Pokémon: Advanced


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Pokémon: Advanced is the sixth season of Pokémon and the first season of Pokémon the Series: Ruby and Sapphire, known in Japan as Pocket Monsters: Advanced Generation (ポケットモンスター アドバンスジェネレーション, Poketto Monsutā Adobansu Jenerēshon). It originally aired in Japan from November 21, 2002, to August 28, 2003, on TV Tokyo, and in the United States from November 1, 2003, to September 4, 2004, on Kids' WB/The WB.

Pokémon: Advanced
Season 6

English front cover of the Pokémon: Advanced DVD collection box

No. of episodes40
Release
Original networkTV Tokyo
Original releaseNovember 21, 2002 –
August 28, 2003
Season chronology

← Previous
Master Quest

List of episodes

Set in the fictional Hoenn region, the season follows the adventures of the ten-year-old Pokémon Trainer Ash Ketchum, and his electric mouse partner Pikachu as they collect Gym Badges so they can compete in the Hoenn Pokémon League competition. Along the way, they are joined by Brock, the former leader of the Pewter City Gym, and the Pokémon Coordinator May and her brother, Max, as May competes in Pokémon Contests with the aim of earning Ribbons so she can enter the Hoenn Pokémon Grand Festival.

The episodes were directed by Masamitsu Hidaka and produced by the animation studio OLM.

The Japanese opening song is "Advance Adventure" (アドバンスアドベンチャー, Adobansu Adobenchā) by GARDEN for 40 episodes. The ending songs are "Because the Sky is There" (そこに空があるから, Soko ni Sora ga Aru Kara) by Toshiko Ezaki for 18 episodes, and "Polka O Dolka" (ポルカ・ドルカ, Poruka O Doruka) by Inuko Inuyama (Meowth) and Nolsol Chorus Group for 22 episodes, and the English opening song is "I Wanna Be a Hero" by David Rolfe. A shortened version of the English opening song was used for the end credits.

Themanime.org gave a positive review saying that "the anime does stuff from the video games in this season" and that "May isn't just a replacement of Misty"[1] Movie Reviews Simbasible gave a negative review saying that "the new characters are actually more annoying instead of likeable" and that "it ended up being a bore but with some very good episodes"[2] Alfah, writing for Pokeblog gave a positive review, giving the season a 8/10 and saying that "It's an awesome start to the Advanced Generation series, showing growth of two protagonists, Ash and May. Other than Max's bratty attitude, this is an awesome season: a definite must-watch."[3]

In the United States, Viz Video and Ventura Distribution released the series on 8 VHS and DVD volumes from 2004-2005.[4][5] The entire series was released on DVD, while the VHS versions only featured the first three episodes from each release.

Viz Media later released two 3-disc boxed DVD sets in 2005 and 2006, containing 6-7 episodes per disc.

Viz Media and Warner Home Video released Pokémon: Advanced – The Complete Collection on DVD in the United States on May 16, 2017.

  1. ^ a b These episodes were broadcast on Kids' WB on March 15, 2003, as part of a special sneak peek at the upcoming Advanced season. It was later redubbed and rebroadcast for inclusion during the standard broadcasts the following November.
  1. ^ "THEM Anime Reviews 4.0 - Pokemon Advanced". www.themanime.org. Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  2. ^ "Pokémon (Advanced) Season 6 (2002) – Movie Reviews Simbasible". Retrieved 2022-04-01.
  3. ^ "Pokemon Advanced (Season 6) Review". My Site. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  4. ^ Pokemon Advanced, Vol. 8 - Jump for Joy, Amazon.com, ASIN B000667G82
  5. ^ Pokemon 8: Advanced — Jump for Joy [VHS], Amazon.com, ASIN B000667G7S