>>58572633for fuck sake
People tend to think ORAS retcons megas to be from space, but not quite, the writing may seem like rainbow colored stones fell from the sky but the japanese script actually uses the word meteorite, not meteoroid, it refers to one that has already impacted on Earth, it talks about rocks that began glowing like mega stuff after impact.
>English: The meteors shone with a rainbow brilliance, as if some great life was held within.>Japanese: 隕石はまるで生命を宿したかのように七色に輝きだした The meteorite(s) began to glow in seven colors, as if it had come to life.After this Zinnia says
>A thousand years after this time, the meteoroids once again fell. A huge meteoroid, far greater than any before, struck the planet, boring deep into the ocean and leaving behind it a crater larger than any other. The land born of this event later become known as Sootopolis.>The great meteoroid was the first of many disasters to befall humanity. When it punched into the planet, the land cracked beneath it, and a great welling of natural energy poured from beneath Hoenn. Thirsting for that energy, Primal Kyogre and Primal Groudon once again woke.>The people had a wish—a memory from a thousand years before... They wished that the Legendary Pokémon clad in emerald light would appear again. The huge Meteorite that lay at the heart of Sootopolis gave off a boundless brilliance. In its brilliance, it resembled a vast and powerful Key Stone. And once again, Rayquaza descended from whence it came in the heavens.That event is the key (pun not intended). The meteors impact on Earth and then get turned into rainbow stones. This is also shown with the meteor the character carries most of the game, it starts as a completely normal meteor but the more the plot progresses the more the rock changes into a megastone which Rayquaza later eats.
>well that doesn't mean whatever makes rocks turn into mega stuff is from Earth, it's only space rocks that become megastones in ORAS, right?Also wrong. (cont)