When main Pokémon entries continuously bring in millions of sales every time, it’s hardly surprising that Nintendo’s hit series has so many spin-offs. Since Pocket Monsters: Red and Green arrived in Japan one fateful February in 1996, we’ve witnessed over 100 different games, and even dedicated fans only have so much time.
Many are familiar with bigger spin-offs like Pokémon Snap, Pokkén Tournament, Stadium, and Go, but plenty ended up slipping through the cracks, too. For better or worse, they’ve brought us significant variety to Pokémon’s formula over the years, covering everything from edutainment, racing, and even tactical RPGs.
We previously ranked the best mainline Pokémon games, so if you wanted to tell us why we’re wrong about the big players, come take a look. However, if you’ve been looking for something different whilst waiting on Brilliant Diamond and Shining Pearl or Pokémon Legends: Arceus, allow us to offer up a few entries you may have forgotten about.
Pokémon Battle Revolution (Wii)
Having seen a successful RPG stint on Gamecube with Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness, not many still talk about the Wii’s Battle Revolution by comparison. Unfortunately, there’s a good reason for that. Launched in 2007, gone was the story mode and instead, it focused on battling within a Pokémon-themed park called Pokétopia. It also let players use their Diamond & Pearl team through the Wii, using the DS as a controller.
Making for a pretty barebones experience, we gave it 4/10 stars, calling it a “stripped-down version of Pokémon Stadium” and criticised its dependency on the DS games. Our biggest praise went to its online play – which shut down back in 2014 – and each main entry has offered online battles since, making this entry redundant to all but the most dedicated fans.
Pokémon Trading Card Game (GBC)
Pokémon’s success can be attributed to many aspects. Nintendo found that crucial footing in video games, but we can’t forget the Trading Card Game’s influence either. First arriving in 1996, those original cards sell for extraordinary prices lately, and TCG has also won some accolades. Nintendo saw this success early and, back in 1998, launched an accompanying Game Boy Color adventure, simply titled Pokémon Trading Card Game.
Simulating TCG but including RPG elements, players were tasked with defeating eight Club Masters, each carrying decks that represent elemental cards. We believed it still held up when Nintendo released it on the 3DS Virtual Console, giving it 8/10 stars. A second TCG game followed in 2001, significantly expanding upon the original but, outside of fan translations, it remains a Japanese exclusive. Otherwise, TCG Online is still running, and some of us believe it’s time we saw a Switch entry.
PokéPark Wii: Pikachu's Adventure (Wii)
Even by this list’s standards, PokéPark Wii: Pikachu's Adventure is an oddity. Released in 2010, it swapped gym battles for an amusement park, seeing Pikachu summoned to the PokéPark by Mew. The Sky Prism protecting PokéPark has been shattered, meaning it’s up to Pikachu and friends - Charmander, Chikorita and Piplup - to find those missing pieces. To do that, players need to complete minigames, appearing as theme park attractions.
Reviews were generally mixed, criticising PokéPark for poor controls and repetitive gameplay, and we weren’t exactly impressed ourselves. A sequel emerged two years later with PokéPark 2: Wonders Beyond, taking greater influence from Black and White and, thankfully, we had better things to say about it.
Pokémon Trozei! (DS)
Better known as Pokémon Trozei! in North America, Pokémon Link! was one of several DS spin-offs - Ranger and Mystery Dungeon included - to arrive before Diamond and Pearl’s eventual launch. Released in 2006, this spin-off offered puzzle-focused gameplay, and players needed to match four of the same Pokémon in a row, having more in common with Yoshi’s Cookie than Tetris Attack.
This story followed Lucy Fleetfoot, who attempts to take down the Phobos Battalion, a shady group stealing Pokémon to power their secret weapon. It didn’t receive a huge amount of attention but it reviewed fairly positively, eventually getting a 3DS sequel in 2014 – Pokémon Link! Battle! got a solid 8/10 stars from us.
Pokémon Dash (DS)
During the DS’ European launch, Nintendo covered its first-party bases well. Alongside Metroid Prime Hunters’ demo, WarioWare Touched!, and Super Mario 64 DS, a new Pokémon game was also present. Unfortunately, it was Pokémon Dash, our first (and currently only) attempt at a racing game in the series. Playing as Pikachu, players needed to slide their stylus across the DS touch screen for movement, competing against other Pokémon across five different cups.
It held interesting ideas, letting players link up with GBA entries to create courses based around your team, but the wider experience was significantly lacking. Dash reviewed badly. We didn’t cover it ourselves, but it holds the dubious distinction as Metacritic’s second lowest-rated Pokémon game, with a 46 Metascore. It’s only beaten by Pokémon Rumble Rush, and may explain why we’ve not had another racing entry since.
Pokémon Art Academy (3DS)
It’s been 5 years since we last saw a new Art Academy entry. Rather than provide an actual “game”, Nintendo offered us an art training simulation, helping players develop their skills, using the DS touch screen as a canvas. Later emerging on 3DS and Wii U, Pokémon Art Academy also arrived in 2014.
Offering over 40 step-by-step lessons to teach players the basics, it used over 100 different Pokémon as reference images. Including some new quality-of-life features like an undo button, it won’t convince anyone that isn’t artistically driven, but we thought it made for an “extremely accessible experience”, giving it 8/10 stars.
Pokémon Channel (GCN)
Before its recent acquisition by Creatures Inc., Ambrella had a rather mixed history with Pokémon spin-offs. Best known for the Pokémon Rumble sub-series and the aforementioned Pokémon Dash, Pokémon Channel marked Ambrella's only GameCube game back in 2003, bringing together elements from adventure, simulation and digital pet games.
Our goal was helping Professor Oak set up his TV network, watching broadcasts with Pikachu and obtaining collectible trading cards. Notably, it recreated the Pokémon Mini hardware’s five games, also including an exclusive 6th title. If you beat Channel, players could also obtain Jirachi, who was transferable to Ruby and Sapphire. Ultimately, it wasn’t well-received, earning a 55 Metascore.
Learn With Pokémon: Typing Adventure (DS)
Typing games aren’t particularly uncommon on PCs but, considering most consoles use controllers, they’re quite niche, and that’s especially true for handhelds. Yet, this didn’t stop Nintendo back in 2011 when it released Learn with Pokémon: Typing Adventure, bundling it with a Bluetooth Nintendo Wireless keyboard.
This time around, we captured Pokémon by correctly typing out their names, working for Professor Quentin Werty within the Elite Typists’ Club. We thought it held some flaws, but still earned a decent 7/10 stars from us. Uniquely, this is also the only Pokémon game with an English translation to never release in North America.
Pokémon Conquest (DS)
Unusual crossovers are nothing new in gaming - especially when Koei Tecmo is involved – and back in 2012, one of its lesser-known series’, Nobunaga’s Ambition, teamed up with Pokémon. Gameplay mechanics borrowed heavily from the former, offering us a turn-based strategy RPG with tactical elements. Set within the Ransei Region, this land is split between 17 different kingdoms, and our goal was to unify them all, eventually going up against Nobunaga himself.
Playing as the Warlord of the Aurora kingdom, defeating fellow Warlords unlocked access to further Pokémon. Featuring 200 of the (then) 649 Pokémon, they were restricted to one move each, and evolution only occurs by hitting specific conditions. We thought pretty highly of this one at the time - awarding it 8/10 stars - saying it could’ve benefitted from a deeper story but Conquest stands strong as one of Pokémon’s better spin-offs.
Pokémon Puzzle League (N64)
Tetris Attack remains fondly remembered by a lot of players, so it’s no surprise that back in 2000, Nintendo capitalised on Pokémon’s success with a new crossover. Accompanied by a Game Boy Color entry that same year, Pokémon Puzzle League arrived on the N64, retaining Tetris Attack’s core gameplay by matching three identical blocks in a row or column. Based around the Pokémon anime, we found Ash selected as a Puzzle League Tournament challenger.
It reviewed well and gained a second lease of life back in 2008, when the N64 entry arrived on the Wii Virtual Console, where we awarded it 8/10 stars. Sadly, that’s no longer available, but the GBC game was also released for the 3DS Virtual Console in 2014, and it holds up just as well. Arguably, Planet Puzzle League remains the best choice in the Puzzle League franchise, but we’ve still got a soft spot for these two Pokémon-flavoured spin-offs.
Have you gone through any of these Pokémon spin-offs? Anything here you’d argue isn’t obscure enough? Let us know in the comments!
Comments 58
Oh man, Pokémon Dash was my first DS game as a kid, and it’s honestly one of the least interesting games I’ve played. And I feel like Pokémon Channel was a great game as long as you were younger when it came out. Looking back at it as an adult, it’s...repetitive to put it kindly.
Pokémon Conquest is one of my favorite games ever, it definitely doesn’t deserve to be forgotten.
Conquest is a great game. Would love to see a sequel, or better yet, a crossover with Fire Emblem instead ::looks over longingly at my own profile image::
Poképark is one of my favourite games on Wii. It’s ridiculous but there’s loads of content, lovely graphics, fun mini games and seeing Pokemon in their natural habitat never grows old. I really need to seek out the sequel.
I loved Battle Revolution! Spent so much time on it. That waterfall arena is one of the prettiest places to battle, even to this day.
Pokepark was fun too!
I recognize most of these and I don’t have most of the consoles lol. I guess I love Pokémon too much
Surprised the Pokémon Ranger games aren't on here
I really hope we get a Pokepark Sequel or Remaster at somepoint, I loved the second game and still have fond memories of it.
@Tulio517 Battle Revolution was a bit bare-bones but the battles in that game have better graphics than any Pokémon game since.
I remember being on a trip to the states and they had puzzle league set up in a kiosk in a gamestop in think. Completed the main puzzle mode in one sitting. Didn't feel very compelled to buy it after that.
Pokepark 2 is so underrated, it's a solid (although not amazing) sandbox adventure game and would make for a good real time battling spinoff. Sadly, it's been forgotten.
Battle Revolutions was basically the Battle Frontier on your TV with the best battle animations to date.
Conquest was a nice strategy RPG.
I had Pokemon Dash and, let me tell you, that 44 metacritic score is well earned. Absolutely terrible game with terrible controls, as most of the early DS games were.
Pokemon ranger games are my fave spinoffs
@nessisonett @Tulio517 I loved watching the watter effects they used in that game. The music wasn't too shabby either. To this day I still listen to Stargazer Colosseum Theme
@nessisonett My sister loved the first PokéPark but thought the sequel was bad. I think it lacked the mini games and other things that made the original great.
I only had one of these the Pokémon trading card game, I liked it but found it a bit short though.
I forgot about all of these! Surprised Hey You Pikachu didn't make the cut!
@Zach I would prefer that we forgot about that one.
I'm not crazy about Pokémon spin-off games with only a few exceptions.
Shuffle was extremely predatory and is my most-played 3DS game by a mile (over 800 hours). It took a LOT of willpower to finally give up that vice, and I have been so much better off for it. I regret to say that I have also spent a bit of money on it too (which I justified with leaps in logic ). I have uttered a LOT of profanity toward this awful piece of software.
I 100%'ed Learn with Pokémon: Typing Adventure, which I loved (I work as a typist) and would throw my money at a sequel.
I would also love a successor to Stadium/Battle Revolution. They could issue a new release per generation. Considering that the main series games are no longer including the National Dex, they could at least consolidate all of those 2012 to present models into a new Stadium-style experience (with fully customisable teams and story mode).
But my favourite of all would have to the excellent adaptations of the trading card game. I absolutely loved the first game and I have been utterly addicted to the second game as well (which has an EXCELLENT fan translation available). The currently available TCG Online experience is total garbage, but they could make something in the spirit of the GBC games every year and I will faithfully buy each installment.
Still waiting on a new Pokémon Pinball.
No Pokemon Pinball? Then again, I mentioned it a while ago myself, did that disqualify the games from the "you may have forgotten about" theme?😅 And I suppose Hey You Pikachu is alive and well in people's memories, too.
A lot of peculiar stuff here regardless, Pokemon Conquest remaining of the most interest to me among them. Almost surprised KT has yet to go Warriors on this franchise, although maybe everyone's mentality is just entrenched in your mon battling one or maybe two others at a time, not a few dozen per second.
I've been asking for a Pokemon Trading Card game successor for years and years. I know they didn't keep making them because they don't want to compete with themselves and the IRL card game.
But Pokemon cards don't remain in rotation and printing forever. I'd love to see Pokemon TCG video games based on past formats. It would be a way to let newer players experience older formats and cards, and a way for older players to revisit their nostalgia.
And since they were established formats, they could make decks in games, based on the archetypes that were popular in those formats in real life!
I’m surprised that the WiiWare games weren’t mentioned here... although if you look at the graphics, maybe that’s for the best...
Even though Pokemon has never been one of my favorite series, something about PokePark 1 and 2 were so fun to me! I wish they'd remaster those for switch or make a new game in the series.
Pokémon Dash is not just easily the worst Pokémon game ever made, it's easily one of the worst games I've ever played, period. And I've played some bad games.
The pic used for Pokemon Trading Card Game makes no sense as it contains Pokemon that didn't debut til Gen 3 which was 4 years after Pokemon Trading Card Game's release.
Both of the Pinball games are great. And I still play Pokemon Picross from time to time.
@nessisonett so true. Isn't it ridiculous ? If I remember right Pokemons in this game actually cross the battle field to make a physical damage to the opponent. Animations were great, 3d models as well. I wonder if they recycled them for the second snap...
Most of these I've heard of, a few I've played. Before anything else, I'd like to mention I'd love another chance at Pokemon Conquest rolling around since I missed out on that one.
Pokemon Dash still leaves a bad taste in my mouth. That was the first time kid me was burned HARD by a property I trusted. The controls were bleh (Hello scratched touch screen), and you could only play as Pikachu. There was a little fun to be had with the courses you could import that were shaped like Pokemon you owned in the Gen 3 games, but they weren't customizable. I still partially blame this game for killing much of my interest in the racing genre.
I got some enjoyment out of Battle Revolution, but that was mainly due to the fact that I owned the DS games and could import Pokemon. I was really expecting an experience more on par with Pokemon Stadium. From what I've gathered, the previous two Stadium entries and Colosseum/XD all had more to offer. I've only played a demo for one of the two Stadium games.
I didn't play Pokemon TCG until it came to the 3DS VC. That one was very refreshing and taught me how to play the card game; I never played with the cards as a kid per se, I just collected them lol. Few if any kids on the playground knew how to play the TCG properly. XD It was a nice alternative to the main titles since they weren't on the VC at the time.
I was quite addicted to Pokemon Puzzle League and Pokemon Channel back in the days. I miss these types of spinoffs.
Scandalous... How could anyone forget the Pokemon TCG game? Probably one of the best card games ever made. The second one was crap though and it's probably for the better it was Japan-only... I hope we will see another TCG at some point though. I mean, a singleplayer one. Not a fan of PvP.
Would love a new TCG.
I was quite a fan of the ranger spin-offs. Shame they don't get talked about anymore
I always wanted to play conquest - but missed out and now it's quite pricey!
Played and own them all aside from the weeb Conquest game, which I've no interest in.
You know a game has gotten really big when there are a lot of ridiculous spinoffs. This reminds me of the wacky Ninja Turtle stuff in the 80s and 90s.
Would love to see Pokémon Conquest get a remake like Rescue Team did. Heard it was good but has a lot of things that could use a Quality of Life improvement, and it could gauge interest in a sequel. Just... don't make it 60 bucks if you don't add anything new of substance. Like Rescue Team DX. Or Let's Go. Or Pokken DX.
Pokemon Conquest was immense.
@g_ruz Couldn’t agree more with Pokémon Dash. I was so excited to get my DS for my birthday in 2005 with Pokémon Dash. I remember it being confusing, boring, and really frustrating. I beat it because I remember it being relatively short... but man it wasn’t a fun completion and I traded the game in for something else not too long after.
Pokemon Conquest deserves a revival.
(Not gonna happen of course but still)
I would absolutely love an update to Pokemon Conquest, a perfect combination of two wonderful genres!
I only have Pokepark 2 Wii.
Have finished the storyline several months ago.
The GB Pokemon Trading Card game was actually really good. I'm really sad that we never got the sequel and that the series never continued.
It should be a crime that we haven’t gotten a new Pokémon TCG video game in ages. I’d play that so much.
Funny this article doesn't mention the single most addictive, love-hate and most played spinoff ever called Pokemon Shuffle.
I think I put in well over 1000 hours into both the mobile and 3DS versions lol.
@TheLightSpirit yeah I got to like 600 without paying anything ever. Tbf the game is very challenging with tons of content and depth, you can put a good 45-60 mins into one session. A perfect mobile game.
It's totally not a game in any meaningful sense, but I'm kind of surprised (pleasantly so, if we're being honest) that Pokemon Channel hasn't been revived on Switch or for smartphones. It seems like the kind of silly inane thing that would keep kids happily occupied during long car rides or plane trips. Plus you know they would exploit the hell out of being able to patch/update the programming with exclusive broadcasts.
actually l played few of these and heard most of them. Kinda wished l owned one of them.
I've got the Pokemon typing game withthe keyboard ^_^
@terra 'Notably, it recreated the Pokémon Mini hardware’s five games'.
You mean five of the Pokemon mini's 10 games. 🙃 And it only has a small section from each, not the whole game.
Also, if ever there was a time to champion Pokemon Tetris this was it.
I really enjoyed pokemon conquest, but at some point I got stuck, and didn't know how to progress the story, so I was just running back and fort between castle doing the same battles over and over...
PokePark and Conquest are my childhood pokemon games. I really hope at least one of those two make it to the switch..I miss playing them ;-;
@Divinebovine your avatar has reminded me of the time I saw a shiny Koffing in Fire Red, but it used self-destruct before I could catch it 😭 The worst part was that I had a Masterball and didn't use it. Still haunts me to this day.
Pokepark 2 houses my childhood memories and a heap of nostalgia. It is the closest thing to making me want to buy a Wii again.
@Samuel-Flutter That metacritic score is not earned at all. Anyone who gave that game anything over 2 or 3/10 is absolutely out of their mind.
@kickerofelves Sorry about bringing up that past trauma, I hope you can someday find peace!
the Ranger and Dungeon games were great, I'm honestly surprised that they aren't here, seeing as neither of those subseries has been revived in a dog's age. would love to see new entries in those two subseries, as well as the Coliseum/Battle Revolution and those kinda Diablo ones on the WiiU IIRC (I forget the name of any of 'em). never played the latter two, but the core ideas have potential imo.
@Krisi You make an incredibly strong argument and have thoroughly convinced me.
@TheRealMW Mystery Dungeon just got a new entry last year... it's hard to call it forgotten. Overlooked, sure, but not nearly as obscure as the others on this list. I always saw Mystery Dungeon and Ranger as the two big spin-offs, though Ranger could certainly use a new entry. I'd love another Mystery Dungeon on Switch, too, but even the one we already got is more than I ever expected before.
As to this list in particular... Pokemon Conquest 2 would be fantastic, that or the FE cross-over they originally planned. Conquest is one of my favorite DS games, it's a shame it never got a sequel. I'm also in the group that enjoyed Battle Revolution and was suckered into Dash... TCG was great and I wish we got the sequel out here. I have yet to play any of the other games aside from a tiny bit of PokePark's sequel, but I'd like to one day... well, maybe not Channel.
Show Comments
Leave A Comment
Hold on there, you need to login to post a comment...