>>12553757>Never said otherwise, I'm not sure what this has to do with what we were discussing. I don't at all dislike the third gen, if that's what you're trying to insinuate in a roundabout way.To be fair, I don't dislike 1st/2nd gen either. I'm simply trying to illustrate that a remake could be possible and attempting to give reasons as to why it could be more than I pipe dream. I included this header mostly in anticipation of you simply being bullheaded, and now I see that I was clearly wrong in that regard, as you have continually backed up your information with actual data, something that I have not been able to do admittedly, basing my opinion mostly on conjecture
i.e. I am admitting I may well lose this arguement, despite continuing to believe in my opinions>As it stands since the release of Black and White, the 18-25 block (the people that started with RB or GSC) are either the largest or second largest (can't tell between them and 1st-3rd graders) is the age group with the highest percentage of BW registrationThat age group is also broad enough to include people who began playing in Gen 3. In fact I'd be willing to bet that most of those sales happened in the lower end of that demographic than the higher end. While it is still mostly a gen 1-2 age group, it simply illustrates that very soon, a large number of "Hoennbabies" will soon be entering that target demographic, making remakes of RSE a good bet, maybe not next year, but within the next few years.
>On the off-chance that you watch the anime, this is why we're currently getting Kanto throwbacks (Newtwo, Charizard, Butterfree), they want to translate these adult game sales into ratings.This demographic also contains a large amount of parents (read, consumers) whose children who are in the second demographic of 1st-3rd graders. Parents watch cartoons with their kids. It's basically advertising within advertising if you think about it.