>>33917502>>33917510Arguably a minor thing, but the AI had an uncanny ability to tell exactly when you were going to switch, what you were switching to, and what you're planning to use. Especially in the Masters Battle.
As for Neon Colosseum, it runs on the "Fortune Battle" concept, which puts all six of your and your opponent's Pokemon on a roulette wheel. You're both given four Pokeballs, and each take turns throwing them at the wheel. You're stuck with whatever a thrown Ball lands on, and whatever you get first is what you'll have to open with, no ifs ands or buts, even if it's your opponent's Pokemon. It is very possible for you to get screwed over if you use custom Pokemon, so if you don't want to basically hand the AI a win, you need to use rentals.
which means that all twelve Pokémon on your pass and your opponent's pass go on a roulette wheel, and you throw Poké Balls at them. Even the Pokémon on the Rental Passes are better than your opponent's. There's a seven-or-eight slot delay between your pressing the button and the Ball landing, which means you need to be careful if there's someone particular you want to pick up. And since your first time through is a mandatory Double Battle, you need to throw your first couple Balls in preparation for any combination your opponent might catch. Yes, Sunset Colosseum runs a very randomized Rental Battle, but at least you're sharing the disadvantage with your opponent!