Pokemon players slam “lazy” Pokedex and call for changes

Pokédex evolution concerns: Why fans demand ORAS features return

The Pokédex Controversy

Recent discussions in the Pokémon community have highlighted growing dissatisfaction with the current Pokédex implementation across recent titles. What began as a simple digital encyclopedia in 1996 has evolved through eight generations, yet many players argue recent iterations have regressed in functionality.

A viral Reddit thread with over 15k upvotes has sparked debate about whether Game Freak’s approach to the Pokédex needs fundamental restructuring.

Modern Pokédex Shortcomings

Missing Features

Players note the current Pokédex omits crucial information that was previously available through external resources. Competitive battlers particularly miss:

  • Evolution methods and requirements
  • Complete level-up move lists
  • Egg group classifications
  • Base stat comparisons

“The Pokédex should be the ultimate in-game resource,” argues competitive player @VGC_Pro. “Right now I need three different apps open just to plan my team’s development.”

Community Frustrations

Common pain points include:

Issue % of Players Affected
Lack of evolution info 78%
Missing move data 65%
No breeding details 59%

This data comes from a recent fan survey of 2,500 trainers conducted by PokeCommunity.net.

What ORAS Did Right

DexNav System

Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire (2014) introduced several innovations still unmatched:

  • Real-time route Pokémon tracking
  • Encounter history per location
  • Search functionality for specific species
  • Visual indicators for completion

“DexNav was revolutionary,” recalls longtime fan Sarah K. “I could actually use it to hunt for specific abilities or hidden moves without leaving the game.”

Field Sightings

ORAS also innovated by counting overworld Pokémon sightings toward Pokédex completion, a feature many expected to become standard:

  1. NPC Pokémon counted as “seen”
  2. Overworld encounters registered
  3. Gym leader teams auto-logged

What Players Want Changed

The community proposes several improvements for future titles:

  • Tiered Information: Basic data upfront, with advanced stats unlockable
  • Integration: Link Pokédex to breeding and battle facilities
  • Customization: Let players prioritize displayed information

Game designer Mark Rosewater suggests: “The Pokédex should grow with the player. New trainers get simple info, while veterans unlock deep mechanics data.”

For now, players continue using third-party resources, but hope future generations will make the Pokédex truly comprehensive.

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