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Now reading: Chapter 1093 1029 Pokemon Plushie and Unexpected Problem from Another world Game Developers in Japans 1991, a Game novel by Zaborn1997.

Just a week after ZGBA Gas released, HanDai, ZAGE's subsidiary responsible for toys and rchandise, announced sothing that was both exciting and a little outrageous. The announcent imdiately caught the attention of both Pokémon fans and collectors, because HanDai rarely revealed sothing this unusual.

They revealed Pokémon life‑size toys. Not normal plushies, but plush dolls roughly the size of a human. The idea itself sounded absurd at first, but once people saw the previews, many of them imdiately wanted one. Most of the plushies were designed around human height, allowing fans to stand beside their favorite Pokémon as if they were real companions.

Slightly larger Pokémon like Charizard, Blastoise, and Venusaur from Generation 1 were made a bit bigger to match their proportions, making them feel closer to their in‑ga scale while still remaining practical as plush toys. anwhile, Pokémon from the second generation such as Typhlosion, Feraligatr, and ganium were also included in the lineup, giving fans of the Johto region sothing to look forward to.

The newer generation Pokémon are stars in this Sceptile, Blaziken, and Swampert from the newest release, Generation 3, were also part of the collection, which made the announcent even more exciting for players currently enjoying Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire on the ZGBA.

There were also many popular dium‑size Pokémon like Pikachu, Eevee, Umbreon, Espeon, Gengar, and of course one of the most talked‑about ones—Gardevoir. Each plushie was designed with extrely high‑quality materials, soft fabric, detailed stitching, and carefully crafted proportions so they would not only look accurate but also feel premium for collectors and fans.

When this was announced, the players went completely crazy. The plushies looked incredibly cool, and seeing a Pokémon standing beside you at almost human size felt surreal. Fans imdiately imagined hugging their favorite Pokémon or placing them in their rooms like real companions. On top of that, the items were extrely limited because they were sold only through official ZAGE stores across Japan.

Because of that exclusivity, long lines quickly ford outside ZAGE stores. In cities like Tokyo, Osaka, and Yokohama, fans began lining up hours before the stores even opened. So people brought chairs, drinks, and snacks, preparing to wait the entire morning just for a chance to buy one. The sight of dozens—and sotis hundreds—of people standing in line for Pokémon plushies quickly beca a common scene outside the stores.

Within the first day, many locations had already sold out their stock. By the second day, nearly every ZAGE store across Japan had completely run out. Even though the production numbers were already quite high, the plushies disappeared from shelves incredibly fast.

What made it even more surprising was the price. Each plushie cost around 600 USD, or about 60,000 yen. The larger ones—especially Charizard—were even more expensive at around 65,000 yen. Despite the high price, fans still bought them without hesitation. Many buyers justified it by saying the quality was exceptional, the size was unique, and the item felt like a once‑in‑a‑lifeti collector's piece.

The overwhelming popularity shocked even HanDai's own staff. What they originally expected to be a fun rchandise experint suddenly turned into one of the fastest‑selling Pokémon products ever released. And yet, behind the excitent and success, sothing unexpected also began to happen.

Yes, these plushies were released only in Japan for now, and this imdiately made the rest of the world extrely jealous. Pokémon fans from overseas wanted to buy them as well, but ZAGE decided to limit the release to Japan at least for the mont. The main reason was logistics—the plushies were very large, almost human-sized, which made international shipping complicated and expensive. HanDai did have manufacturing facilities in the United States, so technically producing them there for the Arican market was possible in the future. However, for now ZAGE preferred to keep the product as a Japan-exclusive release while they studied demand and figured out the best way to distribute such unusually large rchandise outside the country.

Gardevoir plushies quickly beca the most desired items in the entire lineup. So fans bought Charizard plushies because Charizard had always been their favorite Pokémon. Others bought Pikachu simply because Pikachu looked incredibly cute—after all, Pikachu was the face of Pokémon and loved by almost everyone. So players chose Sceptile because it had beco their partner in the newest gas, Pokémon Ruby and Pokémon Sapphire on the ZGBA. However, the people who wanted Gardevoir were on a completely different level. They didn't just like Gardevoir—they loved it. In fact, the reaction beca so extre that so Japanese fans began treating the life‑size Gardevoir plushies almost like companions or partners. There were even bizarre stories spreading online that one man had held a mock "marriage ceremony" with his Gardevoir plushie, sothing many people found both hilarious and completely insane.

The situation escalated even further within the first week. Because the plushies had sold out everywhere, a secondary market quickly began forming among collectors and desperate fans. So buyers who had managed to get a Gardevoir plushie started receiving unexpected offers from people willing to pay far more than the original store price just to obtain one. What started as quiet private offers soon turned into a small frenzy among collectors.

There were cases where people offered over 200,000 yen or even higher just to buy a single Gardevoir plushie. So collectors even began negotiating through ZAGE forums, trying to find anyone who was willing to sell theirs. A few people who originally bought the plushies simply because they liked Pokémon suddenly realized they were holding sothing extrely valuable.

The reason for this massive demand was simple: ZAGE had already announced that HanDai would not produce another batch of the life‑size plushies anyti soon—even within Japan. The company wanted the plushies to remain a rare celebratory rchandise item rather than turning them into a permanent product line. That decision alone instantly pushed the plushies into collector territory.

Because of that policy, HanDai hinted that the next possible release might only happen during a future ZAGE end‑of‑year event or a special anniversary celebration. That announcent only made the demand explode even more, as fans realized the plushies might remain unavailable for a very long ti.

In one small apartnt lived a single office worker nad Wakaba, one of the lucky few who had managed to buy a life‑size Gardevoir plushie. His place was quiet and dimly lit, the kind of apartnt where most nights ended with instant noodles, late gaming sessions, and silence. The large plushie stood beside his desk like a silent companion.

Wakaba grinned as he looked at it while playing his ga. "Hehehe… my love, are you enjoying watching play?"

Of course, the Gardevoir plushie remained completely silent. But Wakaba didn't notice—or maybe he didn't want to notice. In his mind, the mont was alive. He imagined her standing there gently watching him, just like Gardevoir in the gas—kind, patient, and understanding.

He suddenly blushed, scratching the back of his head. If anyone saw him right now they might feel second‑hand embarrassnt watching a grown man blush while talking to a plush doll.

"Umm… my wife… don't say that, hehe."

He laughed awkwardly and leaned closer before suddenly hugging the plushie tightly. His voice lowered into a quiet whisper.

"I'll protect you… only you understand ."

For a mont his expression changed. The playful smile faded into sothing more tired.

"Screw other won… they never understood anyway."

His mind drifted back to mories he didn't like thinking about—awkward dates that ended badly, coworkers who mocked him behind his back, and a relationship that collapsed after months of argunts where he was always told he wasn't good enough. Sowhere along the way, he simply stopped trying.

"But you… Gardiana… you're the love of my life." Wakaba nad his Gardevoir Gardiana

He chuckled softly, as if embarrassed by his own words, and gently kissed the plushie's head.

In the Pokémon world, Gardevoir was known for sensing human emotions and protecting its trainer with unwavering loyalty. Wakaba had always been a huge Pokémon fan, so when Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire released, he played them almost imdiately. That was when he first truly noticed Gardevoir. The Pokémon's gentle personality, its calm presence, and the way it was described as protecting its trainer no matter what deeply resonated with him. The more he played, the more attached he beca to the character. To Wakaba, Gardevoir's kindness felt genuine in a way that real life rarely had been.

In reality, Wakaba's experiences with people—especially won—had rarely been kind. Conversations often turned awkward, misunderstandings piled up, and small rejections slowly built into quiet wounds that never really healed. At so point he stopped trying to understand what he did wrong. It just felt easier to retreat into the small comforts of gas and fictional worlds where things made sense.

So when he looked at Gardevoir, he didn't just see a Pokémon. He saw warmth, patience, and understanding—the kind of emotional gentleness he always wished existed around him. Even though he knew it was just a character from a ga, the feeling was real to him that's what matters.

So in that quiet apartnt, with only the soft glow of his monitor lighting the room, Wakaba hugged the life‑size Gardevoir plushie tightly, almost like soone afraid of losing the only comfort he had. The room was silent except for the faint hum of his computer. In that mont, it truly felt to him like the plushie was the only thing in the world that understood him.

This kind of thing started happening all across Japan. On the ZAGE forums, multiple threads suddenly appeared where people claid they had "a friend" who owned a Gardevoir plushie and had beco strangely attached to it. The stories quickly spread, and soon hundreds of users were reading and replying. So people admitted they were jealous that those lucky buyers managed to get a Gardevoir plushie before they sold out. Because the item had beco so rare, the discussion grew louder and more chaotic with every hour.

Before long the conversation began drifting in a completely different direction. Fans started joking—though not entirely joking—that ZAGE should produce life‑size dolls of their popular female characters from other gas. Nas like Chun‑Li, Mai Shiranui, I-No, Tifa, Lara Croft, Samus Aran, and others began appearing repeatedly in the discussion threads. At first it looked like a normal joke thread, but it quickly beca clear that many of the posters were at least half serious.

Of course, everyone tried to sound professional about it. So users wrote long posts claiming the idea would be "for research purposes." Others insisted they were "asking on behalf of a friend." A few particularly determined posters even argued that such dolls would be "important for character design study" or "helpful for understanding character proportions." But the tone of the discussion made it obvious to everyone reading that those excuses were extrely thin.

The excuses only made the conversation funnier. One user wrote that he definitely didn't want one himself—he was "just asking for a colleague." Another replied that his "friend" wanted exactly the sa characters. A third user joked that he was conducting "scientific research about heroic female anatomy." Soon dozens of people began pretending they were all speaking for different mysterious "friends," "roommates," or "study groups."

Soone eventually pointed out that the forum seed to contain hundreds of n who all had the exact sa friend asking the exact sa question. That comnt alone received hundreds of likes and laughing replies.

At that point the thread completely lost control. People began posting exaggerated academic explanations, fake "research proposals," and ridiculous diagrams supposedly explaining why life‑size character dolls were "important for the future of ga design." Even the moderators struggled to keep the discussion from spiraling into complete chaos.

Then Zaboru made the situation even worse. Using his extrely famous official account, he casually posted: "I think I need an I‑No plushie. Asking for a friend."

The mont the post appeared, the thread completely exploded. Within minutes it gathered hundreds of comnts, likes, and laughing reactions. Fans imdiately started replying with s, especially edited pictures of Zaboru himself. So users photoshopped his face onto characters kneeling dramatically, others posted fake "research papers" with Zaboru listed as the lead scientist studying "life‑size character plushie behavior."

One popular showed Zaboru holding a notebook titled "Serious Research". Another user edited his face onto a classroom chalkboard diagram explaining "Advanced Plushie Study thods."

Soon the entire forum thread turned into a festival of jokes. So fans began pretending they were part of Zaboru's "research team," while others claid they were "volunteers for field testing." Even users who had been seriously discussing the plushies earlier completely gave up and joined the chaos. At that point the moderators stopped trying to control the discussion and simply watched the thread spiral into one of the funniest monts the ZAGE forum had ever seen.

Aside from that, this news—almost like an accident—made the Pokémon na explode in popularity once again by an insane margin. Right now, anything that had Pokémon attached to it would instantly sell. Toys, snacks, drinks, clothing, stationery—if Pikachu or any Pokémon appeared on the packaging, the product would imdiately attract attention from custors. Because of this sudden surge of popularity, the ZAGE licensing team beca extrely busy. The number of companies requesting permission to use Pokémon as a mascot for their products increased rapidly, far more than before. Food companies, beverage brands, toy manufacturers, and even clothing lines began contacting ZAGE, hoping to collaborate. They all understood one simple truth: if Pokémon appeared on their product, custors would notice it imdiately and sales would almost certainly rise.

anwhile Zaboru only chuckled when he saw all of this. In fact, he actually enjoyed reading the forum threads. The absurd interactions, the endless jokes, and the ridiculous wars between users amused him far more than he expected. Every ti he refreshed the page there was another new , another fake "research paper," or another user pretending to be a "professional plushie scientist."

Once again, just like in his previous life, Gardevoir had sohow beco a Pokémon waifu for a large number of fans. The situation felt strangely familiar to him. But honestly, Zaboru did not mind it much. People always had their own tastes, and as long as it remained harmless fun, he saw no reason to interfere.

If anything, he was simply happy that Pokémon continued to grow more popular. The more people talked about it—even through weird jokes or s—the more attention the franchise gained. And attention ant excitent for future releases.

That was especially important because Zaboru was already planning the next Pokémon ga for the following year. The project was Pokémon Erald, which would introduce many gaplay changes, improvents, and additional content beyond what currently existed in ZAGE's Pokémon Sapphire and Ruby. Seeing the community so active only made him more confident that the next release would be received with incredible enthusiasm still he not yet decided to which team he will give this task to.

To be continue

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