>>35477976>>along with the Truth/Ideals theme>Which didn't really happen either, it was a stated trait of the dragons that never really came up.Didn't even play the game, nerd
>N is an idealist. He wants to create a world where Pokemon are free from the machinations of man, even though the reality is that the co-exist peacefully 95% of the time. This is his reality, which exists due to Ghetsis' plotting. Because in his reality, Pokemon are victims, his choice of dragons makes sense in either game>You, the player, want to preserve the world where pokemon and humans live together and improve it if at all possible. You see the truth that man need pokemon and pokemon need man, so you are in opposition to N. Your protag is silent so, again, you can project either truth or ideals onto him>Bianca is the rival who represents truth. She is frank about her mediocre abilities as a trainer, and even her dad admits as much. She spends lots of time wondering if she should bother being a trainer, since the games suggest that's the end all for all kids and teens. She wonder what she even can do.>Cheren represents ideals. He is a strong trainer but hasn't been challenged to think about the world that much. He's challenging the league because that's what you're supposed to do, but he doesn't really have any particular ideal of strength, so he spends time wondering what he should do and what he should believeImagine being so much of a brainlet you can't follow a game for 10 year olds