The meeting room door closed softly, muffling faint workplace chatter outside.
Only Takuya Nakayama and GALLOP's core creative team, led by Kunihiko Yuyama, remained.
Takuya's hefty documents were distributed, first reaching Yuyama's hands.
Yuyama picked up the top stack, its cover featuring vibrant, peculiar creatures.
His eyes locked on the first page—a yellow, cheek-sparking, mouse-like yet not-quite-mouse creature.
The name below: Pikachu.
Other team members took their sections: some studied character designs, others world-building, some story outlines.
The room filled with the rustle of pages, a rhythmic cadence.
Takuya sat opposite, unhurried, watching these animation veterans.
He knew the weight of these materials and trusted their persuasive power.
Time flowed in near-still silence.
From initial scrutiny to growing engagement, then full immersion, the team's expressions shifted subtly but clearly.
Yuyama read meticulously, page by page, fingers pausing occasionally on a design or note.
With years in the industry, he'd seen countless proposals, but never one so complete, vast, and… captivating.
This wasn't a proposal—it was a world's framework, awaiting flesh and blood.
Each design balanced uniqueness with an indescribable charm, unforgettable.
The story outline—travel, challenges, meeting Pokémon and people—was clear, compelling, almost cinematic.
Nearly an hour passed unnoticed.
No one spoke; even chair shifts were rare.
Each person seemed drawn into the Pokémon world, forgetting their surroundings.
Yuyama closed the final page, setting the thick stack down.
He removed his glasses, rubbed his brow, fatigue from absorbing vast information mingling with undeniable excitement in his eyes.
151 starter Pokémon? Just the first batch?
Each with unique designs, attributes, brief backstories, and evolution chains?
What resources was Takuya, or Sega, pouring into this?
The workload was daunting, yet irresistibly enticing—a chance to bring this world to life.
Other members looked up, exchanging glances of shock, disbelief, and creative hunger.
Takuya's proposal wasn't just a business pitch—it was a key unlocking a new continent.
Each page radiated creativity, Pokémon practically leaping off the paper.
Noticing Yuyama's completion, Takuya set down a GALLOP portfolio, scanning the team.
Their initial polite scrutiny had turned to surprise, focus, and excitement.
Especially Yuyama, his brows alternating between furrowed thought and relaxed delight, lips twitching at clever designs or plot points.
Finally, the last document closed.
Yuyama looked up, eyes filled with awed admiration.
"Nakayama-san…" he began, pausing to gather words.
"This proposal… it's astonishing."
"Not just the creativity, but its thoroughness—151 Pokémon designs, sheer artistry."
"Frankly, with this level of detail, you could switch to directing anime and make waves."
Team members nodded, their gazes toward Takuya brimming with respect.
"You're too kind, Director Yuyama," Takuya said, smiling with youthful humility.
Inwardly, he chuckled: Half a year of burning passion for Pokémon went into this—151 first-gen Pokédex and the original series' plot. I'll never do something this crazy again.
He had to secure the IP's core essence from the start, preserving its most iconic, heart-tugging elements.
For attributes, he drew on the later, refined 18-type system but, for early anime simplicity, marked types like Dark and Fairy as "unidentified new attributes" for later introduction.
Takuya began: "For the story, I've outlined the first League region—Kanto's adventure…"
Yuyama and the team listened intently, nodding.
They discussed details—Pokémon-trainer bonds, world tone (adventure vs. daily life)—in brief, efficient exchanges.
Takuya's clear, precise answers showed his mastery of the world's every corner.
The team expressed high approval of his robust, detailed framework.
To their professional eyes, this wasn't just a promising plan—it was a highly feasible blueprint.
"Nakayama-san, from an animation production perspective, your materials are more than sufficient," Yuyama said firmly, adjusting his glasses.
"Now, it's about finalizing cooperation details."
He stood. "Shall we join President Wakana and Suzuki-san in the president's office to settle the business side?"
Takuya nodded. "Thank you, Director Yuyama."
Yuyama led Takuya to the president's office. The creative team dispersed, knowing the upcoming talks would decide if this thrilling project would take flight.