1. favorite pokemon?

SYLVEON WAHOOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!! Farigarif CLOSE SECOND!! I LOVE MY GIRAFFE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I LOVE MY GIRAFFEE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! IT MAKES ME SOO HAPPY...

3. what is one of your favorite OR least favorite things about pokemon?

shiny hunting :) and shiny hunting :( - My XY luck was insane (shiny noibat in one egg) but SWSH and SV been a pain for shinies.



Pokemon X And Y Free Download No Survey


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Hello everybody, I am writing a masters thesis about continuous intention to use Pokemon Go and affects of the current pandemic to the game. I need some survey data from regular players to do that. Survey might look like it has a lot of questions, but it only takes around 5 minutes. I would really appreciate any help. Thanks in advanced.

Dear participant,This survey is going to be used as a main data source for our academic study, which aims to investigate why people are keep playing Pokmon Go, especially during pandemic period.This survey is anonymous and your participation in...

The POKEMON (Pervasive Overview of Kompanions of Every M-dwarf in Our Neighborhood) survey of nearby M-dwarfs intends to inspect, at diffraction-limited resolution, every low-mass star out to 15pc, along with selected additional objects to 25pc. The primary emphasis of the survey is detection of low-mass companions to these M-dwarfs for refinement of the low-mass star multiplicity rate. The resultant catalog of M-dwarf companions will also guide immediate refinement of transit planet detection results from surveys such as TESS. POKEMON is using Lowell Observatory's 4.3-m Discovery Channel Telescope (DCT) with the Differential Speckle Survey Instrument (DSSI) speckle camera, along with the NN-Explore Exoplanet Stellar Speckle Imager (NESSI) speckle imager on 3.5-m WIYN; the survey takes advantage of the extremely rapid observing cadence rates possible with WIYN and (especially) DCT. The current status and preliminary results from the first 20+ nights of observing will be presented. Gotta observe them all!

Methods:  A total of 199 participants completed an open self-selected Web-based survey. On the basis of their self-indicated assignment to one of three predefined user groups (active, former, and nonuser of Pokmon Go), participants answered various questions regarding game experience, physical activity, motivation, and personality as measured by the Big Five Inventory.

The C-Gear has a feature where you can answer survey questions for you to share the answers of which through the C Gear's Passing By mode. In Castelia City, you'll find the C Gear building to the far left of the Main Area. In this building, a researcher will set you various questions for you with a variety of excuses for giving you the questions. You need to do them all sequentially with the questions ranking up as you go. If you manage to successfully complete the surveys through Passing By, you'll get given an item. You get given a choice on whether to do the surveys by the amount of people or within a set amount of time.

The way you collect answers is simple. In the C Gear Passing By mode, you yourself answer the questions, just as the other players do. Then, when you encounter the players in Passing By mode, the information will be shared automatically and you wont need to go and request the information. There isn't a set time limit on how long you have to run the surveys, but you have a limit before you can produce results

The organizations partnered to create a survey that uses infographics to highlight new technology free for students this semester, such as Lynda.com and Office 365, and publicizes the upgraded campus Wi-Fi. The brief survey also asks for feedback about technology needs, interest in new initiatives such as beacon technology, familiarity with eSports, the Student Technology Center and e-gaming.

"It was amazing having groups across campus come together supporting students playing games," Stephen Ritterbush, director of information systems at the Honors College, said. "Seventy percent of college students game regularly. For many it is part of their identity, and we have a chance to bring students together doing what they love as a community. We're currently collaborating on a Pokestop map of campus that will follow the survey, as the next step in our continuing support."

Notes for FireRed/LeafGreen:

1. The population numbers for prints 2-4 and 6 are very low, so the percentages would move around quite a lot just by one or two more copies showing up on the market. It's clear that they are each quite rare, and prints 1 and 5 are by far the most common.

2. The numbers on 2 vs. 3 for LeafGreen are questionable; there were several listings where the top of the box wasn't shown, so I could only tell that it was 2 or 3. It would have been statistically unfair to leave these listings out as "unidentifiable", since we need more pictures to distinguish between 2 and 3 than to recognize any other print. My system doesn't really allow for categorization as "2 or 3", so I just arbitrarily called them all 2. I have been able to identify more copies since, but some are still ambiguous. The player's guide offer survey probably gives the most accurate data here.

3. The Nintendo Power ads NL-AGB-BPGE-USA (LeafGreen) and NL-AGB-BPRE-USA (FireRed) actually look identical except for the print codes. They both have both FR and LG cover mons, and don't specifically refer to the exact game they're coded for. So I don't know why they're individually print coded, but they are. I can only imagine it was to do with the unique registration code printed on each copy, that this was game-specific. All copies of this offer have a nine-digit serial number on the MY NINTENDO side which simply started at 000000001 and counted up with each copy printed (per game, not combined); copies from boxes after the first print have a seven-digit serial number on the other side which was reset to 0000001 with each new print run of the offer. The "Player's Guide offer survey" estimated production counts are based on establishing the boundaries between print runs by subtracting the second number from the first, and associating print runs with box prints.

These don't have date codes on the boxes, but there are date codes on the original and first revision manuals (from first, second and third print boxes), and on copies of the second revision manuals from earlier fourth print boxes. Later fourth, fifth and sixth print boxes copies with second revision manuals with no date code, but copyright dates on the boxes at least let us date the fifth print (regular Player's Choice) to 2006 and the sixth print (PLAYS ON DS* Player's Choice) to 2007. The date codes I have for manuals are 040706 in both my first print manuals, 040803 from both my second print manuals, 040922 from both my third print manuals, and 041102 in my LeafGreen fourth print manual. So the first print dates to July 2004, the second to August, and the third to September; the game was released on September 9th, so the first two prints were likely on shelves at release time, and the third shortly after. The fourth prints (no wireless adapter, not Player's Choice) started as early as November 2004, which surprises me a bit. So the fourth prints were the only one produced for the end of 2004, all of 2005 and possibly part of 2006. Per the player's guide offer serial number survey I'm fairly sure there were multiple runs of at least the FireRed fourth print over this span, though I can't date them specifically. I guess for 2005 TPC's main focus was Emerald, then for 2006, as they did not have a new main series game, they decided to make Player's Choice releases of FR and LG their main push.

The contents and population data are based on a survey I have been doing of eBay and Heritage Auctions listings. I try to find every listing with an identifiable box and record the box print and all available details of the contents and any visible date codes. I check listings available for delivery to Canada, the US and the UK. The dataset starts in November 2020 and I update it daily, I'll update the numbers in this post periodically. Where I am certain there are multiple listings of exactly the same box - by the WATA or VGA serial number, or by the seller's serial number (one store in particular sells and relists a lot of the GBA games, but happily posts inventory numbers on the listings so I can spot dupes), or by some particularly unique wear, I de-duplicate those so the box is counted only once. (The WATA/VGA serial numbers are super fun, actually, because you can trace the sales history of specific boxes; I've seen a couple of cases of games that were sold by HA being flipped for twice the price a couple of months later on eBay, for instance). There are almost certainly other cases of the same box being listed multiple times that I can't realistically catch, so you cannot safely take my listing counts to be a precise count of the number of different boxes that were available for sale over any given period.

Right. If my survey is about accurate - it's a small sample size, but it probably is - the error text is about 1 in 10 copies. That's...uncommon but not really "rare" like an obscure game they only printed 500 copies of or something. Again it's like Left Bros. - there are quite a lot of copies of Left Bros. out there, really. ~10% of all Pokemon Blues ever made is still a lot of copies.

As for rarity - i guess we could only really tell with more certainty by doing a survey with a larger sample size, somehow, or from inside information. If there's a database of old eBay listings someone has access to, or something, they could look there. Once you know what you're looking for it's pretty easy to run through listings and identify them. I'd be *surprised* if it was actually far rarer than three months of eBay data suggests, but of course it's possible.

Well I've been at the Nintendo thing at home since 85, second hand since 95, and really never stopped though I got curbed hard early this century. I never really sought out sealed stuff, but I like to know than not, so I try and keep up. Pokemons mystery I never really thought of much as it's sooo sooo mass produced. I figured you did the research so I'd ask. You're right, it's a guess, and I couldn't figure it either. On one hand it's not the first print, yet the first print of red was where a mass majority of them came from and unlike the spotty fubar'd copies of blue/red mix, it's hard to say. If around your 40~ copies a 1/3 of them were mine, few were in the tail of it, and a vast majority of them fell into the first...maybe someone would pay more for the lesser run copies? I guess it would depend on the pokemon fan+sealed persons logic on the matter. Would they care more about first run, or least run when throwing cash at it. 0852c4b9a8

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