>>47793314Doesn't matter which one N has. Zekrom, Reshiram, truth, ideals, modernity, history, fire, electricity, masculine, feminine, anything remotely tied to these pokemon are all the same in front of wuji.
Wuji is the original dragon, in that it is primordial and boundless, but also boundless in the sense that it represents nothingness, the "old universe". We only see the original dragon through myth, and its origins only get further muddled with Lacunosa's origins claiming Kyurem is from a meteorite.
The true yin and yang in Gen 5 isn't Reshiram versus Zekrom, but rather Reshiram/Zekrom versus Kyurem. This is exemplified through the interchangeability of Zekrom and Reshiram for the plot. Ghetsis being more of a traditional villian, seeking for power through pokemon, represents the "older universe". N, being conflicted throughout BW, but ultimately finds his resolve, is represented by the "new universe", one that has polarity.
Through the climax of BW2 do we see the old and the new come to a head, represented through Kyurem. Kyurem, a seemingly barren vessel, doesn't revert to the original dragon, but rather becomes something new. It simultaneously wields ice and fire/electricity.
N summarizes in BW2:
>I put my beliefs on the line and battle a certain Trainer! And I lost… But at the same time, I learned something important. To make the world better, you must accept different ideas. I learned that this is the formula for changing the world. Accepting different ideas… I want to see if you a Trainer whose heart is strong enough to do that.Truth or ideals don't have to be a dichotomy, what N, and Kyurem through Zekrom and Reshiram, represent is transformation, being able grow and progress into something away from the old and into the new. Something that BW in itself was trying to be by being a soft reboot, as well as having the setting take place in a cosmopolitan city half way around the world from Japan.