>>47232940>Can a Kirlia/Gardevoir/Gallade be prominently good in strategy games?Being psychic with some ability to percieve the future helps, but that's a lot of effort on their part. Depends on the game. Chess is manageable, but the Grand Stragegy genre would be too complex and they'd be frustrated with the interfaces of most RTS games.
>Do the full moon affect the Ralts line in any way?Nothing supernatural; Moonblast seems to work fine regardless.
>What signifies a Kirlia has come of age?(Deliberately ignoring the game mechanics)
There's no physiological indications, only psychological and empathic indications. A Kirlia coming of age will be probing with its mind in deeper ways and reaches out to others beyond the family unit, becoming truly mature when its sense of duty to others is coherent.
It becomes increasingly curious if whether or not others are curious about it, all while seeking deeper emotions, prying into more intimate behaviors and their nuances.
This prying pushes them to recognize positivity as more than just something they enjoy, since not everyone is positive, let alone candid with their emotions, and this discovery of contrasts builds their future sense of duty.
>Are Gardevoir banned from playing Chess?Going back to the first question, while their abilities can give them an edge, reading surface thoughts is unreliable and also useless against master level players. Peering into the future takes more effort than it's worth most of the time, especially for something so trivial. An individual Gardevoir psychically influencing their opponent mid-match would get banned.
>What role do they serve in nature?A form of Guardian Spirit and/or Protector, though loyal to a fault to whatever they choose to protect. Given how weak Ralts are, protecting non-hostile species and having Ralts bond with them could be considered a survival strategy.
>How beneficial it is, for a Ralts growing up, showing love for it?Quite beneficial - they thrive on it.