Seasonal First Impressions: Gotta Catch ‘Em All, All Over Again, in POKÉMON HORIZONS

Seasonal First Impressions is a column where I detail my thoughts, however brief or long, about a currently-airing anime’s first episode or so.


From a certain point of view, this, not Oshi no Ko or Heavenly Delusion or any new or returning Shonen Jump adaptation, is the most anticipated premiere of the season. All of those other anime premieres are anime premieres, at the end of the day. Big Magikarp in a small pond, so to speak. Anything to do with Pokémon is a global event; it just plainly isn’t playing the same game that everything else I write about on this site is.

Pokémon Horizons, which began yesterday, is essentially the second “main” Pokémon anime, succeeding the storied 1,200-some episode saga of Ash Ketchum (Satoshi, as you likely know he’s known in his home country). The fact that Horizons exists and can be watched—although only via fansub for those of us outside Japan at the moment—still feels deeply surreal. But this first episode, which primarily exists as a from-square-one character building exercise for brand-new protagonist Liko [Minori Suzuki], makes it feel a bit less so. Liko, as we’re introduced to her here, feels very much like she should be the protagonist for this sort of story. She’s much more soft-spoken and a bit more of a thinker than her often hotheaded predecessor. She’s also rather insecure, in particular harboring a complex about how people often say that they don’t understand what she’s thinking. Indeed, leading with the protagonist of the two that seems to be much less like Ash first is probably the smart move. Also, her two-tone hair is pretty cute, and is further evidence for my conspiracy theory that, eventually, all anime characters will have at least two colors in their hair at minimum.

The first episode (one of two that aired back to back, but we’ll only be covering the first here, partly to give it parity with other shows this season but mostly just because the second isn’t available in English yet) sees Liko attending Indigo Academy, a school in the Kanto Region far from her native Paldea. There, she’s partnered with her starter Pokémon; a particularly willful Sprigatito that she spends much of the episode trying to bond with. There’s a distant echo of the Ash/Pikachu dynamic here, but aside from the fact that a cat scratch is not the equivalent of the Thundershock-to-the-face running gag of the first anime’s earlier seasons, Liko and Sprigatito also get on much sooner. Basically, as soon as Liko starts trying to understand the funny green cat on its own terms.

There’s a nice little bit of trackable progression in the series’ own language, too. Early in the episode Sprigatito struggles to even use Leafage, a very basic Grass-type move and a staple of its very first few levels in the games. By the episode’s end, it uses that same move to temporarily blind a freaking Rhyhorn, which it also promptly puts to sleep (seemingly with Sweet Scent. Which isn’t how that move works, but the show has never precisely followed the rules of the games, so that’s fine).

It’s super effective!

Yeah, about that Rhyhorn; anyone concerned that this is going to be some kind of laid-back slice of life series should stick around for the episode’s final few minutes. There, the mysterious “good luck charm” pendant that Liko’s been given by her grandmother turns out to be much more important than she could’ve possibly imagined. Our evident first antagonist, a fellow with black-and-white hair and weird eyes [Shun Horie], shows up with an obviously-falsified letter from Liko’s grandma on the first day of summer break, where the school just so happens to be sparsely populated. (Liko seems to be one of the relatively few students hanging out in the dorms over break rather than going home.) She’s rightly very suspicious of all this, and the guy’s demeanor doesn’t help. Eventually, she gets so freaked out that she tries fleeing out her bedroom window, only to be stopped by a minion working for this fellow, leading to the Rhyhorn battle previously described.

Things end on a truly exciting note; a man on a Charizard (of course it’s a Charizard) swoops in to protect Liko after she’s faced down with a Ceruledge. We know from pre-release press materials that this is Professor Friede [Taku Yashiro], and that the group of people he leads fly about the Pokemon World in an airship. But all of this is left to the realm of thrilling cliffhanger here, and we don’t get much more than that in this first episode, beyond one small twist that I’ll not spoil.

Taken on its own, this episode does definitely have the disadvantage of feeling like just one half of a whole. But, even then, this is clearly building up to being something special. Anyone worried that the spirit of true Pokémon adventure was in danger of dying out need not fret any longer, it’s clearly going to be just fine.


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All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.

Anime Orbit: At The End of a Long, Long, Long Road in The Final Episode of The POKÉMON Anime

Anime Orbit is an irregular column where I summarize a stop along my journey through anime, manga, and the related spheres of popular culture over the past week.

Expect spoilers for covered material, where relevant.


One thousand two hundred and thirty-two. That’s how many episodes, in sum total, the original Japanese run of the entire Pokémon anime has. The episode that aired just two days ago, “The Rainbow & The Pokémon Master”, is the 1,232nd. I’m not trying to wow you with sheer numbers here—although if I were, just for reference, that’s about 400 more episodes than The Simpsons, perhaps the only American cartoon with an episode count in even the same ballpark—but I am trying to make a point. 1,232 episodes over the course of 26 years is a truly stunning achievement. Even if the show were utterly unremarkable in content, that would be worth commenting on.

But we’re not here to evaluate quality today. That’d be pretty much impossible for Pokémon, something that has sunk its fangs into my psyche as much as it has any other Millennial of a certain age and disposition. When I started watching the Pokémon anime—and really, that is how pretty much everyone still refers to it, as either just “the cartoon” or, if they’re slightly more of a weeb, “the anime”—I was a literal child. It was one of the first cartoons period I was ever invested in, long before I had any idea that cartoons from different parts of the world could be meaningfully different, Pokémon, when I first got into it as a child, offered me something very different from any cartoon I’d seen before.

My experience with TV had been very limited up to that point. I grew up in a fairly religious household where things like television were considered distractions and possible corrupting influences. We only got a TV in our house at all in the year 2000, and my grandmother had to do some convincing to convince my mom to pick up cable. It was a tiny hand-me-down thing with a fuzzy picture. Nonetheless, the Pokémon cartoon became important to me. How could it not? I was six years old, and here was this thing chucking all these crazy monster designs at me, and telling me that a young kid Just Like Me (more or less), could have adventures, make friends, and that there was a world outside of the town you grow up in.

I won’t pretend I’ve religiously followed the series in the 23 years since then. (Has anybody? I think even those who’ve seen all the episodes are more likely to have marathoned it in chunks, but maybe I’m underestimating the true Pokemaniacs out there.) But Pokémon has remained part of my life. I’m neurodivergent, and it was, to my recollection, my second total special interest after dinosaurs (I had a big, illustrated encyclopedia of dinosaurs. Wish I still had that thing!), and it’s remained enough of a hobby that I preordered Pokémon Violet. (I also play a fair few Pokémon ROMHacks, but we’re getting into hobbies-within-hobbies at that point) It’s stayed both a part of the cultural conversation and a part of my life, so seeing it finally end as of this 11-episode “postscript” season, after Ash has finally won a championship, feels not so much bad or good, but rather just surreal. I remember the news taking a while to really process for me. As in: “what do you mean the Pokémon anime is ending?” If it feels like the end of an era, it very much is. There will continue to be a Pokémon anime; two new protagonists are slated to start their own journey in just a few weeks, but the Pokémon anime that stars Ash—Satoshi in the original JP—is now officially over. That’s nuts. And I have thought about whether I wanted to even write anything about it, because on some level “that’s nuts” is all you can really say, but not writing anything would be even crazier. This series has been a part of my life since I could read. I have to say something, right?

Then let me say this; if the miniseries’ purpose was to kick shots of pure nostalgia right into my brain, it worked splendidly, and the last episode might be the purest example of that in the whole show. There are a lot of one more‘s in this episode. One more time where Brock gets all lovesick and then gets reprimanded by his Croagunk, one more Team Rocket scheme to snatch Pikachu, one more example of Ash bonding with a Pokémon he just met (it’s a Charmander here; Professor Oak has a new round of trainers to give starter Pokémon to, don’t you know?), etc. If you wanted to be cynical you could describe it as box-ticking. But honestly, there’s so much obvious affection in every frame of this anime that I really find it hard to summon up such a criticism. Toward the end of the episode, Ash’s Pidgeot, the second Pokémon he ever caught, returns to his team, and it’s such a hugely obvious nostalgia play that I started tearing up. I am not immune to affection from giant birds.

In general, they cram quite a few Pokémon into this episode, actually, although I’m sure some will nitpick some omissions. (The big surprise to me is that Ash’s Charizard doesn’t show up for even a split second. When a scene briefly calls for a big draconic flier, his much more recently-acquired Dragonite does the job instead. I’m not complaining, but it is slightly surprising!)

What took me from having watery eyes to full-on bawling was the final scene, where Ash and Pikachu—plus a bunch of Kanto wildlife—take refuge under a tree as a storm passes overhead. This too is a callback; you’ll remember that the very first arc of the series involved Ash biking through a thunderstorm as he tried to protect Pikachu from a flock of Spearows. More than just a reference, though, it’s a meaningful inversion. Back then, the Pokémon were hostile. Here, everything is peaceful and serene; Ash may not consider himself a Pokemon master yet, but in spite of the endless “eternal 11 year old” jokes, he’s clearly grown, and the show itself reflects that.

Not long after, Ash and Pikachu set off again, but this time, we don’t follow along. Our journey together ends here.

But, like I said near the top of this article, this isn’t really the end. The show itself acknowledges that; the retro “To Be Continued…!” text that’s closed out each episode of the miniseries says something a little different here, and really, can you argue with it?


Like what you’re reading? Consider following Magic Planet Anime to get notified when new articles go live. If you’d like to talk to other Magic Planet Anime readers, consider joining my Discord server! Also consider following me on TwitterMastodonAnilist, or Tumblr and supporting me on Ko-Fi or Patreon. If you want to read more of my work, consider heading over to the Directory to browse by category.

All views expressed on Magic Planet Anime are solely my own opinions and conclusions and should not be taken to reflect the opinions of any other persons, groups, or organizations. All text, excepting direct quotations, is owned by Magic Planet Anime. Do not duplicate without permission. All images are owned by their original copyright holders.