![]() After defeating Falkner for the Zephyr Badge, Elm's assistant appears to give the player the Egg, which will later hatch into a Togepi. With the first Gym in nearby Violet City, the player heads off on their adventure. From here, he encourages the player to journey across Johto and challenge the eight Gym Leaders, Falkner, Bugsy, Whitney, Morty, Chuck, Jasmine, Pryce, and Clair, and eventually the Pokémon League (though this is a long way off). Elm is amazed by the Egg and insists on studying it, allowing the player to keep the Pokémon they traveled with as a starter Pokémon. Upon defeating him and returning to New Bark, the player gives the name of the boy (the player can choose any name, provided it fits under the seven-character limit his name defaults to Silver) to a police officer who has come to investigate the incident. Pokémon's discovery turns out to be an Egg, the player returns to New Bark, only to find that a suspicious red-haired boy seen lurking outside of Elm's lab earlier has stolen one of Elm's Pokémon- the one that the player's choice is weak to, coincidentally. Elm supplies the player with one of three Pokémon, Chikorita, Cyndaquil, or Totodile, for this errand. Pokémon's house to discover what he was so excited about. ![]() The player begins his journey from New Bark Town, running an errand for Professor Elm to Mr. However, Kanto can be traveled to later in the games. Unlike earlier games, Gold and Silver take place in the Johto region, west of the region that the original games take place in, Kanto. Much like Red and Green (Red and Blue overseas), Gold and Silver were followed shortly by a third version with minor changes, Pokémon Crystal Version, as well as remakes two generations later in the form of Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver Versions for the Nintendo DS. ![]() As Pokémon had become an international phenomenon already with the release of Pokémon Red and Blue Versions and Pokémon Yellow: Special Pikachu Edition in North America and other regions, the localized versions of these games were greatly expected. Like their predecessor, they are paired versions, with few differences aside from available Pokémon. They were released in Japan on November 21, 1999, in North America on October 15, 2000, and in Europe on April 6, 2001. Pokémon Gold Version and Pokémon Silver Version(known in Germany as Pokémon Goldene Edition und Silberne Edition) were the first main series of Generation II for Game Boy Color.
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