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Home Gaming

Pokémon Sword and Shield: first impressions

by technewshero
November 15, 2019
in Gaming
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Pokémon Sword and Shield, the 8th generation of Pokémon games, are now available on Nintendo Switch. Having received a launch-day review code, TechRadar will be posting a full review in the next week once we’ve had a little more time with the game. In the meantime, we’ve recorded our first impressions of the first couple of hours spent in the Galar region below. 

At this point in the long-running series, starting a new Pokémon game is kind of like being a kid and going to your favorite soft play area. It’s colorful, friendly and familiar and there’s a genuine anticipation for adventure with every visit, even if you largely know what to expect. 

It was with that slightly contradictory but intoxicating thrum of excitement and solace that we dropped into the world of the newest Pokémon games: Sword and Shield. 

Of course, we got much of what we wanted and expected from our version’s (Pokémon Sword) beginning. As with other Pokémon games, Sword and Shield start you off in the comfort of your childhood home. Here you can run from room to room, unrealistically marching past your massive TV and Nintendo Switch console with barely a glance.  Before you have time to get too comfortable, your friend and neighbor, Hop, arrives to drag you off to pick a starter Pokémon and start your quest to defeat all the gym leaders that dare to stand in your way. 

Look at all of those Gym Leaders, just waiting for you to beat them

Look at all of those Gym Leaders, just waiting for you to beat them

(Image credit: The Pokémon Company)

For veteran players this routine is a welcome home of sorts, while for first timers it’s a pleasant introduction to the Pokémon world, anchoring you with a home and friends before sending you on your voyage across a vast region. 

The core underlying gameplay is also largely the standard Pokémon fare. If you like battling trainers and gym leaders interspersed with catching wild Pokémon and training them up then you’ll find that here.

This is Pokémon trying for a larger and more ambitious scale, as befits a move onto the Switch.

But not everything is exactly the same. For all its retention of many of the small moments that have become tradition in the series, the early hours of Pokémon Sword (and Shield, of course) have also made it clear that this is Pokémon trying for a larger and more ambitious scale, as befits a move onto the Switch. We’ll be able to go into the changes this ambition has wrought and assess their effectiveness more thoroughly in our full review but we’ll give an overview of what we’ve been most immediately struck by in the first few hours. 

Naturally, on starting the game you immediately take in how much more environmental detail there is than anything seen before in the series. Stepping outside your home to see the flowers adorning your cosy cottage and the Wooloo gamboling around offers serious The Shire meets Fable vibes. 

The world we’ve seen so far has personality and in its attention to detail has clearly been created with an affection for the UK it’s inspired by. There’s even an acknowledgement of the country’s ever-present class division when you walk from your humble cottage over the road to Hop’s palatial home with its own Pokémon battle court, just after he teases you about your bulky and scruffy second-hand bag. 

Train delays. It's just so British!

Train delays. It’s just so British!

(Image credit: The Pokémon Company)

Despite the care and detail, though, the world and its cutscenes aren’t that much of a visual step up from Pokémon Let’s Go.

Despite the care and detail, though, the world and its cutscenes aren’t that much of a visual step up from Pokémon Let’s Go (although your character does look less like a bug-eyed toddler) and unfortunately don’t quite meet the standards of other Switch headliners like Breath of the Wild. That doesn’t mean this isn’t a good-looking game—because it is, it’s arguably the best-looking Pokémon yet—it’s perhaps just not quite as much of a step up as we might have hoped for the series’ mainline debut on the Switch. 

Then there’s the big addition of the Wild Area which is introduced early on. This is pretty much the first truly open Pokémon area and it feels like a take on the real-life Pokémon Go events that have been popping up over the world, where you’re able to wander around a park area dedicated to finding and catching Pokémon as well as engaging in Raids and bumping into other players. 

The Wild Area is expansive and the main place to camp up with your existing Pokémon or catch new ones

The Wild Area is expansive and the main place to camp up with your existing Pokémon or catch new ones

(Image credit: The Pokémon Company)

The first sight of this area is striking largely because you get to see Pokémon wandering around in a way you never have before. On our first trip here we wandered through the various biomes, catching Pokémon and setting up a camp so that we could play with our team and cook them a frankly horrendous looking curry. 

Significantly, the Wild Area is home to Pokémon of all levels which is interesting when you’re wandering in at an early low level. As risk averse and lily-livered Wimpods we weren’t initially sure about the idea that you could stumble upon a Pokémon with the capacity to wipe out your whole team with little warning. But we can appreciate that encountering intimidatingly powerful Pokémon makes the Galar region feel far more dynamic and real than the regions that have gone before it. 

The Wild Area is also the home of Dynamax Raids, where you can join a team of three other players to battle and catch powerful new Dynamax Pokémon. We’ve only taken part in one of these Raids so far with 3 AI ‘friends’ so we’ll wait until our full review to give a real assessment of the Dynamaxing element of the game in its entirely. Thus far, though, we’re inclined to say they’re more fun to watch for sheer spectacle than they are to actually take part in. 

Big Pokémon require big Pokéballs

Big Pokémon require big Pokéballs

(Image credit: The Pokémon Company)

For all its scope and promise, we’re not yet sure the Wild Area is somewhere we could see ourselves spending hours on end which could be problematic since as far as we can tell it’s the game’s main open area. Camping (which you can do most places in the game anyway) and catching are only entertaining for so long so we’re looking forward to getting a better sense of whether that first thrilling moment of “whoa” will last and keep us coming back here with pleasure. 

At such an early stage in the game it’s impossible to make a final judgement but we’re enjoying our trip to the Galar region thus far. While first impressions are important, though, they’re not everything—just ask Ash and Pikachu—so we’ll be spending a little more time with the game before publishing our final verdict and review in the coming week. 

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