Chapter 158
Added 2025-05-02 22:30:19 +0000 UTCAuthor Note:
If you missed it, there is a poll going on for the next fiction! You can find it here!
Also, I might have gone a bit overboard with this chapter. Itâs quite long, so forgive me if anything is slightly off.
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Sixteen rows of sixteen. Over two hundred trainers lined up in a grid. The audienceâs roars were deafening, and each and every one of those shouts came out solely to celebrate them.
The sky was open, allowing the light of the nightâs stars to shine through, and a massive, empty brazier sat unlit at the top of the arenaâs edge.
When its fires blazed, the Conference would begin.
But on the ground, a small, constructed stage elevated a handful of people above those rows of competing trainers. At the stageâs front, a podium served as the speakerâs stand, and Sam could already see several very important people he recognizedâthe head referee, the head nurse, a handful of Ace Trainers in charge of protecting both the Conference grounds and Silver Town, and then there was also Indigoâs Champion himself.
However, as the shouts of the crowd slowly began to quiet, it was not the Champion who approached the podium. Rather, an old man so short that Sam had failed to notice him walked up a stepstool to reach the microphone. He was dressed exactly like a teacher trying to be âhipâ with the kids, complete with baggy shorts and a backwards hat, yet the cheers that erupted at his presence all seemed genuine.
A soft smile crossed the old manâs face. Half of him was hidden behind a long, white beard.
âSo many trainers have made it to the Conference this year. The competition has never been this intense before!â
Roars. The small man let out a hearty laugh, and the speakers let that sound echo throughout the arena.
Sam finally recognized who the old man was.
Every region had a Champion in charge of all things related to Pokémon, but the Pokémon League itself also needed someone who helped with the other side of management. As important as the Champion was, they were only part of that show. The Pokémon League President handled all unrelated matters.
Charles Goodshow was that President. He was in charge of the day-to-day operations of all of the Leagueâs staff in Indigo, Hoenn, and Sinnoh.
âIâve seen quite a number of impressive battles. Iâve heard quite a number of curious things,â President Goodshow said, stroking his beard. âOver two hundred trainers in one competition? Thatâs a new record. Well, if you donât count the five-hundred-person tournament that happened two decades ago.â
He laughed. If the man wasnât so thin, Sam would have been reminded of Santa Claus. The laughter that came from the crowd was a bit more awkward, and when Goodshow finally quieted down, he stared out at the rows and rows of trainers, and it felt as though he managed to make eye contact with every person here.
âThe Conference is a tradition spanning back hundreds of years,â he said. âTrainers from every era have always competed to determine the best of the best. You all continue that tradition, standing here today. Your achievements and accomplishments have brought you here. And now, we will find out who stands at the top.
âBut it is not a trainer alone who fights in these matches,â Goodshow continued. âIt is not a trainer alone who manages to reach the Conference. You have your teams! Your PokĂ©mon! Your friends and family and everyone youâve met along the way! This is a competition, but it is also a celebration! Be proud of yourselves! All of you! Because you have finally made it here, today of all days!â
Another loud cheer erupted. Within the rows of trainers, people stood taller than ever before.
They had earned their eight badges and made their way into this tournament. Out of the thousands upon thousands of trainers that attempt the Gym Challenge each year, only they had been the ones worthy of making it to the end.
âNow then. I could go on and on about all these little things, and I know Lance wants to make an announcement too, but I think weâll skip that.â He chucked. âInstead, Iâll just say this: weâve held you back for long enough! After a long preliminary, take the night to rest! Learn about your opponents! Meet them! Discover who youâre about to face! Make your plans, create your strategies, but more than anything else... Just! Have! Fun!â
He laughed once again, and a small light in the stands behind him caught Samâs attention. A woman in a runnerâs outfit charged up the steps of the arena. In one hand, she held a flaming torch that seemed to be tinged with green.
President Goodshow went quiet to watch her approach that brazier, and a pair of Ace Trainers at the top of the steps moved to the side to give her room to throw the torch in.
âI get the honor of saying this every year, and now I get to say it again,â the old man said quietly as the torch sailed through the air. âWith the burning of Ho-Ohâs flames, let the Silver Conference... BEGIN!â
The brazier at the top of the arena erupted, and the fire that blazed within seemed to give off all forms of light. In Kantoâs Conference, the flames were of Moltres, a Legendary PokĂ©mon, with the fire having been collected long ago in the past and said to have never stopped burning.
But in Johto, these flames were of Ho-Oh, a Legendary PokĂ©mon said to command rebirth and life itself. Where myths about Moltresâs flames claimed they had granted humans ingenuity, myths about Ho-Ohâs flames claimed they had granted the first human life.
The light that came from the flames was a mixture of all colors, a rainbow tinted by every hue at once. Yet, that beautiful collage only lasted a second, and the initial burn died back down to a more general mix of reds and oranges.
The brazier would remain lit for the entire Conference, and the flames would be collected again at its end to be used next year.
Just like how Ho-Ohâs fire burned in that brazier, the spirit of the Conference and the will to fight would burn in every competing trainerâs heart.
âNow then. The boring stuff. Pay attention, hm?â Charles Goodshow said.
Those words were just for the rows of trainers, and Champion Lance shot the old man a sharp look before stepping off stage with him to exchange furiously whispered words. In the back, the head nurse left with the handful of Ace Trainers to have a quiet discussion, but the head referee stayed behind. The balding man moved up to the microphone to speak about the tournament to the trainers and everyone else still listening in.
âWelcome. Charlesâs speeches are always quite enthusiastic. He tends to keep things... short.â The referee cleared his throat. âBut we need to cover the important part, now. Listen closely. I am going to explain exactly how this yearâs Silver Conference will work.â
Every trainerâs eyes were on him.
âWith two hundred fifty-six competitors, we will go through eight rounds of battles to establish this yearâs Conference champion. Unlike usual, weâll be sticking to the basics, following a classic bracket format with no twists or alternate rounds,â he explained. âThe only exception to this will happen in the final here. There, the two defeated trainers from the semifinals will have a match to establish third place, and then, only then, will we have our final battle to determine this yearâs champion.â
âBut that only concerns four of you,â the referee continued as he took in everyone here. âWe only have a single week to get through those eight rounds, and due to the... expanded number of competitors this year, expect the schedule to be compressed.â
He scrunched up his nose.
The basic intention for Conference matches was that each battle should involve a full team in a true six-on-six match. However, due to the sheer number of competitors and the size of the tournament, the time that would require would make that unfeasible, so they were putting limits on the early rounds.
Initially, trainers would only be allowed to fight with three Pokémon teams, much like the preliminaries. However, with each round that progressed, one more Pokémon would be allowed, eventually settling at the desired full, six-team matches in the fourth round.
In most cases, the rounds would give trainers one battle each day, and that would hold true for the entire tournament. Yet, with eight rounds required over seven days, one of the days needed to see two rounds take place.
And the tournament had gone with the insane decision to make that day the first.
âOn the first day alone, one hundred and ninety-two battles will take place,â the referee said, a sour note to his voice. âHalf of you will fight two battles that day. Three-quarters of you will end up eliminated.
âMy hope is that you enter those battles prepared. For most of you, those will be the only battles you see, so give them your all. Donât make the foolish mistake of holding back while preparing for the later rounds. That will only cause regret, and there are enough reasons to cause regret elsewhere in your life.
âI suppose Iâm meant to comment on Lanceâs announcement here, but...â He sighed, wiping his forehead. âIf Charles wanted to push past that, then I will too. The only thing Iâll do is to emphasize that you must give it your all. Donât even think about holding back. And keep in mind that there is more than just this tournament going on.â
He looked around.
âStay out of trouble, and win your matches. We start tomorrow morning and will be using every arena. Try your hardest, and good luck. But remember, the League will be watching.â
The rest of what he spoke about was far less serious, mostly just going over how opponents would be assigned. Battles would be randomized, mostly. Trainers had been ranked by approximate power, and rather than a true randomization across the entire tournament, trainers had a range from which they could draw their opponents.
Hearing that, Sam frowned.
And since Iâm at the end, I wonât be fighting anyone that strong. Or even anyone I know. Redi and Xavier are too far above me. I probably wonât be facing anyone ranked above half.
âAs one last note, you will not know who you are fighting until after the previous round is over,â the referee said. âYou only need to worry about your upcoming fight. The next roundâs opponents will only be announced after everyone else has already gone.â
The overall intention with the pseudo-random matches was to keep the âfairnessâ of randomization while also ensuring there was never too much of a difference in strength. There was the slight implication that âweakerâ trainers would get further in than they otherwise would, but by the third or fourth round, the number of competitors would be so far reduced that trainers would be up to fight anyone who was still in their round.
After that, a few final rules were shared, mostly just a handful of warnings and notes on certain regulations. The head referee then looked around at everyone for the last time, nodded his head once, and wished them luck.
This part of the opening ceremony ended just like that.
Voices began to spread throughout the arena as everyone discussed their hopes for the upcoming tournament. They came from both the crowd and the trainers below.
Also, a band and a variety of performers started to move onto the arena floor. After all, the League wanted the opening ceremony to be more exciting than just a few talks.
But as the trainers began to leave that lower floor to give the performers room, Sam sent a final look over his shoulder up to Ho-Ohâs flames.
This was the Conference. He and his team had made it, but he had to remember that moving on would not be easy. Just tomorrow alone would be packed. He wouldnât just have two trainers to face, but it was also the full moon. That meant watching one of Rediâs evolution attempts. And then, added to that, Cassandra was hosting an event.
He wasnât sure if heâd go.
Still, his battles tomorrow would be a true test of his teamâs strength, but Sam didnât feel nervous. He was looking forward to it.
Turning back around to continue to leave the arena, his heart beat in his chest.
After spending so long in training, he knew his team would win.
He had made sure of it.
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All of the match-ups were made known in the PokĂ©mon Center that night. The screens above the nursesâ counter rotated through pairs of opponents alongside the usual check-up information. Since it took a while for the display to rotate through all of the competitors, trainers could also go up to the counter to request information on their next opponentâs identity, or they could read them on the nearby bulletin board, but that board was so crowded Sam chose to sit back and wait for his name to appear on that screen.
Redi joined him. They stood in silence and stared out into the room, watching the other potential competitors. Sam didnât miss the way several trainers stared back. Though he had personally been placed âlast,â people hadnât exactly paid much attention to other trainersâ rankings. To them, he was still the trainer who had one the very first preliminary match with a single PokĂ©mon.
For that reason, Sam was a threat.
When Redi learned of her opponent, she wished Sam luck and then did the surprising move of running up to her room for research.
When Sam learned of his opponent, he found that they were... someone. He had no idea who they were.
Yes, his opponent was an experienced trainer, but they werenât anyone Sam had encountered before. All he knew was that they must have a strong team to get here. And when he went up to his room as well to research them, he knew that must have been true. After all, as he knew from Typhlosion, Starter PokĂ©mon were powerful.
And his opponent, Rolando, had three of them.
Alongside a Rapidash, Starmie, and Victreebel, Rolando was listed to have an Ivysaur, Wartortle, and Charmeleon. Sam was able to find Rolandoâs team and recordings of his past battles thanks to an entry on the Leagueâs archival website.
Just from a first glance, Sam could tell Rolando always preferred to use a Fire-Grass-Water core. And from the recordings, Sam could tell Rolando often relied on that for coverage to win his fights, using the advantage of super-effective moves to pressure his opponents until they fell.
It was a simple strategy, but it was an effective one. Though Rolando had never won any of the three tournaments he participated in, he had managed to reach the semi-finals twice.
âI donât know if heâs going to use any of his Starter PokĂ©mon, or if heâs going to go with his non-Starter core,â Sam mumbled, âbut we should expect an even spread of Types. In all of his battle recordings, he never doubled up.â
All of Samâs Ghost Types crowded the PokĂ©mon Center bedroom behind him, and the only source of light was the tiny monitor screen set on top of a small, wooden desk. Everyone pushed each other to try to peer out from behind Samâs head, but they settled down once Gengar and Mismagius reminded the Gastly and Haunter that they could save room by merging with the shadows.
âRolando. Our first opponent. Weâre looking him up, and heâll be looking us up, which means what heâll see is...â Sam hummed. âHeâll be aware of all of you except for Trevenant and Drakloak. Except heâll think I have a Primeape and a pure Fire Type Typhlosion. He knows Iâll have a tricky team. A Ghost Type-leaning team. But he doesnât know weâre a pure Ghost Type one.
âHeâll probably think Gengar is the biggest threat, but heâll also know I have Typhlosion in my back pocket. Except Typhloson wouldnât be that great against two-thirds of his team, so I wouldnât want to use her, so then he would know that as well.â
Gengar started to laugh; Samâs reasoning was getting ridiculous. Not only was he trying to anticipate his opponentâs choices, he was also trying to anticipate how his opponent would anticipate his own choices.
There was a give and take here, and Sam knew heâd be liable to go insane if he tried to predict every possible outcome. However, this was exactly why having a core strategy was good: it gave him a specific yet reliable plan to fall back on.
âWe have two battles to win tomorrow, but weâll focus on the first for now. As much as the referee said to give it our all, we also have to strike a balance between a few things. Conserving stamina, strategy, and energy. How much we want to reveal, how much we want to use. We usually play slowly, but if we can make the battle fast...â
Sam paused.
âActually, what if we just sweep?â
Outright trying to set up a sweep wasn't exactly a strategy that would usually work, but this was probably the only round itâd be viable. Teams were small. Trainers hadnât revealed much. As much as specifics about Rolandoâs team were unknown, the same was true for Samâs.
The plan was kind of obvious, but he could do it.
The more Sam thought about it, the more he realized he liked it.
As he turned around to check with his Pokémon, Mismagius started to giggle, and his two physical attackers rotated their arms in preparation.
âAlright. Then we have a strategy. Iâm actually kind of surprised. That was fast.â
It was late, and as much as he wanted to spend more time working out the details, with potentially two matches coming up in one day, he and his team needed the rest.
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â...Three PokĂ©mon each, with four switches allowed,â the referee said at the side of the field. âTrainers, send out your PokĂ©mon!â
Sam nodded as he held back his slight laughter at the field before him. For these early rounds, trainers would fight on one of four themed battlefieldsârock, grass, ice, or waterâwith this outcome being random.
For his battle, the field failed to benefit either trainer. The ground was covered with a thin layer of ice, and the field was interspersed with a handful of frost-covered boulders.
This kind of terrain would harshly impact most forms of movement, but Sam wasnât worried.
Most of his Pokémon could float.
But to Samâs surprise, Rolando sent out the PokĂ©mon he least expected to see here: a Rapidash. The horseâs hooves should have caused it to slip on the icy floor, but the flames on the PokĂ©monâs ankles heated its legs, and its feet neatly seared through and melted the ice to give it solid ground to run on.
Its hooves were getting a bit wet, but otherwise, Rapidashâs Fire Type was letting it ignore the frozen state of the field.
âInteresting,â Sam mumbled, but Rolandoâs PokĂ©mon didnât change his choice.
âMismagius!â he shouted.
In a flash, Mismagius appeared on the field. Sam could tell she wanted a creepy entrance but had no shadows to rise out of, so she brought her arms out to let darkness pulse out from behind her with a cry.
âRemember our plan, and make this fast. Youâll have the chance to rest afterwards, so give it your all and let everyone else handle our next match.â
Mismagiusâs eyes were shrouded by the darkness of her hat, but she sent a look back toward Sam that let him see her utter confidence on display. Across from them, Rolando was giving his own PokĂ©mon words of advice, and his Rapidash was trotting in place to demonstrate to him that its hooves could indeed sear right through the ice on the field.
The referee waited for a moment to make sure both trainers were ready. With one last check, he then blew his whistle.
The only shout that mattered pierced through the air.
âBegin!â
âShadow Sneak, Mismagius! To the rocks!â
âRapdiash, come back!â
When the horse disappeared from the field, Sam blinked in surprise.
He hadnât expected a switch so early.
They were not facing an inexperienced trainer. Rolando had compared Mismagiusâs potential to his Rapidashâs and judged the match-up was not in his favor. For everything his Rapidash could do on the field, another of his PokĂ©mon was better.
âVenusaur,â Rolando named, and the ice cracked under the weight of the PokĂ©mon that appeared.
Ah. So it evolved.
...And heâs mixing his team, too.
If a fully-evolved Starter PokĂ©mon was appearing now of all times, Sam could tell Rolando had taken the head judgeâs words to heart. He was not going to hold back.
âContinue,â the referee said.
âNasty Plot. Stay hidden and observe. Donât let it get to you.â
âSleep Powder! Everywhere! Cover the field!â
Mismagius lingered behind one of those boulders, using the large rock to hide her and let her build up her Nasty Plot. Her yellow eyes almost seemed to pierce into the Venusaur, but the Venusaur just shook, unconcerned with its seemingly absent opponent, and the large flower on its back sent pollen up and out over the entire field.
So he prepared for us. Even if Mismagius stayed in a shadow, thatâs avoidance and not protection. Sheâll fall asleep if the pollen touches her darkness.
Hiding wonât work. All weâd do is open ourselves up to easy attacks.
We need to go on the offensive, but first, we need to make sure we donât get hit by that powder.
âNight Shade,â Sam said.
A sphere of darkness burst into existence around one of those icy boulders, and Mismagiusâs control over Ghost Type energy let her push away any Sleep Powder that drifted near here.
âThere!â Rolando shouted, his eyes locking onto the darkness the moment it appeared. âVine Whip! Grab it!â
Though Mismagius had avoided the Sleep Powder, Venusaur now knew where she was.
Vines whipping out from its body, branch-thick tendrils smashed straight through to stone to swipe into Mismagiusâs darkness. Venusaur could not see her, but it could feel her, and the shock of her hiding place being destroyed meant she wasnât in a position to avoid this move.
Rather than smash through her like that stone, the vines wrapped around her body, and she was yanked right toward the Venusaur. It hadnât even moved a single step.
âNow! Razor Leaf!â Rolando yelled as Mismagius hurtled toward her opponent.
He wanted to end this battle quickly, same as Sam. A fast fight would prevent Sam from setting up or even using that many status moves.
...Which meant Sam needed to take a risk if he wanted Mismagius to escape.
âShadow Sneak! Get back!â came his shout.
They already knew Shadow Sneak did not let her phase through moves, but that self-inflicted damage was less than the damage of that Razor Leaf. Before the spinning, leaf blades could slice right through her, Mismagius grimaced and shifted back. She turned into something akin to a darkened gas, taking damage as the Vine Whip pulled through her and the Razor Leafs hit a spot she was never dragged into.
Where the vines passed through her body, her purple flesh took on a nasty, discolored grey.
âAnd Pain Split!â Sam continued, not even giving up a single moment to his opponent.
âSynthesis! Vine Whip! Razor Leaf again!â
Mismagius held out her arms, channeling her injury into her Pain Split to share the damage she took. The Venusaur groaned in pain, she recovered a bit of her vitality, and the leaves on the Grass Typeâs body glowed to let it undo the drain it had just taken.
Its Vine Whip missed her, but Venusaur wasnât aiming at Mismagius. Forgotten by the previous exchange, the Sleep Powder from before was knocked back up into the air from where it had settled on the ground, and Sam could barely return her in time before she was put to sleep.
â...and Samuel recalls his Mismagius! What an exciting battle! Already, a fourth PokĂ©mon is being forced out!â a cry echoed from the speakers set throughout the arena.
Oh yeah. I forgot they had announcers here.
Sam had been so focused on his battle that he had forgotten everything else existed.
Across from him, Rolando smiled.
The current state of the field was totally against Samâs favor. Venusaurâs Synthesis meant it had all but recovered from the damage of Pain Split, and its Sleep Powder meant there were traps all over the field. A single Vine Whip would either hit and deal damage, or it would puff the powder into the air and send Samâs PokĂ©mon to sleep.
There was also the fact that Venusaur was a tanky Pokémon. It would take several moves to faint. Combined with the recovery granted by Synthesis meant Sam would need a strong Pokémon to faint it.
But the threat of Vine Whip and Sleep Powder meant anything he sent out would have trouble approaching in the first place.
Rolandoâs trying to counter anything I do. My team works best when we have mobility, but heâs trying to completely prevent that.
I suppose I could send out Typhlosion here, but do I really want to use her in the first round? Even then, sheâs the obvious choice. Why wouldnât I use a Fire Type against a Grass Type?
So much for sweeping.
The only good thing was that Sam had learned to not underestimate his opponent without taking a loss. If Mismagius had fainted, he would be worse off, but he now knew that Rolando would be as tough as anyone else with just the previous exchange.
And this was only the first round.
Faced with limited options, Sam spent a while considering it until the referee called out to him for taking so long. Rolando had already revealed two of the three PokĂ©mon he would use in this match, and though Samâs choice wasnât the perfect counter due to the Type disadvantage, he at least saw an opportunity to make use of the team members Rolando had chosen.
âTrevenant!â
Trevenant did not have many ways to deal damage to another Grass Type, but he would at least be immune to most powder-based moves.
And, if Iâm right, his presence should bait outâ
âVenusaur, return!â Rolando called out.
Sam fought to keep his face even.
He actually took the bait.
As expected, Rolando sent out his Rapidash, intending to win this fight with his usual strategy: coverage moves. Trevenantâs Grass Type made the Fire Type an obvious counter, and Rolando looked confident that he could take out a relatively immobile tree.
Just like it had demonstrated at the start of the battle, the Rapidashâs hooves sank into the icy floor, and Trevenant did something similar to let his roots stab into the earth. Between the two of them, he was more uncomfortable with the chill, and he also seemed to be less mobile in a fight.
âContinue,â the referee said.
Rapidash took off running immediately, lowering its head while its body became coated in flames.
âFlare Blitz!â
An uncommon move.
He must have trained hard to have his Rapidash learn that.
The fire that wrapped around the Rapidashâs body meant most of Trevenantâs moves wouldnât work. No Forestâs Curse, and no Leech Seed. The second it impacted, it would deal super-effective damage to boot.
That just meant Sam would need to make sure Trevenant went unhit.
âPhantom Force,â Sam said.
And Trevenant took a single step back to completely disappear.
Off to the side, the referee held up a whistle in preparation, frowning at the sight.
It hit Sam then that Phantom Force was much like Hex; a move almost unknown in Johto. From the refereeâs perspective, Trevenant had just disappeared from the field. He wasnât aware of exactly what Trevenant was about to do, but he was ready to call a penalty if it lasted too long.
Letâs make this quick.
As Rapidash charged right through where Trevenant had just been, it left a trail of watery hoofsteps behind it. Right where it started, Trevenant reappeared, and he was far enough away to give himself a chance to use a new move.
âGrowth,â Sam said.
Rolando frowned.
âFlamethrower. If they want you to stay at range, then stay at range.â
Trevenant was hit, but he crunched down on a berry. The Sitrus berryâs juices healed him, and he disappeared once more to reappear behind one of the boulders, much like Mismagius before him.
âFlare Blitz. Through the rocks.â
As it stood, the cover protected Trevenant and gave him time for more uses of Growth.
Still, rather than directly attack him, Rolandoâs Rapidash began charging through the field. With ease, its Flare Blitz saw each and every stone shatter from the force of its attack. It was taking recoil damage, but every removed boulder was one less place Samâs PokĂ©mon could hide.
Clearly, Rolando expected his Rapidash to handle Trevenant, but he was taking a risk. He was giving Trevenant the chance to repeatedly store energy with Growth, but at the same time, Growth only increased offenses. Not defense.
...And a single Flamethrower had already forced him to eat his Sitrus Berry. In a way, Rolandoâs strategy wasnât even wrong.
Just Misguided.
âPhantom Force,â Sam ordered.
As the very last stone shattered from the Flare Blitz, Trevenant disappeared, and Rapidash slowed to a halt, huffing and puffing from the self-inflicted damage it just took. The heat of its flames meant the field lacked massive patches of ice, turning most of it into a muddy brown. The stones, too, were just fragments. The battlefield was almost back to its normal state, it was now maybe just a bit cold.
But Trevenant had been building up, and as he reappeared, his sole red eye lingered on his opponent. It glowed brighter than ever before.
âOne last move, Rapidash,â Rolando said. âWeâve set the field to win. So take it out with Fire Blast!â
Much stronger than Flamethrower, this move was a legitimate threat, and its burst would see much of the field be covered with heat.
Sam remained quiet. Trevenant had a counter.
After all, Trevenantâs entire strategy was about defense. If Typhlosion could use Detect, why couldnât he take inspiration from that and figure out Protect?
Dipping into his stored energy, Trevenant brought up his arms and infused himself with it, the flames passing over him harmlessly. Sam didnât need to say anything before he suddenly fell through the floor, and he practically hopped out of the ground behind Rapidash.
It neighed in fright.
Still, this was a strong PokĂ©mon, and it wasnât one to pull back from an opponentâs moves. It jabbed its horn right into Trevenantâs chest.
He took it.
And then his arms wrapped around its neck. He threw himself over its lowered head, and his roots jabbed into its back.
âNo! Flare Blitz, quickly!â
Trevenant was burning. So was the Rapidash. Sam could see the glaze that seemed to come over his eyes.
This was stirring up the bad kinds of memories.
But Trevenant was not the same PokĂ©mon he was back then. Heâd been traveling with Sam, and he was on a team filled with friends.
His bark tore open for him to let out a horrible wailâa war cry. Roots and claws jabbing into Rapidashâs body, and though the move he used was resisted, it was boosted many times over from the energy heâd built with Growth.
Rapidash ran, burned itself, and tried to get Trevenant off, but it couldnât. Rolando couldnât exactly return his PokĂ©mon either with Trevenant on the Rapidashâs back. No matter how much it ran back and forth, it could not get him to fall, and his Horn Leech continued to drain it.
Eventually, its eyes rolled up, and it slid across the floor.
Funnily enough, the now-muddy field actually helped Trevenant, as Rapidashâs collapse sent him falling, and the mud put out his burn. Yet, despite all of that, he was burned yet healthy.
He picked himself up, dripping with mud, and his eye still pierced through the shadows that now covered him.
âCh-Charmeleon,â Rolando said.
There was something about the fear in his voice that made Sam smile.
As a Pokémon so close to a Dragon, the Charmeleon did not back down from a threat, and it charged Trevenant with its claws glowing.
Rolando did not stop it.
Trevenantâs claw, wreathed in shadow, snapped out to grab its throat, and he threw it to the ground and drained it until it fainted.
âVenusaur,â Rolando said next.
His heavy, defensive Pokémon appeared on the field.
Trevenant was still healthy.
When the Vine Whip was called, Trevenant was already gone, and the Venusaur let out a horrible roar when Trevenant burst out of the shadow underneath it.
Being struck in its vulnerable stomach, Trevenantâs Phantom Force landed critically. The Venusaur coughed once before falling flat, eyes closing, and Trevenant dragged himself out from underneath.
That was that.
âI have never seen such an impressive turnaround in such an early match! Just like his bout in the preliminaries, Samuel Greyson sweeps through his opponentâs team! The battle is over!â
The referee called the match in Samâs favor, of course, and Rolando seemed slightly stunned before returning his Venusaur. He had earned all eight Gym Badges only to be crushed just like that.
Sam had established himself as a threat in his first battle, and now that was proven to not be a fluke here.
âGood battle,â Sam said.
âGood battle,â Rolando said, shaking Samâs hand at the side to avoid the fieldâs mud. âYou didnât even get to experience my trick.â
âThe Sleep Powder?â
âNo. The PokĂ©mon I used. I normally go with Grass-Water-Fire for a reason, but this time I went with Grass-Fire-Fire. I thought that was clever enough to catch you off-guard, and with that much light from the fire...â He let out a sigh. âIt didnât exactly work.â
Sam left the field after thanking Rolando for a good battle, and they both waved to the audience before disappearing in the tunnels below.
With this, Rolando was eliminated, and Sam was moving on to the next round later today.
...Except, he might have just revealed most of what Trevenant could do and just how aggressive he was now running his team. As much as it wasnât a true reflection of his strategy, he had won, and future opponents would be more prepared.
Oops?
==========================================================================
Author Note:
I enjoy sweeps, but this is basically the last time Sam will be able to pull one off.
Iâll be using Victory Road trainers for Samâs ârandomâ battles, but Generation II lacks any trainers on Victory Road outside of the playerâs rival. Iâll mostly be looking at the Kanto gamesâ trainers, specifically Fire Red and Leaf Green, as trainers are nameless in Gen I.
Pokémon (and people) included in this chapter:
Charmeleon
Ivysaur / Venusaur
Rapidash
Starmie
Victreebel
Wartortle
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Comments
Haha, poor Rolando. His extremely simple strategy and his pride in his âtrickâ made me laugh.
Doctor Xerox
2025-05-03 02:29:40 +0000 UTCRevealing the trevenant isn't that big of a deal, not compared to the 2 game breaking new Pokemon he's hiding lol
Runaway_Cactuar
2025-05-03 01:14:48 +0000 UTC