Day 27 of the journey — cloudy.
When Reiji woke up this morning, the villa was quiet. Naoki wasn’t around, and Reiji had no idea where he’d run off to.
He looked at the on-guard Spinarak and Darkrai. “Anything unusual last night? When did Naoki leave?”
“He left before dawn,” Darkrai said, pointing at a black backpack beside the sofa. “He came back once, dropped that off, then left again.”
“What’s inside?” Reiji picked it up and unzipped it.
“Lots of Gems,” Darkrai said. It had checked earlier, since Naoki had shoved the bag into its hands in the middle of the night.
Back then, Naoki had even said, “Darkrai, please give this backpack to the boss…”
“Why didn’t you hand it over yourself?” Darkrai had asked. Getting dragged outside at that hour just to be forced into carrying a backpack wasn’t exactly pleasant.
“If I give it to him myself, he definitely won’t take it,” Naoki had said. “He’s collected nearly a thousand Gems lately. This place is basically sold out now. These are the last ones I could get my hands on, and the boss really needs them…”
Naoki had been watching. Even the boss—someone who’d pulled out high-grade Fire Stones and even a quasi–Elite Four tier item like Charcoal—had stopped buying Gems and left Mandarin Island North. That only meant one thing: he’d run out of money.
Naoki didn’t know how many more Gems Reiji needed. He could only do what he could—buy out the black market’s last stock and use it to repay the help he’d been given.
“Fifty Poison Gems and forty Ghost Gems. Total value: forty-one million,” Reiji said after counting them out. Then he had Gengar swallow the entire pile.
Naoki had already made the choice, and he’d even bolted—probably afraid of getting chewed out, or afraid Reiji would refuse. The kid really did overthink everything. At this point, refusing wasn’t even an option.
Since Naoki had gone this far, Reiji stopped pushing back. He accepted the Gems, climbed onto Pelipper, set his heading, and flew straight for Rind Island.
He’d already had twenty Gems left. Add these ninety, and that made one hundred and ten Gems in total. Even if every last one went to Gengar, it barely moved the needle.
Gengar’s potential development would have to pause here for now. When he had money again, he’d continue. Until then, he couldn’t magic Pokédollars out of thin air.
As for everything he’d picked up in the City underground black market, he still had…
Two ore backpacks, plus Rock-type and Ground-type held items he wasn’t selling, an Everstone and a Float Stone, a pile of Gems of various types he hadn’t sold yet, and several hundred boxes of high-grade Pokéblocks of different flavors.
Riku’s stash was still there too: Mystic Water, a Water Gem, a Damp Rock, Soft Sand, and a Swampert Egg.
He also hadn’t sold his Ground Gems, Dazzling Honey, Moomoo Milk and other supplements. The Fire Gem was still with him as well—he’d just save it for Hanhan to eat.
And there was still a Heat Rock, Black Sludge, Poison Barb, a Dark Gem, and a few thousand more boxes of high-grade Pokéblocks.
Those were the items he had left. As for his cash…
Yesterday, he’d stocked up on two months of food: 300,000. Getting Zubat’s stitches removed: 10,000.
After adding everything up, he still had 5,656,000 Pokédollars left.
That five million was his last cushion. He was broke again—and this was the cost of raising just one Pokémon.
He had two full squads as his core lineup: ten Pokémon. If they all burned money like this, he couldn’t afford to keep them.
Luckily, the others weren’t like Gengar. They could be raised slowly. If everyone needed this kind of spending, he might as well quit training and go professional as a robber.
He could also use what he knew from his previous life and invest early in certain opportunities here.
But he also knew those “opportunities” were just bait without the strength to protect them. Without power as a deterrent, he’d just be another walking fat lamb.
It was a loop. Without strength, he couldn’t hold onto good things. With strength, he wouldn’t be short on money anymore. That left him stuck in the awkward middle—good stuff existed, but he didn’t dare bring it out.
For now, improving strength came first. A hard fist was the real truth here—same as how people used to “reason” with cannon range back in his old world.
Reiji rode Pelipper through open sky. The blue overhead had thinned to a single blazing sun, and the sea below rolled with layers of gold like scales. He watched the glittering water for a long moment, taking it in properly for the first time.
Back in his old life, even a view like this was rare in the mountain gullies. Now he could cross islands on a Flying-type and look down on it all from high above.
Mandarin Island North was close to Rind Island. After just a little over two hours, the outline of the island finally appeared ahead.
The island was marked on the map. A long river cut straight through it from end to end—the Rind River, a channel linking north and south.
Magikarp born here would always return when they matured, swimming back upstream to climb the waterfall. If they pulled off that climb, they “leapt the Dragon Gate,” reached the lake above, and evolved there.
A Magikarp that completed the climb had a fifty percent chance to evolve.
Half would be eliminated by the climb itself. Then evolution would eliminate half of what remained. In the end, one in four would evolve—and that was already an unusually high rate.
He’d come to the right place.
After reaching the island, Reiji didn’t have Pelipper land. Instead, he had it follow the Rind River, searching for a good campsite.
The river ran north to south, with a large lake in the middle. That lake wasn’t a good place to camp. Fifty percent of the Magikarp that made it there could evolve.
If he started catching Magikarp there, some idiot might evolve into a Gyarados and decide to take a bite out of him. Camping by the lake was asking for trouble.
Besides, there was a small cabin by the lake, which meant someone lived there. If Reiji remembered right, it would be the Magikarp watcher from the anime—Quincy T. Quackenpoker.
An old man who’d been observing Magikarp here for a long time. Reiji didn’t plan on getting involved with him. And the old man had better not try to stop him from catching Magikarp, either.
After circling along the river, Reiji found the right spot: downstream. All the Magikarp would pass through the lower waterfall on their way to the lake.
Catching Magikarp heading upstream was best here. It also made releasing them easier—once released, they could keep climbing.
With the campsite chosen, Reiji had Pelipper descend. He sent out Poliwhirl and the others to help pitch the tent. He planned to stay here long-term.
This wasn’t the Magikarp return season. He didn’t know when they would come back, and right now the river had none at all.
He decided to wait two days first. If Magikarp still didn’t show up, he’d go ask Quincy—someone who’d lived here for years would know the timing.
If he’d missed the season entirely, he’d have no choice but to head to the Gym and apply as an apprentice, then come back another time to catch Magikarp.
Once the tent was up, he unpacked folding chairs, pots and pans, and the rest of the camping supplies. He also set up an inflatable bath—one for Wishiwashi, and one for Magikarp.
He didn’t trust leaving those two in the river. If a predator showed up and ate his fish, he wouldn’t even have a place to cry about it.
Whether or not the Magikarp return happened while he was here, he planned to release Magikarp on this island. Stay or go—up to it. Still, after following him for so long, he wasn’t sure if it would really leave.
With camp arranged, Reiji lit a fire and cooked lunch for both himself and the Pokémon. After eating, they could train in the forest.
He wasn’t on a tight schedule anymore. Since leaving Trovitopolis City, the team had gone seven days without proper training. Now there was nothing to disrupt it.
After lunch, Poliwhirl and Scyther—two battle addicts—headed into the forest together. Poliwhirl’s afternoon training was Moisture sensing. Scyther’s was Swarm. The two sparred while they worked.
Pelipper had carried him here, so it didn’t need afternoon training. It could rest until tomorrow.
Kingler took Croagunk and Shelmet to work on accuracy drills. Accuracy and type matchups were the basics of Pokémon battles. Understand matchups, land your moves, and only then could you start refining real combat technique.
If you couldn’t even hit Water Gun, what were you doing talking about battling? That was exactly what Poliwhirl and Scyther were working toward. He’d taught both of them type matchups too.
Back when he was still training them in the dream, he’d used a full Pokédex encyclopedia. He’d flip through common entries and teach them, one by one, what types other Pokémon had.
At the same time, he’d have Darkrai create illusions so they could recognize them—what type you should use to counter a given Pokémon.
Once they learned this, they could adapt mid-fight and choose the right attacks instead of blindly following habits.
Pokémon needed their own judgment. If the Trainer hadn’t given an order—or didn’t have time to—then a Pokémon making the right call could cover the Trainer’s gaps.
That required constant combat practice: sharpening technique, building experience, and improving the ability to adapt under pressure.
Croagunk and Shelmet were drilling accuracy. With Kingler supervising, Reiji wasn’t worried. Kingler’s own afternoon training was defense—getting hit.
Both of their moves could hit Kingler, and they could help it practice Iron Defense and Amnesia at the same time. Nothing was wasted.
Hanhan had already gone off to headbutt trees again. Its skin must have been itching badly—he was probably going to be scrubbing off a fresh layer of dead hide later.
Then there were Gengar and Zubat. Both were running accuracy training too. Type matchups could wait—accuracy came first.
Their targets were fixed: the trees along the riverbank. They’d master stationary targets first. Starting with moving targets right away was an easy way to shatter confidence.
Once they were steady, they could start beating on Kingler. That would be their moving target. After boosting its defenses, that guy was basically all shell and toughness—nothing they did would really hurt it.
As for Darkrai, Reiji didn’t need to babysit it. It had already gone into the woods to mess with sleeping Pokémon. Its focus was still on Dream Eater—trying to feed what it gained back into its Bad Dreams.
Reiji didn’t know if that had any real meaning. But as Darkrai grew stronger, its control over energy kept improving. Restricting the nightmares it leaked unconsciously, and mastering Bad Dreams, would come naturally with time.
Ditto and Spinarak didn’t train today. Ditto had spent days “changing faces” nonstop; the little guy had earned a break. Still, it would need Protect training tomorrow or the day after.
Spinarak also needed Protect training. Accuracy wasn’t necessary anymore—its moving-target triple-shot was already good enough, and there was no point grinding it further.
Reiji didn’t demand much from support Pokémon. If it could land a triple-shot on a moving target, that was enough.
Poliwhirl was different. At this point, it could land a moving-target triple-shot even while blindfolded. It was already used to that kind of training.
Letting Poliwhirl spar with Scyther also served another purpose: teaching. Scyther ranked third in strength right now, so only Poliwhirl could properly coach it.
Reiji’s standard for Poliwhirl was harsher: blindfolded, moving, dodging attacks, and still hitting a moving target.
That was the strictest form of accuracy training. Poliwhirl was stuck on the final step—one last push, and it would clear it.
He’d split accuracy training into tiers: the first three levels, and the last three. Each level also had three or four difficulty steps. Support Pokémon only needed the first three; the back half was too brutal.
The first three: stationary targets, moving targets, hitting moving targets while you’re moving.
The last three: blindfolded stationary targets, blindfolded moving targets, blindfolded—moving while hitting moving targets.
And each difficulty could scale: one target, two targets, three targets, four targets…
Only certain Pokémon trained the back half—Poliwhirl, Zubat, Scyther, Croagunk, Gengar, Darkrai, and others like them.
Poliwhirl had Moisture sensing. Zubat had Supersonic echolocation. Scyther had Swarm. Croagunk had Anticipation.
Gengar and Darkrai both had psychic sensing—that was only one part of it. They could also hide in shadows, making them hard to find, and they could sense what was inside the shade.
Darkrai even had another kind of sensing Reiji had never heard of. It was probably tied to Darkrai being a Mythical Pokémon. A lot of legendaries had something like that—an absurd level of perception.
For Pokémon with those senses, Reiji demanded blindfold training in the back tiers. They had to locate enemies through sensing alone, attack accurately, and evade attacks they couldn’t see. The blindfold made everything harder.
Pokémon without that kind of perception didn’t need it. Right now, Poliwhirl and Scyther were using combat itself to sharpen their senses—tracking an opponent while also dodging.
This was all just foundation work. After accuracy came move proficiency and ability proficiency, then speed, offense, and defense conditioning.
Type matchups and combat technique were already advanced training. Then came the next step: perception training and combo techniques—core tactics.
And because each Pokémon had a different role, he assigned different training accordingly. Pelipper as team support. Kingler and Rhyhorn as tanks. Poliwhirl and Scyther as the push-in and finisher pair. Shelmet as a harassment specialist.
Once all of that came together, a core Pokémon would be fully formed. At that point, he wouldn’t need to keep his head down. He’d start showing his edge—then pushing into the spotlight, and eventually making a real name for himself.
A battle was only a battle when both sides were evenly matched.
A real fight was different. He wouldn’t leave the enemy even a sliver of chance. If he could kill in one blow, he would. No hesitation. No dragging it out.
After assigning training to twelve Pokémon, he looked at the rest—Butterfree, Slowpoke, Staryu, Farfetch’d…
He had all but Farfetch’d focus on Confusion training. Farfetch’d didn’t train; it helped him chop wood, slice ingredients, and keep the fire going. The duck was still useful.
While the Pokémon trained, Reiji stayed busy too. Cooking dinner for more than a dozen Pokémon wasn’t exactly easy.
Once Farfetch’d finished the camp chores, Reiji sent it into the forest to pick Berries. Spinarak, Ditto, and Butterfree went with it.
Butterfree was always trying to slack off during training anyway. If it wasn’t training, it could at least do some work—and it really did help.
When dinner was ready, Reiji had Pelipper call back the Pokémon training in the woods. Everyone formed two circles around the fire—small Pokémon in the inner ring, bigger ones on the outside.
“Mui-mui.” Butterfree saw itself as the big sister. Not only did it insist on sitting in the outer ring, it also insisted on sitting beside Reiji.
“Yobo.” Poliwhirl sat beside Reiji too, and nobody dared fight for that spot. Poliwhirl’s status had been earned with its fists, and everyone accepted it as the big brother.
Aside from never having fought Darkrai, none of the others could beat Poliwhirl.
“Kook.” Kingler sat in the outer ring as well, right beside Poliwhirl. It was Poliwhirl’s little follower.
“Huff-huff.” Rhyhorn really wanted to sit in the inner ring, but everyone dragged it back. There was no way the inner ring could fit that walking food-mountain.
“Peli.” Pelipper sat in the outer ring beside Butterfree. Those two loved bickering the most. Every time Pelipper carried Reiji in flight, Butterfree would get mad and go whining to Reiji for comfort.
“Sha.” Scyther sat in the outer ring too. It didn’t care about the politics. It only wanted to challenge the strong—especially Poliwhirl, and maybe even test itself against Darkrai.
“Gwa-gwa.” Croagunk was also in the outer ring. Nobody sat near it—its toxins were only getting stronger. It didn’t care. In its mind, there was only Reiji. Reiji didn’t mind it, so it didn’t mind anything else.
Darkrai sat across from Reiji in the outer ring, close to Croagunk. Only Darkrai would choose that seat.
“Ya-don.” Slowpoke sat in front of Reiji, still looking dull and slow as ever. It lagged behind on everything. Everyone knew it was acting, though—it simply couldn’t be bothered to move.
“Shelmet, shelmet.” Shelmet sat beside Slowpoke in the inner ring. After spending so long with the group, it had blended into the family. Everyone treated it well, and Butterfree even shared honey with it often.
“Gah-gah.” Farfetch’d sat beside Slowpoke as well. It no longer attacked Reiji. Its hatred for humans had faded. It could even help cook now—a handy little assistant.
“Keh-keh.” Gengar, the big fat guy, should’ve been in the outer ring, but it forced its way into the inner ring anyway. It was still a baby, after all—and it ended up sitting close to Croagunk.
“Tss-tss.” Zubat sat in the inner ring too. It was the newest member, and with so many seniors around, it still didn’t dare speak loudly.
“Ii-to.” Spinarak sat in the inner ring as well. It was the hardest-working one, often stuck on night watch, and it never complained. As long as it got food, it was satisfied.
Ditto was a total social butterfly. Aside from getting tired during face-changing, it thrived in this big family—matching whoever it was talking to, speaking in their style without missing a beat.
“Heh-cha.” Staryu still felt a bit stiff around the group. It was closest with Butterfree and Slowpoke—mostly because they all had psychic moves.
“Karu-karu.” Magikarp stayed in the inflatable bath, poking its head up to stare at the fire while chatting along with everyone else.
“Woo, woo.” Wishiwashi was in the bath too. It was the boss now—Magikarp couldn’t beat it at all. One tail smack could make Dummy cry. It stole food constantly.
Reiji still hadn’t expected a Pokémon he’d caught on a whim to become this strong.
All eighteen of his Pokémon were here. Add the two Eggs, and that made twenty in total. They sat around the fire in a big outer circle and a small inner one, noisy and lively as they ate dinner together in the sunset. By the time they finished, the sky had already darkened.
It had been almost three months since he arrived in the Pokémon world.
And somewhere along the way, he’d built a team he could trust. These eighteen Pokémon were his foundation.
Once these little guys grew up, there wouldn’t be anywhere in this world he couldn’t go. He’d travel the entire Pokémon world with them, then find a quiet place to settle down.
After that, he could finally fish in peace. No interruptions. Just living happily with this bunch of adorable troublemakers.
There was no training tonight. In the wild, you couldn’t push too hard—you had to keep stamina in reserve in case wild Pokémon decided to crash the party.
On Rind Island, nights were for rest. Train in the day, sleep at night…
[End of chapter]
[100 Power Stones = Extra Chapter]
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Source: Webnovel.com, updated by NovelKeep
Chapters
- Chapter 492 - 492 – Parting Ways
- Chapter 491 - 491 – Two Matches
- Chapter 490 - 490 – Reggie Steps In
- Chapter 489 489 – An Unexpected Encounter
- Chapter 488 488 – An Unexpected Acquaintance
- Chapter 487 487 – Pineco
- Chapter 486 486 – A Small Goal
- Chapter 485 485 – Kangaskhan Herd
- Chapter 484 - 484 – Missing Person Notice
- Chapter 483 - 483 – Team Rocket Trio
- Chapter 482 - 482 – Catching a Diglett
- Chapter 481 - 481 – The Second Time
- Chapter 480 - 480 – Squinty Eyes
- Chapter 479 479 – A Long Night
- Chapter 478 478 – Skirmish
- Chapter 477 477 – Chaos
- Chapter 476 476 – The Sneak Gets Robbed
- Chapter 475 475 – Weezing
- Chapter 474 474 – Keep Making Money
- Chapter 473 473 – Back on Kinnow Island
- Chapter 472 472 – Feeling Out the Magnemite
- Chapter 471 - 471 – Meeting Offline
- Chapter 470 470 – A Way Out for Ordinary Trainers
- Chapter 469 469 – A Talk Through a Nightmare
- Chapter 468 468 – Running into an Old Acquaintance
- Chapter 467 - 467 – Koffing
- Chapter 466 466 – Gringey City
- Chapter 465 465 – Riolu’s Resolve
- Chapter 464 464 – Riolu
- Chapter 463 463 – Surviving Between Giants
- Chapter 462 - 462 – Backstab
- Chapter 461 - 461 – Flipping Him
- Chapter 460 - 460 – The Light Before Dawn
- Chapter 459 - 459 – A Night of Playing Dirty
- Chapter 458 458 – Recon at the Buffet
- Chapter 457 457 – Riolu
- Chapter 456 456 – Another Encounter
- Chapter 455 455 – Looking at Her Own Grave
- Chapter 454 454 – Watching the Drama Live
- Chapter 453 - 453 – Heat Crash
- Chapter 452 452 – Dirty Tactics
- Chapter 451 451 – Gym Battle
- Chapter 450 450 – A Pseudo-Legendary and Mega Stones
- Chapter 449 449 – A Falling-Out
- Chapter 448 448 – The Misty Forest
- Chapter 447 - 447 – Nothing Pays Faster Than Robbing the Black Market
- Chapter 446 - 446 – Gallade
- Chapter 445 445 – Opening a Gym Wouldn’t Be Bad Either
- Chapter 444 444 – Evolution
- Chapter 443 443 – Croagunk Shows What It Can Do
- Chapter 442 442 – Black Market Battles
- Chapter 441 441 – The Dark Side of the Luxury Cruise Ship
- Chapter 440 - 440 – Rhydon Wants a Fee
- Chapter 439 - 439 – Special Ability
- Chapter 438 438 – News About Amber’s Mother
- Chapter 437 - 437 – Volcano Badge
- Chapter 436 436 – Playing Dirty
- Chapter 435 435 – Gym Battle
- Chapter 434 434 – Divorced
- Chapter 433 433 – Arcanine
- Chapter 432 432 – Reunion
- Chapter 431 431 – Blaine
- Chapter 430 430 – Wake Up
- Chapter 429 429 – The Rainbow Wing
- Chapter 428 - 428 – This Damn World
- Chapter 427 427 – Gary Really Does Have a Cheer Squad
- Chapter 426 - 426 – Where a Trainer’s Dream Begins
- Chapter 425 425 – Giovanni’s Deception
- Chapter 424 424 – Team Rocket in Motion
- Chapter 423 - 423 – Mewtwo Rampage
- Chapter 422 - 422 – Mewtwo
- Chapter 421 - 421 – Destination Kanto
- Chapter 420 420 – Pokémon Transfers
- Chapter 419 - 419 – The Road Out
- Chapter 418 418 – The Big Brute Got Cocky
- Chapter 417 417 – Evolution
- Chapter 416 - 416 – Arriving on Mandarin Island North
- Chapter 415 415 – Setting Off
- Chapter 414 414 – Kabuto Reappears
- Chapter 413 413 – A Broken-Bowl Start
- Chapter 412 412 – Fishing Buddy, Drinking Buddy
- Chapter 411 411 – Visitors
- Chapter 410 410 – Sou’s Secret
- Chapter 409 409 – A Slightly Bigger Ant
- Chapter 408 408 – Bounty Hunters Strike
- Chapter 407 407 – Karrablast
- Chapter 406 - 406 – Five Advanced-Tier Pokémon
- Chapter 405 - 405 – Elite Trainer
- Chapter 404 - 404 – Shelmet
- Chapter 403 - 403 – Obscenely Rich
- Chapter 402 - 402 – The Cuckoo’s-Nest Plan
- Chapter 401 - 401 – Pelipper
- Chapter 400 400 – Night Raid
- Chapter 399 399 – Critical-Hit Build...
- Chapter 398 398 – Rhyhorn and Scyther
- Chapter 397 397 – Keep the Lapdog Calm
- Chapter 396 - 396 – Team Rocket Is Toxic
- Chapter 395 - 395 – Croagunk’s Changes
- Chapter 394 - 394 – Kingler’s Changes
- Chapter 393 - 393 – Don’t Call Me That
- Chapter 392 392 – Don’t Make It Too Melodramatic
- Chapter 391 391 – A Sneaky One
- Chapter 390 – Poliwhirl’s Change Advertisement
- Chapter 389 – Rookie Trainer
- Chapter 388 388 – Workplace Pro
- Chapter 387 - 387 – A Promise From Back Then
- Chapter 386 - 386 – City Tricks Run Deep
- Chapter 385 - 385 – It’s All a Setup
- Chapter 384 - 384 – Gym Battle
- Chapter 383 - 383 – Acting Gym Leader
- Chapter 382 382 – Mikan Island
- Chapter 381 381 – Poliwhirl...
- Chapter 380 - 380 – Poliwhirl vs. Darkrai
- Chapter 379 379 – Scyther’s First Battle
- Chapter 378 - 378 – Shelmet’s First Battle
- Chapter 377 - 377 – Refusal
- Chapter 376 - 376 – Assessment
- Chapter 375 - 375 – Kumquat Island
- Chapter 374 - 374 – Here They Come, Here They Come
- Chapter 373 - 373 – Leaving
- Chapter 372 372 – Evolution, Mega Evolution
- Chapter 371 - 371 – Going Home
- Chapter 370 370 – Leaving
- Chapter 369 369 – Farewell
- Chapter 368 368 – The Advantage Is Mine
- Chapter 367 367 – Ambush
- Chapter 366 366 – There’s a Rat
- Chapter 365 365 – Reunion
- Chapter 364 364 – Hiss
- Chapter 363 363 – Orphan
- Chapter 362 362 – In Your Next Life
- Chapter 361 361 – Almost Starved to Death
- Chapter 360 - 360 – Make Your Move
- Chapter 359 - 359 – Mules
- Chapter 358 - 358 – Poliwhirl
- Chapter 357 357 – Rampage
- Chapter 356 356 – Gyarados
- Chapter 355 355 – A Big, Strong Backer
- Chapter 354 354 – That’s Enough
- Chapter 353 - 353 – The Boy Seeking Revenge
- Chapter 352 352 – Another Boy
- Chapter 351 351 – Omnipresent
- Chapter 350 350 – Hostage
- Chapter 349 349 – Hatching
- Chapter 348 348 – The Run Begins
- Chapter 347 347 – Rind Island
- Chapter 346 346 – The League Is the Boss
- Chapter 345 - 345 – Notes
- Chapter 344 344 – Broke Again
- Chapter 343 343 – Probing
- Chapter 342 342 – The Mystery of Evolution
- Chapter 341 341 – Warmth and Coldness
- Chapter 340 340 – Ore Fanatic
- Chapter 339 339 – Crystal Onix
- Chapter 338 - 338 – Naoki, Naoki
- Chapter 337 - 337 – Surprise? Didn’t expect it…
- Chapter 336 - 336 – Champion Tier
- Chapter 335 - 335 – Arriving at Sunburst Island
- Chapter 334 - 334 – Riku’s Loot
- Chapter 333 333 – Conservative Estimate...
- Chapter 332 332 – Counting Cash
- Chapter 331 331 – Riku’s Fury
- Chapter 330 330 – A Sad Story
- Chapter 329 329 – The League Steps In
- Chapter 328 - 328 – Spider
- Chapter 327 - 327 – Delivering Gifts
- Chapter 326 - 326 – Breaking Through the Mental Defense Line
- Chapter 325 325 – A Sneaky One
- Chapter 324 - 324 – Give Me Some Face
- Chapter 323 323 – You’ve Got a Little Sister Too
- Chapter 322 322 – Mega Stone
- Chapter 321 321 – The Challenge Letter
- Chapter 320 - 320 – Making an Example
- Chapter 319 - 319 – Close Call
- Chapter 318 - 318 – Choosing a Pokémon
- Chapter 317 - 317 – Team Assignment
- Chapter 316 - 316 – A Chance
- Chapter 315 315 – Poison Gang Recruiting
- Chapter 314 314 – The Uses of the Dream World
- Chapter 313 313 – Capturing the Nightmare Pokémon
- Chapter 312 - 312 – Legendary Pokémon Trainer
- Chapter 311 311 – I Found You
- Chapter 310 310 – Hooked
- Chapter 309 309 – The Three Gangs
- Chapter 308 - 308 – When It Comes to Fishing, He’s a Pro
- Chapter 307 - 307 – Gastly’s Nightmare
- Chapter 306 - 306 – A Big Haul
- Chapter 305 305 – Pseudo-legendary Egg
- Chapter 304 304 – Another Scheming Bastard
- Chapter 303 303 – Small Roles
- Chapter 302 - 302 – “Heroes”
- Chapter 301 - 301 – Chimchar
- Chapter 300 - 300 – What the Hell, a Horror Movie
- Chapter 299 299 – Just a Little Short
- Chapter 298 298 – Gastly’s Astonishing Change
- Chapter 297 - 297 – More Potential
- Chapter 296 - 296
- Chapter 295 - 295 – Mega Evolution
- Chapter 294 - 294 – Dusk Stone
- Chapter 293 293 – Gastly’s Evolution
- Chapter 292 292 – Awkward
- Chapter 291 - 291 – Dratini
- Chapter 290 - 290 – Lance’s Test
- Chapter 289 289 – Slimmer Wallet
- Chapter 288 288 – Gastly Wakes Up
- Chapter 287 287 – Lorelei of the Elite Four
- Chapter 286 286 – Abnormal Pokémon Egg
- Chapter 285 285 – Campfire Hotpot
- Chapter 284 - 284 – Tactical Plan
- Chapter 283 - 283 – Farfetch’d Habitat
- Chapter 282 282 – I’ll Miss You
- Chapter 281 281 – Founding the Rain Team
- Chapter 280 280 – Shiny
- Chapter 279 279 - Gastly Gets Drunk
- Chapter 278 278 - The Capture Match
- Chapter 277 277 – The Mysterious Trainer
- Chapter 276 276 – Room and Board, Guaranteed
- Chapter 275 275 – That Purple One’s Laugh Is Bone-Deep
- Chapter 274 - 274 – Laying the Cards on the Table
- Chapter 273 - 273 – The Scarlet Eyes in the Basement
- Chapter 272 - 272 – Mischievous Ghost-types
- Chapter 271 - 271 – Castle Investigation
- Chapter 270 270 – Scyther
- Chapter 269 269 – The Purple Chonk
- Chapter 268 268 – Leaving the Cruise Ship
- Chapter 267 - 267 – Pirates
- Chapter 266 - 266 – Exposed
- Chapter 265 - 265 – The Act
- Chapter 264 - 264 – Hiding
- Chapter 263 - 263 – Forced to Leave
- Chapter 262 - 262 – Old Liquor
- Chapter 261 - 261 Ferry Tickets
- Chapter 260 - 260 – Where to go After Leaving the Island
- Chapter 259 - 259 – Goodbye, Nana
- Chapter 258 - 258 – Rigged
- Chapter 257 257 – He Didn’t Go Crooked—He Just Chose to Lie Flat
- Chapter 256 256 – Electivire
- Chapter 255 - 255 – Farewell
- Chapter 254 - 254 – Rigged from the Start
- Chapter 253 - 253 – Sugar-Coated Bullet
- Chapter 252 - 252 – Club Invitation
- Chapter 251 - 251 – Chasing the Golden Ticket
- Chapter 250 - 250 – You wouldn’t want your grandson on the run, would you…?
- Chapter 249 - 249 – The Undercover
- Chapter 248 - 248 – Don’t Mess With a Schemer
- Chapter 247 - 247 – A Grand Game
- Chapter 246 - 246 – Ditto’s Face
- Chapter 245 - 245 – The Cold Croagunk
- Chapter 244 - 244 – Precisely Missing the Point
- Chapter 243 - 243 – Elekid
- Chapter 242 242 – Nearly Broke Again
- Chapter 241 241 – New Partners Join
- Chapter 240 240 – The Wheel Turns
- Chapter 239 239 – Staryu
- Chapter 238 238 – Ditto
- Chapter 237 - 237 – Croagunk
- Chapter 236 - 236 – Mankey
- Chapter 235 - 235 – Bandits
- Chapter 234 - 234 – Killing with a Borrowed Knife
- Chapter 233 - 233 – Training
- Chapter 232 232 – Harmony Brings Wealth
- Chapter 231 231 – The Play
- Chapter 230 230 – Seed Money
- Chapter 229 - 229 – The Fixer
- Chapter 228 228 – The Big Lug’s First Match
- Chapter 227 - 227 – A Scalding Hot Thing
- Chapter 226 - 226 – Learning New Moves
- Chapter 225 225 – A New Training Plan
- Chapter 224 224 – His Shape
- Chapter 223 223 – High-Grade Water Stone
- Chapter 222 - 222 – Seven Million
- Chapter 221 - 221 – Full-Power Breakout
- Chapter 220 - 220 – Three Million
- Chapter 219 - 219 – One Million
- Chapter 218 218 – The Stubborn Kid
- Chapter 217: A Fight Breaks Out
- Chapter 216 - 216 – Kingler’s Changes
- Chapter 215 - 215 – Krabby Evolves
- Chapter 214 - 214 – Surprise
- Chapter 213 213 – The Man in Black
- Chapter 212 212 – Tournament Rules
- Chapter 211 211 – The Fighting Tournament
- Chapter 210 210 – Two in a Row
- Chapter 209 - 209 – Immediate Family
- Chapter 208 - 208 – “You Secretly Hired a Tutor?”
- Chapter 207 - 207 – Skinny’s First Match
- Chapter 206 - 206 — The Water Runs Deep
- Chapter 205 205 — Talent Gaps
- Chapter 204 - 204 – Peculiarities
- Chapter 203 - 203 – I Already Knew
- Chapter 202 - 202 – Bolder Than Him
- Chapter 201 - 201 – Seems We Came Out Ahead
- Chapter 200 200 – Lucario
- Chapter 199 - 199 – Looting the Bodies
- Chapter 198 - 198 – The Advantage of Numbers
- Chapter 197 - 197 – Competing Horses
- Chapter 196 - 196 – You’re a Good Kid
- Chapter 195 - 195 – Farewell to the Orphanage
- Chapter 194 194 – Being Followed
- Chapter 193 - 193 – I’ve Seen the Movies
- Chapter 192 - 192 – “Trainer”
- Chapter 191 - 191 – Water Gun Mastery
- Chapter 190 - 190 – Your Training Is Garbage
- Chapter 189 - 189 – It Was “He” Who Gave It to You…
- Chapter 188 188 – The Butterfly Flaps Its Wings
- Chapter 187 - 187 – The Joke’s on Me
- Chapter 186 - 186 – The Fool’s Outburst
- Chapter 185 - 185 – Massage
- Chapter 184 184 – Ice Fang
- Chapter 183 - 183 - "Hand-Made?"
- Chapter 182 182: The Three Main Forces
- Chapter 181 181: He Really Didn’t See It Wrong
- Chapter 180 - 180 – He Really Is an Orphan
- Chapter 179 - 179 – “I Want to Be a Good Person”
- Chapter 178 - 178 – The First Step Forward
- Chapter 177 - 177 – The Target
- Chapter 176 - 176 – You’ve Been Targeted
- Chapter 175 - 175 – The Long-Awaited Sunset
- Chapter 174 - 174 – Lodging
- Chapter 173 - 173 – The Trinkets
- Chapter 172 - 172 – The Casino
- Chapter 171 - 171 – The Breeding House Layout
- Chapter 170 - 170 – Electabuzz
- Chapter 169 - 169 – Buy, Buy, Buy
- Chapter 168: So Awkward It Hurts
- Chapter 167 - 167 – Six Pokémon
- Chapter 166 - 166 – A Single Phone Call
- Chapter 165 - 165 – A Deal Worth Tens of Millions
- Chapter 164 - 164 – Don’t Flaunt Your Wealth
- Chapter 163 - 163 – The Darkness of the World
- Chapter 162 - 162 – Back to the Black Market
- Chapter 161 - 161 – The Struggling Mayfly
- Chapter 160 - 160 – As Expected of a Tourist City
- Chapter 159 - 159 – The Starters
- Chapter 158 - 158 – Scyther
- Chapter 157: “Fenced Off and Charged”
- Chapter 156 - 156 – “Met a Good Guy”
- Chapter 155 - 155 – Water Stone
- Chapter 154 - 154 – The Department Store’s Second Floor
- Chapter 153 - 153 – Almost a Sucker
- Chapter 152 - 152 – Department Store, First Floor
- Chapter 151 - 151 – Pokémon Center
- Chapter 150 - 150 – A Good Person
- Chapter 149 - 149 – Outrageously Expensive
- Chapter 148 - 148 – Evidence and a Message
- Chapter 147 - 147 – Breaking One's Word
- Chapter 146 - 146 – Black Market Sights
- Chapter 145 - 145 – The Black Market
- Chapter 144 - 144 – Try It and Die
- Chapter 143 - 143 – You Dare Play Me...
- Chapter 142 - 142 – The Six Conditions
- Chapter 141 - 141 – Pffft...:
- Chapter 140 - 140 – It’s Decided, You’re the One
- Chapter 139 - 139 – At Last, He Sees Nurse Joy
- Chapter 138 - 138 – Kabuto
- Chapter 137 - 137 – Leaving the Island
- Chapter 136 - 136 – Poliwirl Returns to the Team
- Chapter 135 - 135 – Poliwhirl’s Growth
- Chapter 134 - 134 – Gathering of Wild Pokémon
- Chapter 133 - 133 – The Two Overlords Return
- Chapter 132 - 132 – The Sixth Returns
- Chapter 131 - 131 – Leaving Tomorrow
- Chapter 130 - 130 – Farfetch’d
- Chapter 129 - 129 – Wingull Evolves
- Chapter 128 - 128 – Too Many Good Things
- Chapter 127 - 127 – Tallying the Spoils
- Chapter 126 - 126 – Learning to Let Go
- Chapter 125 - 125 – Catching Pidgey
- Chapter 124 - 124 – The Value of Pidgey
- Chapter 123 - 123 – Revenge
- Chapter 122 - 122 – A Gift from the Legendary Pokémon
- Chapter 121 - 121 – Grassy Terrain
- Chapter 120 - 120 – Wildfire
- Chapter 119 - 119 – No Escape
- Chapter 118 - 118 – Calm Before the Storm
- Chapter 117 - 117 – A Stranger Comes Ashore
- Chapter 116 - 116 – Refusing to Leave
- Chapter 115 - 115 – Rhyhorn
- Chapter 114 - 114 – Poliwhirl
- Chapter 113 - 113 – Sharpedo
- Chapter 112 - 112 – Boss Fight
- Chapter 111 - 111 – Evolution Tomorrow
- Chapter 110 - 110 – Spinarak’s Decision
- Chapter 109 - 109 – Learning New Moves
- Chapter 108 - 108 – Another Ambush Artist
- Chapter 107 - 107 – Dragon Scale
- Chapter 106 - 106 – The Drawback of “Moisture Perception”
- Chapter 105: Poliwag Takes Off
- Chapter 104: Got It, Got It
- Chapter 103 - 103 – The Water Gem
- Chapter 102 - 102 – Catching Wingull
- Chapter 101 - 101 – Island Escape Plan
- Chapter 100 - 100 – Discovered by Rhydon
- Chapter 99 - 99 – The Fierce and Brutal Overlord
- Chapter 98 - 98 – Battle and Growth
- Chapter 97 - 97 – Watch Out for the Sneaky One
- Chapter 96 - 96 – Wingull and Krabby
- Chapter 95 - 95 – Fleecing the Beedrill
- Chapter 94 - 94 – Family Under Stormy Skies
- Chapter 93 - 93 – Butterfree
- Chapter 92 - 92 – Dig and Ambush
- Chapter 91 - 91 – Grim Prospects
- Chapter 90 - 90 – The Show-off Poliwag
- Chapter 89 - 89 – The Giant Claw of Krabby
- Chapter 88 - 88 – Krabby’s Story
- Chapter 87 - 87 – A New Partner Joins
- Chapter 86 - 86 – Lucky Again?
- Chapter 85 - 85 – More Trouble on the Beach
- Chapter 84 - 84 – Laying a Solid Foundation
- Chapter 83 - 83 – Another Krabby…
- Chapter 82 - 82 – Painting the Dream
- Chapter 81 - 81 – Potential Boost
- Chapter 80 - 80 – Elite-Class Metapod
- Chapter 79 - 79 – Caterpie Evolves
- Chapter 78 - 78 – Little Green Gets Burned
- Chapter 77 - 77 – Scored a Major Windfall
- Chapter 76 - 76 – The Charti Berry
- Chapter 75 - 75 – Pidgeot Attacks
- Chapter 74 - 74 – Pidgeot
- Chapter 73 - 73 – A Bountiful Haul
- Chapter 72 - 72 – Picking Up Fish
- Chapter 71 - 71 – Training "Confusion"
- Chapter 70 - 70 – Molting
- Chapter 69 - 69 – The Door Latch
- Chapter 68 - 68 – Half a Month Without a Smoke
- Chapter 67 - 67 – The Three Krabby
- Chapter 66 - 66 – The Krabby Attack
- Chapter 65 - 65 – The Juvenile Phase Passes Quickly
- Chapter 64 - 64 – Three Companions
- Chapter 63 - 63 – The Little Tadpole’s Resolve
- Chapter 62 - 62 – Nine Seconds for a Hundred Meters
- Chapter 61 - 61 – Searching for Berries
- Chapter 60 - 60 – Little Green
- Chapter 59 - 59 – Crabs Incoming
- Chapter 58 - 58 – Advanced Special Training
- Chapter 57 - 57 – A New Kind of Training
- Chapter 56 - 56 – Another Lucky Catch?
- Chapter 55 - 55 – Departure and Fishing
- Chapter 54 - 54 – How Do You Even Lose That?
- Chapter 53 - 53 – Comeback Against the Odds
- Chapter 52 - 52 – Birdbrain in a Bowl
- Chapter 51 - 51 – All According to Plan
- Chapter 50 - 50 – The Difficulty of Catching "Rayquaza"
- Chapter 49 - 49 – "This Smells Too Good to Resist"
- Chapter 48 - 48 – "Wait, That Works Too?"
- Chapter 47 - 47 – "Moving into the Treehouse"
- Chapter 46 - 46 – "The Astonishing Caterpie"
- Chapter 45 - 45 – “Catching Caterpie”
- Chapter 44 - 44 – Shelter Renovation
- Chapter 43 - 43 – A Natural Shelter
- Chapter 42 - 42 – Poliwag’s Determination
- Chapter 41 - 41 – A Pleasant Surprise
- Chapter 40 - 40 – The Growth of the Little Tadpole
- Chapter 39 - 39 – Metapod
- Chapter 38 - 38 – Double the Good Fortune
- Chapter 37 - 37 – Hypnotizing the Caterpie
- Chapter 36: “Rayquaza”
- Chapter 35: Poliwag’s Progress
- Chapter 34: Special Training Begins
- Chapter 33: "Poli... Poli..."
- Chapter 32: When the Little Poliwag Takes Charge
- Chapter 31: No Rain, No Rainbow
- Chapter 30: Rainy Day
- Chapter 29: Into the Rain
- Chapter 28: The Stormy Night
- Chapter 27: A Storm Approaches
- Chapter 26: The Fisherman of Ten Years' Habit
- Chapter 25: Battle Reflections
- Chapter 24: Sudden Ambush
- Chapter 23: Yet Another Dumb Fish
- Chapter 22: The Tadpole Who Wanted Hands
- Chapter 21: The Tadpole Breaks Down
- Chapter 20: Wingull Crashes the Party
- Chapter 19: Skill Proficiency Growth
- Chapter 18 - 18 – Magikarp
- Chapter 17 - 17 - No Way… No Way…
- Chapter 16 - 16 - Training Grind and a Bite on the Line
- Chapter 15 - 15 – The Training Plan
- Chapter 14 - 14 – No More Worries About Food
- Chapter 13 - 13 – Clamming with Poliwag
- Chapter 12 - 12 – The Stolen Bait
- Chapter 11 - 11 – Found Fresh Water
- Chapter 10 - 10 – Fresh Water, Fresh Water
- Chapter 9 - 9 – The Beginning of a New Story
- Chapter 8 - 8 – The Mediocre Poliwag
- Chapter 7 - 7 – Carvanha
- Chapter 6 - 6 – The Fisherman Hooks a Big One
- Chapter 5 - 5 – The Street-Punk Kingler
- Chapter 4 - 4 – Capturing Poliwag
- Chapter 3 - 3 – Scavenging and a Poké Ball
- Chapter 2 - 2 – The Fifteen-Year-Old Fisherman
- Chapter 1 - 1 – A Fisherman Never Blanks