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Please rate and fix my barebones draft of a plot:
>Villain A wants to summon Jirachi in order to wish for Doom (Jirachi's signature move is Doom Desire), which will summon a Meteor
>By summoning Jirachi, he knows Zygarde will awaken and protect the region/planet
>Villain A wants to then control Zygarde so he can make everyone think he's some kind of hero, and after that he assumes everyone will bow to him as an easy way of becoming a world leader/ruler
>Villain B (the real villain) is a stoic admin serving Villain A.
>Villain B is actually a traitor, and wants to stop his plans by making sure after Zygarde appears, Villain A can't control it somehow (think Red Chain but for Zygarde? Then imagine villain B makes a defective Red Chain so it doesn't work).
>Villain B's thought goes like "If a dumbass like my boss can summon such destruction without being stopped, then we deserve total anihilation"
>Player fails to stop them from wishing for a Meteor
>Player fails to stop Villain B from making a defective way to control/power-up Zygarde
>Player has to catch Zygarde and make it protect the planet
>It is revealed Zygarde can't prevent such a huge threat by itself
>Player then is forced to faint Jirachi, at which point Jirachi shoots itself towards the meteor (the game's probably going to be called Pokémon Shooting Star or whatever)
>The meteor is destroyed but there's no trace of Jirachi (it's alive, post-game quest)
>From the meteor comes Deoxys and then you have to beat Villain B in trying to do some freaky shit during the post game, but this time you're aided by Villain A as if he were Guzma during Rainbow Rocket.
>Villain A helps you stop Villain B's plans and becomes a real hero but without the evil bullshit
>Villain B is like "oh, if you were able to stop me from blowing shit up a second time, then it wasn't mean to be. I was wrong all along".