Pokmon Platinum Version - Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokmon encyclopedia

June 2024 · 26 minute read
This article is about the core series game. For the Pokémon Adventures character, see Platinum. For the Trading Card Game expansion, see Platinum (TCG). Bulbanews Bulbanews has multiple articles related to this subject: StrategyWiki

Pokémon Platinum Version (Japanese: ポケットモンスター プラチナ Pocket Monsters Platinum) is a solitary version to Pokémon Diamond and Pearl, and the third Generation IV core series title.

The game was first seen on May 11, 2008 when a low-resolution cell-phone picture of an upcoming issue of CoroCoro magazine was leaked around the internet. On May 15, the magazine was officially released and the game was also officially confirmed by Nintendo. The game was released in Japan on September 13, 2008, in North America on March 22, 2009, in Australia on May 14, 2009, in Europe on May 22, 2009, and in Korea on July 2, 2009.

Like previous third versions, the region and starting area remain the same as in previously released paired versions; in Platinum, the player begins their journey from Twinleaf Town and travels across all of Sinnoh.

Plot

When the game begins, the player is watching a newscast about Professor Rowan's return to Sinnoh. Just then, the player's best friend runs in, and the two head for Route 201 to get a Pokémon from Professor Rowan. However, Rowan sees them and reprimands them for endangering themselves. His assistant (Lucas or Dawn, depending on the player's gender) comes along, and Rowan lets the player and Barry each choose among a Turtwig, Chimchar, or Piplup. After choosing, Barry, who later becomes the rival, challenges the player to a battle, having picked the Pokémon with the type advantage over the player's choice. After the battle, the two head to Lake Verity, where they meet Cyrus. Back in Twinleaf Town the player's mother gives them a pair of Running Shoes before the player leaves for Sandgem Town. The professor gives the player a Pokédex and the player then sets off to explore Sinnoh and defeat the Gym Leaders in order to advance further in the plot, challenge the Elite Four, and become the Champion of Sinnoh.

During the course of the game, there are many conflicts with the evil Team Galactic and its leader, Cyrus. When the power of Dialga and Palkia, summoned by Cyrus, begins to overwhelm Sinnoh, Uxie, Mesprit, and Azelf appear, and Giratina drags Cyrus down into the Distortion World.

After facing off against Cyrus, the player is then forced into a battle with Giratina. After the battle, Cyrus disappears and the player heads to Sunyshore City to take on the final gym leader, Volkner. Jasmine, whom the player meets there, gives HM07 after the gym battle, and the player then heads to Victory Road. After the final battle against the friend and rival, the player faces the Elite Four and Cynthia, the reigning champion of the region.

After the player defeats Cynthia, there are further activities to pursue in-game. These mainly concern the capture of previously unavailable Pokémon, extra features such as the Poké Radar, exploration of previously inaccessible places such as the Fight, Survival, and Resort Areas and the perfection of battle skills in the Battle Tower. At the Survival Zone, the player will help Looker finish off Team Galactic by arresting Charon.

Blurb

Another world has emerged in the Sinnoh region...
...A world where time and space are altered! Catch, train, and battle your favorite Pokémon, and discover ancient, mythical Pokémon in this exciting new adventure!

Changes from Pokémon Diamond and Pearl

Gameplay

Obtainable Pokémon

Missing Pokémon

These Pokémon are unavailable in Platinum. To be obtained, they must be traded from the other games of Generation IV or imported from a game from Generation III.

Missing Pokémon

Areas

Storyline

Graphics

Sound

Connectivity

The game can connect automatically to Pokémon Diamond and Pearl and Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver once players have access to a Pokémon Center. It can also connect to Pokémon Ranger: Shadows of Almia and obtain Pokémon received from Ranger Net Special Missions. It retains the same compatibility with Generation III games and Pokémon Battle Revolution as its predecessors, but My Pokémon Ranch requires a Japan-only update to work with Platinum. Pokémon Battle Revolution also wasn't programmed to be compatible with Platinum, so new formes will not appear.

Like Diamond and Pearl, the issue with Korean characters remains: non-Korean versions of Generation IV games did not include a way to view Korean characters, and therefore Korean versions of any Generation IV game can't normally trade with any non-Korean game. If a Pokémon with a Korean name or Korean Trainer name was somehow traded to a non-Korean game, the data for their name would be converted to something else. In Diamond and Pearl, empty spaces were used in lieu of Korean characters. However, Platinum—and subsequently HeartGold and SoulSilver—show dashes instead; this is likely to prevent any issues that may come from a completely blank name.

Localization changes

Localization changes shared by Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl

Main article: Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Versions → Localization changes shared by Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl

Reception

Gaming magazine Famitsu gave Pokémon Platinum a score of 36 out of 40.[7] IGN rated the game a "Great" 8.8/10, stating that "Yes, it's still good. Even two years later."[8] It holds a rating of 83% on Metacritic, based on 46 critic reviews.[9]

Sales

In the fiscal year of its release, it sold 3.75 million units.[10] As of March 31, 2010, Pokémon Platinum has sold 7.06 million copies worldwide, making it the lowest selling core series Pokémon game on the Nintendo DS.[11]

Japanese sales

Pokémon Platinum sold 963,273 units on its first week on the Japanese market, with a sell-through of 90.72%. By December 29, 2013, the end of its 277th week, it had sold 2,626,618 copies.[12]

WeekWeek endingRankingUnits soldTotal units sold
1September 14, 20081st963,273963,273
2September 21, 20081st314,7961,278,069
3September 28, 20082nd195,4791,473,548
4October 5, 20081st121,7221,595,270
5October 12, 20082nd85,8801,681,150
6October 19, 20082nd72,4701,753,620
7October 26, 20083rd52,8171,806,437
8November 2, 20084th47,2431,853,680
9November 9, 20084th36,6701,890,350
10November 16, 200810th26,7671,917,117
11November 23, 20089th24,1731,941,290
12November 30, 200813th--
13December 7, 20087th37,3302,008,753
14December 14, 20087th57,5102,066,263
15December 21, 20088th85,8492,152,112
16December 28, 20088th78,6532,230,765
17January 4, 200912th--
18January 11, 200914th--
19January 18, 200920th--
20January 25, 200923rd--
69January 3, 2010--2,560,990
121January 2, 2011--2,601,017
173January 1, 2012--2,616,600
225December 30, 2012--2,623,756
277December 29, 2013--2,626,618

Staff

Main article: Staff of Pokémon Platinum

Music

Main article: Pokémon Diamond & Pokémon Pearl: Super Music Collection

The soundtrack contains all of the background music used in Pokémon Diamond and Pearl (the basis for a majority of the music in Pokémon Platinum). However, the soundtrack does not include the remastered title theme music from Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire or the other unused music, all of which are present in the internal data of Diamond and Pearl, as well as Platinum.

Main article: Pokémon Black 2 & Pokémon White 2: Super Music Collection

Several music tracks exclusive to Platinum went officially unreleased until 2012, when they were included with the official soundtrack of Pokémon Black 2 and White 2. These Platinum-exclusive tracks comprise tracks 17-48 of Disc 4 of the soundtrack.

Version history

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Beta elements

Main article: Pokémon Platinum beta

Errors

Gallery

Logos

Title screens

Trivia

In other languages

See also

External links

References

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