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Now reading: Chapter 39 - 36 — The First Pokéball Factory from Establishing Pokedex on Earth, a Adventure novel by Blaze98.

With the team dismissed and their new Pokéballs tucked securely in their pockets. I really had to get pokeball belts.

I headed straight to the command tent and found Colonel Rawat hunched over a map, glasses low on his nose, marking defensive lines across the Aarey periter.

"Colonel."

He looked up imdiately.

"Aakash. Good. You ready?"

"More than ready. Let's go."

He nodded and folded the map.

We left the camp and reached a large temporary building—a converted cold-storage facility now labeled:

POKÉBALL PROTOTYPE PRODUCTION UNIT

Inside, the air slled like tal dust, oil, and fresh wood.

Around 20 craftsn stood in a semi-circle.

• Master blacksmiths• Weapon forgers• talworkers• Alloy shapers• And two precision engineers

Every single one of them older than by 20–30 years.

Every single one staring at with the exact sa expression:

"This child better not be wasting my ti."

I clapped my hands lightly.

"Good morning."

They blinked.

So nodded stiffly.

One muttered under his breath, loud enough for everyone:

"Colonel, is this a joke? He looks younger than my apprentice."

Rawat shot him a warning glare.

But I didn't mind.

They would believe soon enough.

"Let's go to the production floor," I said calmly.

We walked deeper inside—toward the cleared workshop, worktables, molds, furnaces, and shaping tools already arranged according to my blueprint from last night.

So craftsn eyed the setup in confusion.

No iron bars.

No tal sheets.

No alloy stock.

Just crates of…

Apricorns.

Tumblestones.

And storage bins.

One man whispered, "Are these… fruit?"

Another hissed, "Sir, we forge weapons. Not… jam."

I ignored their comntary and stepped forward.

"Before today, everything I'm about to teach you didn't exist on Earth. This is new. Impossible by our logic. But Pokémon don't follow our logic."

I lifted a firm, crimson apricorn.

"This… is not just a fruit."

So murmuring.

"This is the shell of a Pokéball."

The room froze.

I continued.

"And this—"

I picked up a rough, glimring red Tumblestone from the table.

"—is the core material needed to create the capture lattice."

The craftsn blinked, confused.

One raised a hand.

"Sir… this is just stone. You an we make balls with… berries and stones?"

"Yes," I answered simply. "But the result is more powerful than any alloy you have ever shaped."

The confusion deepened—but curiosity flickered in their eyes.

Ti to begin.

Demonstration — The Birth of a Pokéball

I placed one apricorn and one Tumblestone on the central table.

"Watch carefully. Everything you make from today onward will follow this process."

They leaned forward.

Step 1 — Heating & Forming Apricorn Shells

I sliced the apricorn cleanly, removing the inner pulp.

"First: clear the inside."

A talworker muttered, "Like cleaning coconut shells…"

I smirked and continued.

"Now—heat."

I placed the apricorn halves into the furnace, adjusting the temperature precisely.

Apricorn wasn't tal—it needed controlled heat.

Too much → burnedToo little → brittle

Once the edges glowed faintly orange, I removed them and shaped them with wooden hamr. heat them again and quench in oil.

The craftsn's eyes widened.

The apricorn shell hardened instantly as it cooled—

—to a tallic sheen.

Not tal… but sothing between wood and steel.

"Apricorn shells," I said, "beco a Pokéball's exterior once treated properly."

The craftsn traded stunned glances.

This wasn't normal forging.

This was alchemy.

Step 2 — Slting Tumblestone

I held up the red Tumblestone.

"Next: lt the Tumblestone."

"This lts?" soone blurted.

"Yes. At high heat."

I placed it in the crucible.

The furnace roared.

Slowly… very slowly…

The Tumblestone softened into a glowing red liquid.

The craftsn leaned in as if watching magic.

"And now," I whispered, "we form the lattice."

Step 3 — Forming the Capture Lattice

Using fine iron rods prepared by the engineers, I stirred and shaped the molten Tumblestone into thin channels—like glowing threads.

Then I poured it carefully into the apricorn halves.

The molten energy fused instantly, carving intricate ring patterns inside the shell.

The craftsn had fallen silent.

"This," I said, "is the capture lattice. Without it, nothing can be caught. The Pokémon's energy interacts with this matrix. So your work must be perfect."

They nodded slowly—absorbing every detail.

Step 4 — Assembly & Calibration

I snapped the two halves together, inserted the internal spring plate, and placed a tiny sphere of Tumblestone essence in the center.

Click.

A red-and-brown Pokéball rested in my palm.

A real one.

One craftsman inhaled sharply.

Another whispered, "What in God's na…"

I pressed the button.

Beep.

The ball pulsed faintly with red light—the capture matrix activating.

Silence swept the workshop.

I placed it gently on the table.

"That is a functional Pokéball," I said softly.

"Crafted entirely with your hands and Earth's new materials."

They stared at it like it was a holy relic.

The oldest craftsman finally stepped forward.

He touched the ball lightly.

"…Sir," he said slowly, voice trembling with excitent and disbelief, "how many… how many of these do you want us to make?"

I smiled.

"As many as this nation will ever need."

Rawat let out a low whistle.

The first Pokéball factory of India… was officially open.

______________________________________________________

The craftsn surged forward—not chaotically, but with a fire in their eyes I hadn't seen earlier.

They were no longer skeptical.

They were hungry.

Hungry to learn this new craft.

Hungry to master sothing no human on Earth had ever made before.

"Alright," I said, stepping back. "Now it's your turn."

The senior-most blacksmith, Master Deshmukh, rolled up his sleeves.

"Boys," he barked, "station yourselves according to expertise!

They moved like a well-oiled machine.

But this was new.

Very new.

The first apricorn cracked in the wrong place.

"Again!"

The second overheated and charred.

"Start over!"

The first Tumblestone batch lted unevenly and hardened instantly when poured.

"Temperature control, idiots! WATCH THE FURNACE!"

But with every mistake…

They learned.

Within half an hour, sweat soaked their shirts and smoke streaked their arms—but their rhythm evolved.

• Apricorn shells—cut cleanly• Inner pulp removed perfectly• Surface heated–not burned• Tumblestone lted in controlled batches• Lattice shaped with steadier hands• Halves joined with precision

Finally—

Click.

The first craftsman-made Pokéball glowed faintly.

They cheered.

Then made another.

And another.

And another.

By the ti they finished their fifth Pokéball, the trembling in their hands had been replaced by a craftsman's confidence.

Master Deshmukh looked at , beard soaked with sweat.

"Sir… think we got the hang of it."

I nodded. "You did."

Most of them smiled with pride.

A few looked like kids who'd unlocked a new toy.

Rawat smirked beside . "Told you they'd fall in love with it."

"Before we wrap up for today," I said, pulling out a folded sketch from my back pocket, "I want to request one more item."

I placed the drawing on the worktable:

A leather belt with:

• six reinforced circular slots• snap-lock clasps• internal padding• adjustable strap• camouflage pattern option

A proper trainer's belt.

The craftsn leaned in.

"This is simple," one said.

"We already have leather."

"And rivets."

"And clamps."

Master Deshmukh rolled his shoulders.

"Give us twenty minutes."

He wasn't joking.

Twenty-five minutes later, they handed a finished belt.

Crafted by master artisans.

Sturdy. Sleek. Balanced perfectly.

Not flimsy like ani belts.

Not plastic like ga versions.

This was real equipnt.

I clipped six Pokéballs into the slots.

Perfect fit.

"It's good," I said.

Deshmukh smirked. "Good? Boy, this is the kind of thing people will bid hundreds of thousand. It is not made by so factory. It is made by finest craftsn in India. You won't find such quality elsewhere."

I chuckled.

"Have your apprentices make more belts. Every trainer is going to need one."

He nodded proudly.

Rawat pulled aside.

"So, kid. What's the price?"

I had thought about it since yesterday.

"It has to be affordable for civilians—but we must cover production costs."

"Agreed," Rawat said. "What number?"

"₹5,000 per Pokéball."

Rawat blinked.

"That low?"

"Yes. We need mass adoption. Not a luxury market."

He rubbed his chin.

"And governnt?"

"₹3,000 per Pokéball."

Rawat nodded slowly, impressed.

"India will be the largest Pokéball supplier in the world."

I grinned.

"That's the plan."

Behind us, craftsn were still experinting—lting, shaping, assembling—like kids handed a new world to play in.

And in a way… they had been.

The birth of India's first Pokéball industry had begun.

And I was going to make sure it never stopped.

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