really? again? how many people have posted this stupid conspiracy theory verbatim? and how does that make Red and Blue a "good" relationship?Skyesby said:Red and Blue from the first Generation Pokemon games of the same name. Why?
Consider this: When Red first fights Blue after their incident at the lab, he has a Rattata. Since he keeps it around, it evolves into a Raticate, which Red fights on the SS Anne before fighting Surge. Red doesn't see him for a while before suddenly running into him in the Pokemon Tower in Lavender Town. Where he is facing a lone gravestone. When Red talks to him, he turns and rather angrily asks him what he's doing here, since none of his pokemon look dead. He then asks Red if he know what it feels like. From that battle onward, he never has his Raticate again.
So with that in mind, let's consider something else: Blue's Raticate was severely injured in the fight on the SS Anne, but because of all the confusion and chaos on a major cruiseliner the boy couldn't find it medical care fast enough, and it died. When Red finds him in Lavender Town, he was putting his old departed friend to rest. He never outwardly tells Red that he's responsible, but he does know it. Despite trying to tell himself that it's not Red's fault, that it was just bad luck, he knows it was you that killed his pet, and he will never truly forgive him. But he doesn't harbor an active grudge or attempt to kill him, nothing so childish. That impish kid nature of his shattered long ago. Instead he channels this grief and rage into determination: To fulfill his promise to his departed friend and become the Kanto champion: To finally show Red up and make him face humiliation. Which he does... For all of five minutes, before Red appears and decimates his team again. On top of that, Professor Oak, his only remaining father figure (yeah, he doesn't have any parents) appears, chastises him for 'not caring about his pokemon enough' after all he did for just one of them, and then piles praise and glory on Red. After this Blue is never seen again in the game, and I think we all know why.
Keep in mind that Red is the player character. So throughout the course of a kid's game, you singlehandedly destroy a young boy without laying a finger on him.
If you're going to psychoanalyze a one-dimensional video game character, lets analyze him. Blue is quite arrogant in his attitudes and speeches, one might even consider him a bully. He is clearly skilled with Pokemon to challenge you (the player) at every turn. AND, considering you have the ability to own hundreds of Pokemon and they never die in battle, ever (notice everyone else in the Lavender Tower says their Pokemon died of "old age" or were "hit by a car" not one person makes any reference to "battled too hard" or "died in/after battle"), then it is likely to assume he simply obtained a stronger pokemon.
Also, is Blue really so obsessed with the player such that he has no other friends, relatives, pokemon, etc.? Signs point to "no". Consider how you obtained your own pokemon. You caught some, and traded for others (including with in-game characters). Particular evidence of this is Blue's Golem, which only evolves once traded (and appears after he drops Raticate). Chances are, he either traded Raticate to obtain Golem, or dumped the rat in the computer box (as you probably did about halfway through the game, aka Lavender Town?).
Cannonically, Blue (3 years later, aka. Gold and Silver) plies his skills to become the Viridian Gym leader after Red takes down Giovanni and Team Rocket. (speaking of psychological murder, where does HE go hm? does he "disappear" as Blue does at the end of the original Pokemons? he's no longer in the gym after you beat him and Team Rocket is gone and makes no direct appearance later. How would you feel if you were a powerful mob boss defeated and thwarted by a 10 year old and his pet rat, lizard, turtle, and whatever else? he should have just shot you after you defeated him. how's that for character development?)
Admittedly none of that is known at the end of Red/Blue. It's called a "cliffhanger". It makes you want to find out what happened and therefore play any sequels that come out. Stop trying to find meaning that isn't there.