town.
At the beginning of the games, the player chooses either a Chikorita, Cyndaquil, or Totodile as their starter Pokémon from Professor Elm.
After performing a delivery for the professor and obtaining a Pokédex, he decides to let the player keep the Pokémon and start them on a journey.
Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver are role-playing video games with adventure elements. The basic mechanics of the games are largely the same as their predecessors'.
As with all Pokémon games for hand-held consoles, gameplay is viewed from a third-person overhead perspective, and consists of three basic screens: a field map, in which the player navigates the main character; a battle screen; and the menu, in which the player configures his party, items, or gameplay settings.
The player begins the game with one Pokémon and can capture more using Poké Balls. The player can also use the Pokémon to battle or deceive others, often forming alliances or trends via the Team Rocket networks.
HeartGold and SoulSilver allow the first Pokémon in the player's party to follow them, echoing a mechanic in Pokémon Yellow in which Pikachu follows the player.
Apart from Yellow, this mechanic was also used in Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum in a limited fashion: when the player is in Amity Park with a cute Pokémon.
The player may talk to the Pokémon to see or check on how that Pokémon is feeling, and occasionally it may pick up items. A new minigame called the Pokéathlon (called Pokéthlon in Japan) uses the Nintendo DS touchscreen and allows Pokémon to compete in events such as hurdling.
The Japanese versions retain slot machines found in previous games, while the international releases of the titles replace the slot machines with a new game called "Voltorb Flip", described as a cross between Minesweeper and Picross.
Another new item, the GB Sounds, changes the background music to the original 8-bit music from Pokémon Gold and Silver.
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