Blog Page 42

Did Tulsi Gabbard Sink Kamala Harris’ Campaign, or Did Kamala Harris Sink It?

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In a somewhat surprising move, despite sagging polling numbers, Senator Kamala Harris has officially withdrawn from the presidential race.

While polls clearly showed Harris didn’t have much of a path forward, it was widely assumed she would continue her campaign at least through the December debate. However, with Harris struggling to connect with voters and earn a base of support as well as raise the money needed to keep her campaign afloat – she opted to drop out ahead of the December debate instead of simply risk not qualifying for it.

“I’m not a billionaire. I can’t fund my own campaign. And as the campaign has gone on, it’s become harder to raise the money we need to compete,” she said in her announcement on Medium.

The other side of the coin is the fact that Harris continuously struggled to clearly define her positions on issues pertaining to domestic and foreign policy. Harris was dealt a deeply troubling blow based on her record as a prosecutor from Congresswoman Tulsi Gabbard during the second night of the second debates on July 31.

“There are too many examples to cite but she put over 1,500 people in jail for marijuana violations and then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana,” Gabbard said during that debate.

Harris was polling at 15% at the beginning of July, but she was unable to sustain that momentum. After uneven debate performances and the criticism received at the hands of Gabbard, Harris’ polling numbers dropped 77% from July to December 2. Advisers to Harris believe that moment during that debate is what really accelerated Harris’ decline in the polls, and now withdraw from the race.

Additionally, approximately 50 current or former campaign staff members for Harris spoke with The Times anonymously and pointed the finger directly at Harris for her swift decline. That’s in addition to former State Operations Director Kelly Mehlenbacher highlighting in her resignation letter that, “This is my third presidential campaign and I have never seen an organization treat its staff so poorly.”

Harris has vowed to keep on fighting to defeat President Trump, albeit in a different capacity than what she initially intended.

Yankees-Ellsbury Contract Fight is About Sending a Message

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When the New York Yankees signed Jacoby Ellsbury to a 7-year, $153 million contract, there were few lingering debates as to whether it was a good signing. The overwhelming consensus from analysts and bloggers – even those with a Yankee-centric tilt – was that of an immediately sunk cost before he played a game in pinstripes.

Ellsbury never seemed comfortable with the scrutiny of ostensibly replacing Robinson Cano on the Yankees roster, did not have the personality for New York, and his injury woes with the Boston Red Sox grew worse when he became a Yankee. Those injuries and a lack of performance made him, at best, a forgotten joke within the Yankees universe. Now, as the Yankees have finally capitulated to reality and released him, there is a dispute as to whether the club is obligated to pay the remainder of his contract for $26 million.

Based on Ellsbury receiving treatment from a doctor outside the Yankees’ umbrella and his subsequent inability to play due to injuries up and down his body, this is not about whether the Yankees or Ellsbury are “right” in their perspectives regarding his contract. Contractual fine print should be left to those who have seen the agreement and have the legal background to understand its clauses and ramifications for various acts and transgressions.

What is relevant here is how predictable the outcome of the Ellsbury-Yankees union was and that the team is sending a message to other players about falling in line regarding medical treatment. Injury-prone players with humongous contracts like Giancarlo Stanton might want to take note as the deal the club absorbed from the Miami Marlins to get him is clearly hamstringing them from making necessary additions.

As much as the Yankees deny it, the signing of Ellsbury went beyond a baseball decision and was designed to distract from the pending loss of Cano. If the Yankees’ front office was given sodium pentothal and subjected to intense questioning about those machinations, they would have no choice but to admit that they needed to do something drastic to cover for the mistakes made in negotiating with Cano. Had the same contract given to Ellsbury after 2013 been offered to Cano a year earlier in the form of an extension to preclude his free agency that came simultaneous to Ellsbury’s, it’s difficult to imagine him rejecting it.

The Red Sox knew what Ellsbury was. They also knew what he wasn’t. It’s a glowing red flag when a notable free agent’s former employer just won the World Series and has the money to spend, but chooses to limit its retention attempt to an amount they know he will reject. That’s precisely what happened with the Red Sox and their reported 5-year, $80 million offer.

Ellsbury was undoubtedly a good player. However, there was one season in which he put the entire package together and achieved what his skills suggested he could be. In 2011, he was the bright spot in the Red Sox’ disastrous collapse, finishing second in the voting for Most Valuable Player, more than tripling his previous career high in home runs, winning a Gold Glove for his work in center field, and being awarded a Silver Slugger. Had he been a free agent after that season, other teams in addition to the Yankees would have bid for him at his high point.

In 2012 and 2013, he reverted to his general category of being a good but not great player; someone who would provide speed, some pop, great defense and serve as a background cog rather than a centerpiece.

Perhaps the Yankees were comfortable with that and believed the notion that playing his home games in Yankee Stadium with its Little League dimensions in right field would lead to at least 20 homers in addition to his other attributes. Or they might have been accepting of him being a name sufficiently recognizable to counteract the loss of Cano and if he posted the same numbers he did in an average year in Boston, the rest of the Yankees lineup would cover for him.

It didn’t and it was not because of physical fragility and inability to adapt to New York. In his first four seasons as a Yankee, Ellsbury played in 520 out of a possible 648 games – not an outrageous amount of missed time given his history. His Red Sox injuries were sprains and strains, something that a team could reasonably chalk up to the rigors of everyday play and Ellsbury’s game of speed and defense. His .264/.330/.386 slash for the Yankees was nowhere close to the .297/.350/.439 he posted with the Red Sox. His defense declined and he was basically a slightly better than average player in New York after he showed All-Star and even superstar flashes in Boston. Had Ellsbury been joining the Yankees from three years earlier, he would have been more easily hidden. The 2013 to 2016 Yankees needed a player who would lift others around him rather than blend in with the scenery. It was not a particularly good team and the results – win totals in the mid-80s – showed that. Ellsbury was considered part of the problem in their mediocrity, but the real issue was bad starting pitching and a lack of depth, not Jacoby Ellsbury.

He was a contributor to the Yankees’ ALCS team in 2017. Had he continued that trend and played at all in 2018-2019 when they were legitimate title contenders, he would not have lived up to that contract, but it would not be in the debate for one of the worst contracts in the history of the sport as it is after two lost years and now a legal fight.

It’s difficult to envision the Yankees being overly concerned about the money still owed Ellsbury as much as they’re looking to punish him and hammer the point to other players not to get treatment from a doctor unaffiliated with the team or face the same fate. As much as he’s blamed for his failed tenure in New York, the fault lies more with the team for signing him, not with the player for taking the money that should not have been offered in the first place.

Pete Buttigieg Has Had One Hell of a Week

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South Bend, Indiana Mayor and Democratic candidate for President Pete Buttigieg has had one hell of a week. He’s picked up two congressional endorsements on Monday and Tuesday, giving him three congressional endorsements overall.

The first one he received in April from Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.) who said he is “similarly inspired” by Buttigieg as he was former President Obama. His second endorsement came on Monday from Rep. Pete Visclosky (D-Ind.). This third endorsement arrived Tuesday morning from Rep. Kathleen Rice (D-N.Y.), who previously endorsed former Texas Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D) before he dropped out of the 2020 race.

This comes off news of the latest Iowa polls showing him with a huge jump in support from prospective voters, picking up 26% of voter support. The next highest candidate is Senator Elizabeth Warren at 19% and Senator Bernie Sanders at 18%.

Granted, this is just for Iowa. He’s still polling at around 9% nationally but that kind of boost could lend itself to his campaign gaining additional momentum and further solidifying himself as a viable alternative candidate to the far-left candidates ahead of him.

However, all this positive momentum that he has been building up could potentially come crashing down.

Michael Harriot wrote a scathing piece on The Root titled Pete Buttigieg Is a Lying MF. You should absolutely read the article for yourself, but here’s a key highlight.

“This is not a misstatement. Pete Buttigieg went to the best educational institutions America has to offer & he—more than anyone on the goddamned planet—knows everything he said [about minority students] is a baldfaced lie”

That, in turn, got the hashtag “PetebuttigiegisalyingMF” trending.

We could spend weeks poring through every single tweet with #PetebuttigiegisalyingMF attached to it, but that’s more of an exercise you should do for yourself instead of having me cherry-pick a handful to shove in your face proving just how bad Buttigieg’s day was getting during that time. One of the big takeaways from all this is the fact that Buttigieg is a white man pretending to have some intrinsic understanding of the plight of the black community, specifically as it pertains to educational opportunities and attainment.

When you’re the whitest person in the room, have had one of the whitest upbringings along with much of the privilege that comes from all that – how could you truly know or understand what the black community is going through?

You can’t. It’s time to stop pretending that you do. And that goes for anyone who hasn’t lived that experience as being black in America. It’s just different. And some of us who have shared experiences with black communities, who happen to not be black, can understand and even relate some – but it’s still not the same.

Pete Buttigieg’s response to the harsh criticism, the fair criticism, he’s received as a result of that article was to call Harriot directly and have a conversation with him after briefly discussing it while on the campaign trail. According to Harriot, who wrote about that call, Buttigieg mostly just listened for nearly 20 minutes instead of trying to explain to Harriot why he was right.

It’s a good start.

Because you see – sitting at a table with other white men discussing the plight of the black community and providing ideas on how to ‘fix’ the problems of the black community isn’t particularly constructive.

Sitting around a table with those white men and discussing the root causes of the discrimination and issues faced by the black community each day actually could be.

Calling out the systemic racism by institutions put in place by white people and calling it out directly to the faces of white people you know who support those institutions actually could be.

Being willing to proactively engage community leaders and residents within predominantly black and under-served communities is something Buttigieg should have been doing already – and not in an “I’m smarter than you and know how to fix things for every one of you” kind of way.

But here’s the rub.

Buttigieg enjoys and owes the majority of his support to white voters. He’d surely lose a portion of them if he began to truly and passionately take a stand against the institutional racism that has plagued our nation since its creation. 

How willing and ready is he to accept that loss of support within his base so he can make proper inroads within the black communities and voters across the country? 

How willing is he to better educate himself through gaining that understanding of the black experience by reaching out to black voters directly and listening to them too, as opposed to talking at them and instead with speaking with them?

No one knows the answers to these questions, but actions speak louder than words. We’re about to find out just how much Buttigieg doesn’t want to be just another one of those “get-along moderates who would rather make shit up out of whole cloth than wade into the waters of reality.”

Former Trump Aide and Felon Running for Congress

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George Papadopoulos is the former campaign aide to President Donald Trump. He was also the key figure in the FBI’s Russia probe. He also pleaded guilty in 2017 as part of the special counsel’s investigation into Russia election interference after admitting he lied to the FBI. Because of that, he was sentenced to 14 days in prison. The judge who sentenced him said that Papadopoulos placed “self-interest over the national interest” when he lied to the FBI in an attempt to keep open the possibility of a job within the Trump administration.

Papadopoulos, technically, is also a former felon.

That aside, he made an announcement – which was widely expected, on Fox & Friends that he is running for the California Congressional District seat vacated by Democrat Katie Hill. Papadopoulos filed paperwork after Hill announced her resignation once news surfaced of an inappropriate relationship she had with a staff member, which led to an ethics probe.

The Congressional District seat he is seeking election for is the 25th Congressional District and covers a part of Los Angeles County that has historically been held by Republicans since 1993 until Hill’s victory in 2018.

This district was created January 3, 1953 and the voters from that district have historically voted Republican. Of the nine elected representatives since its creation four have been Democrats. However, that covers nearly 57 years and a Democrat has only held office for 25 of those years, with 18 of them (nine congressional terms) being held by one man from 1975 to 1993 – Edward R. Roybal.

The District, while more competitive for Democrats, could still be a toss-up – even for someone with Papadopoulos’s reputation. In 2008 49.45% of residents voted for former President Barack Obama. In 2012 that flipped with 49.7% of residents voting for Senator Mitt Romney over President Obama. And it flipped again during the 2016 Presidential election with 50.3% of voters backing Hillary Clinton over President Donald Trump.

Papadopoulos, for his part, says he will adopt a Pro-Trump campaign message.

Pixel Street Podcast: Our Star Wars, Pokemon Reviews, and Predicting the Game Awards Winners

This week on the Pixel Street Podcast:

John gives his review of Pokemon Sword and Shield while Connor and Joel give their thoughts on Star Wars Jedi: Fallen Order. We also predict the winners of each categories from The Game Awards as well as discuss Google Stadia’s poor launch.

Be sure to follow @pixelstreetpod on Twitter and let us know what you think of the show!

Elon Musk Unveils Futuristic Electric Truck by Tesla – The Cybertruck

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Elon Musk unveiled the latest electric vehicle option from Tesla on Thursday night – the Cybertruck. It looks like something straight from a futuristic sci-fi film, a la Bladerunner, and Musk (in classic Musk fashion) has already said he doesn’t care whether people like it or not.

How is the new electric truck line from Tesla being received in the media?

Here’s how it’s being covered by journalists since the announcement:

Tesla’s new Cybertruck might be able to turn into a ‘Cybercamper’ with a tent for sleeping in the back

Hot takes as opinion cools on Tesla Cybertruck

Tesla Cybertruck will have solar roof option to add 15 miles of ranger per day

We have five questions about Tesla’s Cybertruck

Tesla Cybertruck Impressions & First Drive – Video by Marques Brownlee

Between the tank-like design, kind-of-maybe shatterproof glass, and options to extend range and uses it seems like a fairly cool futuristic vehicle option on the market.

Here are the specs for the Single Motor RWD model:

0-60 MPH <6.5 SECONDS
RANGE 250+ MILES
DRIVETRAIN REAR-WHEEL DRIVE
STORAGE 100 FT3
VAULT LENGTH 6.5 FT
TOWING CAPACITY 7,500+ LBS
AUTOPILOT STANDARD
ADAPTIVE AIR SUSPENSION STANDARD
GROUND CLEARANCE UP TO 16″
APPROACH ANGLE 35 DEGREES
DEPARTURE ANGLE 28 DEGREES

Mets and Syndergaard now a marriage of convenience

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The New York Mets and general manager Brodie Van Wagenen flirted seriously with trading Noah Syndergaard at the July 31 trade deadline. With the club floundering at three games below .500, out of the race for the National League East and behind several teams for a Wild Card spot, part of a moderate teardown with an eye toward contending in 2020 was listening to offers for Syndergaard and Zack Wheeler.

Taking offers for Wheeler, a pending free agent, made sense. Syndergaard was more complicated. A reasonable question to ask was why the Mets, hoping to contend and with a 27-year-old power arm under team control for two more seasons, would even think about trading Syndergaard. A simple explanation is that he would yield the biggest return based on those very factors. Still, it’s understandable to stop and wonder if there are underlying issues that teams would not see until they unwrap the box to play with their shiny new toy.

Rather than trade anyone other than the superfluous (Jason Vargas), the Mets instead chose to add by acquiring Marcus Stroman from the Toronto Blue Jays. With the very real prospect of losing Wheeler, a Syndergaard trade left them with not one but two giant holes to fill in their starting rotation for 2020.

For the Mets and Syndergaard, it’s not as simple as one answer as to why they’ve headed in this direction. There is a combination of factors that made him available to begin with and led to the Mets, according to a Van Wagenen pronouncement that he would not be traded, ultimately deciding to retain him for 2020.

The free agent market for starting pitchers is relatively flush, but the Mets’ holes are many and given the contracts already on the books, their financial wiggle room is limited. Unless a team caved to their demands – think Forrest Whitley and Kyle Tucker from the Houston Astros – it made precious little sense to deal Syndergaard. Had they signed Wheeler to an extension at the deadline as they tried to do, either they would not have traded for Stroman or they would have traded Syndergaard, likely the latter.

Syndergaard can be a handful. He speaks his mind. He is out and about in New York City, enjoying the attention he attracts with his 6’6” frame and long blonde mane. On the field, it’s not as obvious that his ceiling is as limitless as was once believed. He surrenders an inordinate number of hits for a pitcher with his power arsenal; his command has been lacking; and his complaints about Wilson Ramos’ framing skills and overall defense sounded eerily close to blaming everyone – Ramos, the organization for pairing him with Ramos, the tightly wound baseballs – other than himself.

In the positive category, FanGraphs has the average velocity of his fastball at 97.7 mph; the rise in home runs and reduction in velocity and movement on his slider could easily have been attributed to the changes to the baseball itself; and he did come within 2.1 innings of reaching 200 for the first time in his career.

Obviously, the relationship had reached a nadir as the Mets listened to trade offers. It was leaked that Syndergaard was unhappy with Ramos’ defense and the Mets paired him with Ramos anyway. Now, with the Mets telling teams he’s no longer available, clearly the sides came together and reached a détente for the foreseeable future. Regardless of all other considerations, with the still unsettled situation of Wheeler and the reality that the Mets are not signing Gerrit Cole, Stephen Strasburg, Madison Bumgarner or any of the big names from other teams, they need Syndergaard’s innings even if they’re attached to 2019’s up and down performance. Unless a comparable pitcher was coming back in the Syndergaard trade as well as top-tier prospects to sweeten it, how can they trade him and sell an idea that they’re trying to win in 2020 or that it’s best for the organization to deal him?

For Syndergaard’s part, a trade could benefit him if he’s sent to the right place as Cole was. But Cole might have remained the enigmatic and frustrating entity he was at the tail end of his tenure with the Pirates had he been traded to the Yankees instead of the Astros. Now, after two masterful seasons in Houston, Cole is set to receive between $35 million and $40 million annually. Syndergaard knows that. There is a chance, however, that if the Mets trade him, he could wind up in a locale that is unappealing to him professionally and boring personally. A bored Syndergaard could cause more trouble than he’s worth.

For the benefit of the club and the player, they are staying together in a marriage of convenience. Each can get what they want and then amicably split when the time comes. It’s the logical conclusion and best for all parties if they stick to that script, which by statement and action, they appear primed to do.

Here’s the Latest Coverage on Ambassador Gordon Sondland’s Testimony During Impeachment Inquiry

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Ambassador Gordon Sondland gave his updated testimony for the impeachment inquiry today and said that he ‘followed the president’s orders’ in Ukraine. Ambassador Sondland’s testimony called into question the President’s defense of his ‘perfect’ call with the Ukrainian president.

Here is what other news outlets are saying:

Trump: ‘If This Were a Prizefight, They’d Stop It!’

Ambassador Sondland says he ‘followed the president’s orders’ in Ukraine

Judge Napolitano: Sondland ‘Most Compelling’ Yet

Trump directed Ukraine quid pro quo, U.S. Ambassador Gordon Sondland testifies at impeachment hearing

EU ambassador testifies there was a quid pro quo in impeachment investigation

Here’s a snapshot of which news outlets are covering Ambassador Gordon Sondland and his testimony the most over the previous 90 days.

Pokemon Sword/Shield Review

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Pokémon Sword and Shield are the first mainline games in the series available on a home console. Pokémon is right at home on the Nintendo Switch. Last year’s Let’s Go Pikachu and Eevee were decent games for casual fans, but people have been eagerly waiting for a chance to get that core Pokémon experience the franchise is famous for.

Pokémon Sword and Shield do a good job of delivering that classic gameplay with a few thoughtful revisions. It would have been nice to see them try some additional new things, but this still ends up being one of the best Pokémon games made yet.

A Controversial Pokémon Game

For what feels like the first time in my life, Pokémon has some controversy surrounding it. The controversy stems from quality concerns and the lack of being able to transfer national Pokémon to your game.

National Pokédex

boltund

Starting with the national Pokémon issue first, I have personally never taken advantage of that function in the past. I always like going into Pokémon games to build up my team from that game. I acknowledge that this prevents people from playing with their favorite Pokémon from the past, but I think the new selection of monsters added to the game more than makes up for the missing feature. I constantly was finding new Pokémon I wanted to add to my party. There were always good choices in the wild that would better my team. The Galar Pokédex is filled with great choices that should keep you continually invested in changing your team out. It did for me, at least.

Designs and Animations

rolycoly

Now for the quality concerns. At E3 this year, one of the reasons given for the lack of national Pokémon was that Game Freak could not fit in all the updated designs and animations and have the game come out on time. Outraged fans have also pointed to graphics not being up to par and performance issues.

As for the designs and animations, I would have liked to see a step forward towards a definitive home console experience. Of course, the Switch is not the most powerful thing in the world, but the dev team could have spent more time at least making battles more cinematic. There are a few examples where they went above and beyond, but they’re far and in-between.

Graphics

Graphically, the game looks like a Pokémon game. This is disappointing because Sword and Shield do not feel like they have left behind their mobile days in this way. I wonder how much effort it would take to get this game running on a 3DS. Don’t get me wrong, the games look fine. That is what is disappointing. Graphically, the 8th generation does not stand out from what came before it. However, the Galar region might be my favorite region yet. The England inspiration is very apparent, and I think they pulled off the look, and it feels brilliant.

People were looking for the first Pokémon games on a home console to take the series to new heights like Breath of the Wild did for Legend of Zelda, and it does not do that. While I do not agree with all the hate Game Freak has received lately, I do notice where they could have put more effort into making Sword and Shield stand out. As they are now, they are interchangeable with other Pokémon games from a design and performance standpoint.

A Streamlined Experience

corviknight

One of the best things the 8th generation of Pokémon has done is to make a streamlined experience of past annoyances in the series.

HMs once again are not in the game, which is still one of the best moves Game Freak ever made. You can also access your Box of stored Pokémon at any time, and pressing the “X” button in wild encounters will bring up your Pokéballs instantly. Sword and Shield have the best set-up for their controls and features.

Wild Pokémon have also never been handled better in the series. The best thing to come from Let’s Go Pikachu and Eevee was wild Pokémon appearing in the world. That returns here with a combination of wild encounters. When walking through tall grass, an exclamation point will pop up. If you decide you don’t want to have a random encounter, you can walk around it. If you do want the battle, just walk into it. It’s simple and works brilliantly for whatever mood you are in while not sacrificing the way the world feels better populated with Pokémon living in the world.

One of the things I enjoyed most is flying to towns doesn’t have an animation that pops up every time you do it. The game mentions that Corviknight taxi you around and the only indication of that is a short loading screen. Selecting a town to travel to in the past, and seeing the same scene countless times was always annoying. For having as many questions as they do above, Pokémon Sword and Shield are the best games in the series for traversing the world and stand above and beyond what came before them from that standpoint.

Big Pokémon are not too Interesting

dynamax

Finally, we can start talking about the new features of this generation of Pokémon. Dynamaxing is the process of turning your Pokémon into giant forms of themselves. Every Pokémon can be dynamaxed, but only once per battle and only for three turns. What it does is buff your Pokémon to be stronger and have new moves depending on the types of moves they currently know.

At first, these moves look awesome and are very powerful. After using them just a few times, though, you realize how limited dynamaxing is. There is one move for each type in the game, and they lose their luster quick. They are very powerful and influence the field or the stats of the Pokémon, but outside of that I struggle to find a way that Dynamax was a proper replacement for mega evolutions.

A select few Pokémon can change their design when they Dynamax. This is called Gigantamaxing. Outside of the design change, nothing is separate from another Pokémon going Dynamax. The same moves are used, and stat changes are the same. While it is cool seeing Pikachu’s original design come back for this function, it largely feels more like a gimmick than a feature to build a game off of.

As you travel throughout Galar, you will encounter many people talking about Dynamax as a part of the region’s culture. It is routinely hit over your head, and every gym battle features it, but at the end of the day, it does not feel special.

A Wild Area Appeared!

Galar, for the most part, is set up like past regions. It remains a linear experience as you travel north and progress through gyms on your way to becoming champion. What is different is a section mixed into the different towns called the Wild Area. This area is filled with Pokémon, Dynamax Raid battles, and other trainers if you are connected to the internet.

Dynamax Raid Battles

Raid battles have you team up with three others and battle a Dynamax Pokémon. If you can defeat the Pokémon before ten turns or it makes your team’s Pokémon faint four times you will be able to catch it. I do not believe it is possible to miss when you beat it.

I found the raid battles to be a lot of fun and helpful with building my party with powerful Pokémon. Unfortunately, Nintendo’s struggles with online play carry over here. It was difficult to find a full team to go into the battles every time. Either I was disconnected from the others, or I would go into battles with AI teammates. While it is nice having the game fill my team, too many times I had bad Pokémon AI to fight alongside me. For example, Wobbuffet is not a good raid Pokémon because it is a reactionary fighter. Jolteon, who is an electric type, being chosen to go up against a ground type Pokémon also leaves you at a stark disadvantage. Going into raid battles with AI seems to be a flip of the coin.

Wild Pokémon in the Wild Area

sandaconda

Outside of raids, Pokémon are everywhere in the wild area. The beautiful thing about these Pokémon is they will change out along with the weather. One moment you can find bug Pokémon in a certain area, and when you return later, something completely different could be in its place with a thunderstorm changing the battle itself. If you want to fill out your Pokédex, the wild area is the best spot to explore.

However, spending time in the wild area has limited reliability before you reach the endgame. As you progress, you will find powerful Pokémon in the wild area who are on main paths. They are removed from others in the grass to stand out. Until you have all of the badges, there will be Pokémon at a certain level you cannot catch. This inclusion is the worst update to the game. I would hit moments where a Pokémon I had on my team was a higher level than the one I was battling, and I couldn’t catch it. For example, my Cinderace was level 42 as I was fighting a level 40 Machoke. The game refused to let me catch it until I went and got the next badge. I understand them trying to hold off you catching overpowered Pokémon concerning your current gym level, but if my Pokémon are already surpassing that, you should allow me to catch it.

A Cakewalk Through Galar

yell

My final point I want to bring up here is synonymous with Pokémon anymore. Pokémon Sword and Shield are incredibly easy. Throughout my 25+ hours of game time, I did not lose one single battle and only got close to losing in the championship match and once in the endgame. I understand Pokémon is made for children first, so it will always be an easier experience, but I think the game could benefit from adding in a new difficulty mode. Something where opposing trainers have higher level Pokémon or damage is decreased. Too many times my battles came down to one hit KO’s.

In conclusion, Pokémon Sword and Shield do not stand out apart from other entries in the series, but still, deliver one of the best experiences yet in the franchise. If you can get by the early controversy from disgruntled fans, you will truly enjoy yourself. It is a Pokémon game on a home console that you can take anywhere. That novelty alone makes it worth purchasing. It fits perfectly on the Switch and is a must-buy for any Nintendo fan that is looking for that end of the year blockbuster game to spend their time on.

Final Score: 8/10

Pixel Street Podcast: Pokemon Sword/Shield Reviews, Sonic Redesign, and Disney+ Impressions

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This week on the Pixel Street Podcast:

John and Connor discuss the reviews and controversy surrounding Pokemon Sword and Shield, the Sonic the Hedgehog movie redesign, and their first impressions while using the Disney+ streaming service.

Be sure to follow @pixelstreetpod on Twitter and let us know what you think of the show!