>>33642218Yeah, that was me. Glad you took some of my feedback to heart.
Wait, are you drawing these pictures? Is that you, doing that? God damn, man, those are super good. Post a discord or a deviantart or some shit, I'm sure people here would want to commission you. I kind of do.
Actively sought Larvesta, outdoorsy, researches bug type Pokemon, good, all good. Glad you took to that. Still think that with Cutiefly being her first, she has less of a reason to travel to Alola, and her obtaining a Dewpider could be worked around some other way. I'm of the opinion that you need to be able to think of Pokemon populations a little flexibly, to be work with generational orders retroactively. Base shit more off of habitats than regions. Zubat, Woobat, and Noibat could all be found in caves swarming together, Scatterbug and Wurmple aren't rare in Viridian Forest, Beartic and Cryogonal are plentiful around Mt. Coronet and Silver. Take into consideration how the Pokemon World works and how we experience it semi-independently; as more games are added, past games are changed slightly here and there to accommodate new information, new regions, new species. The way Houndour are found in Kanto in GSC, but not RBY. That's me, though. I understand not everybody is willing to follow that paradigm, exactly
Environmentalism is kind of broad, as a political and philosophical field. If you mean environmentalist merely as "person that protects/supports nature," then yeah, totally. Not so much conservationism. A Pokemon Ranger is pretty much a Park Ranger, they try to stop ecological problems, helping both Pokemon and humans. In the series, that means stopping Pokemon abuse, rescuing lost individuals, and stopping shitty organizations from taking regions over. I imagine they'd also do things like put out fires, dealing with overpopulation through hunting, clearing out campgrounds, delivering medical attention to those in need, keeping an eye on overflowing rivers. That sort of thing.