John rode Arcanine across the wilderness, the fire-type's steady gait eating up ground as Gardevoir glided alongside them. The psychic Pokemon extended its Psychic in a kilometer-wide sweep, constructing a detailed sand table of their surroundings that hovered before John like a tactical display.
Their destination remained clear: the lighthouse in the distance.
If any Pokemon or humans still inhabited this desolate world, logic dictated they'd gravitate toward that towering beacon of light rather than the barren wasteland surrounding them.
"Garde!" Gardevoir's sudden alert made John snap to attention.
"Enlarge it," he commanded immediately.
At the very edge of Gardevoir's detection range, a shadow materialized on the psychic sand table, the unmistakable silhouette of a Pokemon!
"There's actually Pokemon here?" John's eyes lit up as he leaned forward. "Show me more detail."
The spiritual energy construct sharpened, revealing a light blue figure that looked distinctly like a Raichu.
John's mind raced. "This changes everything. That's definitely not one of Scarlett's Pokemon." He'd memorized her entire roster before the mission. Since this Raichu didn't belong to her, it had to be native to this pocket dimension.
A Pokemon thriving in a spatial rift world? The implications were staggering.
"Did I just stumble into one of those 'exception' worlds the scholars theorized about?" John muttered, remembering the research materials he'd studied.
"Change detection to forward sweep," he ordered. "Let's follow it, but keep our distance."
Gardevoir immediately adjusted its psychic probe, trading wide coverage for focused forward scanning. The detection range shortened, but the resolution improved dramatically.
As they advanced, signs of civilization began emerging from the sand table's blue projections.
A tavern. A greenhouse. Stables.
The architectural style screamed classical Western, all wooden beams and cobblestone foundations. But every structure sagged with neglect, windows dark and empty. This town had been abandoned for years, maybe decades.
"This antiquated style is practically extinct in the modern world," John observed, studying the ghostly buildings. "This place must have been trapped in the spatial rift for quite some time."
When they finally reached the town's outskirts, Gardevoir's psychic sweep penetrated deeper into the settlement. Suddenly, the sand table exploded with activity as dozens of Pokemon signatures appeared.
Raichu, Magnezone, Electivire, Probopass, Bronzong...
"There's an entire population here," John breathed, doing a quick count. "At least a hundred, and that's just what we can detect so far."
A mechanical whirring sound cut through the air.
John's head snapped up, instantly alert. In the distance, at the lighthouse's base, a faint silver gleam separated itself from the golden illumination. It was moving, no, flying, directly toward them with increasing speed.
At five hundred meters, John got his first clear look at their visitor through Arcanine's enhanced vision.
A Magnezone, its metallic body wreathed in silver-white energy, descended like some kind of alien spacecraft. Its trajectory was unmistakable: a direct collision course with John's position.
"Heavy Slam!" John recognized the steel-type move immediately. "Seriously? I haven't even done anything yet and they're already trying to flatten me?"
He snatched a Pokeball from his belt and released his ace. "Let's give them something to really worry about."
Greninja materialized in a burst of light, water immediately spiraling around its form. When the aquatic vortex dispersed, the ninja Pokemon stood ready with a massive Water Shuriken strapped to its back.
Bond Phenomenon complete.
"Ultimate Water Shuriken," John commanded with a raised hand.
Greninja's movements were poetry in motion. It hurled the first shuriken while simultaneously drawing a second from its back, enlarging it to full size. Golden energy coated the weapon's edges while a rapidly spinning Aura Sphere formed at its center, a deadly fusion of fighting and psychic energy.
This wasn't the crude prototype John had used in previous battles. This was the perfected version.
The waveguide energy didn't just power the golden shuriken's rotation for extra cutting force. The Aura Sphere and Water Shuriken remained distinct entities, the shuriken would explode on impact while the Aura Sphere continued forward for penetrating damage before detonating again. And because the Aura Sphere guided the entire construct, it possessed both lock-on capability and tracking functions.
Faced with this approaching doom, Magnezone didn't even attempt evasive maneuvers. Instead, it accelerated directly into the attack, apparently confident it could bulldoze through with sheer momentum.
The collision was spectacular.
BOOM!
Something definitely got launched, but it wasn't John's attack. The Ultimate Water Shuriken detonated on contact, the explosive force sending Magnezone tumbling through the air like a metallic meteor. A split second later, the Aura Sphere punched through the smoke cloud and slammed into the still-airborne steel-type, launching it even further.
CRASH! CRASH! CRASH!
Magnezone plowed through building after building, each impact sending up clouds of dust and debris. When it finally hit the ground, the Aura Sphere delivered its second explosion, creating a ten-meter crater and reducing everything in the blast radius to rubble.
Black smoke billowed skyward like a funeral pyre.
"Overconfident idiot," John snorted. "Steel-types are weak to fighting moves, and this one chose to tank a direct hit? Where did these Pokemon learn their battle tactics?"
"Impressive work," he told Greninja with genuine approval.
The ninja Pokemon landed gracefully, arms crossed over its chest, expression as stoically unreadable as ever. Its body language clearly conveyed: Of course I won. Did you expect anything less from a technique this refined?
"Garde!" Gardevoir's urgent warning drew John's attention back to the sand table.
The Pokemon signatures that had been scattered throughout the town were now converging on their position. Hundreds of them, all crackling with electrical energy, their hostile intent radiating across the psychic link like heat from a forge.
"They want a fight?" John grinned, adrenaline surging through his veins. "Perfect. I could use the experience points."
A quick analysis of the approaching horde revealed an interesting pattern, every single Pokemon was either electric or steel-type. The monotonous typing actually made tactical planning easier.
"Greninja, use Role Play," John commanded, already reaching for another Pokeball.
With Electivire leading the charge, its ability was almost certainly Motor Drive. Once Greninja copied that ability, electric attacks would not only become harmless but would actually boost its speed. Combined with its natural agility, Greninja would be able to dance through the enemy ranks like a phantom.
John's second Pokeball burst open, revealing Garchomp. Mega stones resonated between trainer and Pokemon as the land shark underwent its transformation into Mega Garchomp, twin blade-like appendages gleaming with deadly promise.
"Earthquake should clear out most of the ground-bound opponents," John mused, already visualizing the carnage.
But just as he was preparing to unleash devastation upon the approaching horde, a familiar voice cut through his battle focus.
"John, don't fight yet!"