
Ho-Oh is also obtainable in FR/LG via a special Nintendo event alongside Lugia. All of these pokemon are not actually obtainable in Colosseum alone, meaning you do catch Noctowl, but you have to breed it R/S/E or FR/LG to get Hoot-Hoot. Other than that, you can obtain any of the other Hoenn Dex pokemon (except for Jirachi and Deoxys) in your individual R/S game.Ĭolosseum introduced us back to many Johto pokemon, though we missed any that had ties to FR/LG pokemon since we didn't have those games yet (Steelix, Kingdra, Slowking). You can't have the other two starters you didn't pick, and you can't get the other fossil in the same game. Sapphire's Lunatone and Ruby's Zangoose are really the rarest pokemon between both games (since neither are in Emerald or FR/LG), but they are obtainable in XD: Gale of Darkness. I'll correct it and credit you for noticing it ASAP. The Kanto and Hoenn pokemon are the only starters that require multiple play-throughs or trading to get all 3 (excluding Emerald, you can obtain all 3 Johto starters in Colosseum and XD: Gale of Darkness). Of course one-off pokemon for the GBA games (starters, fossils in both R/S and FR/LG but not Emerald for example) require multiple play-throughs or trading with a friend who took the choice you didn't. Kyogre is only available in Sapphire and not found in Ruby, but both are in Emerald. See what I'm saying?īasically if I say ONLY, I'm talking about the two games you're on (noted by the _ Generation). But between both FR/LG, it is only found in FR. Skarmory is also available in Colosseum and both Ruby and Sapphire versions. Obviously I'm doing this from a generational standpoint. Also to shed some light on where pokemon can be found, to better make a decision on what game you buy, in case you don't own all versions like me. I decided to do this guide so you know what pokemon are exclusive to your game.
