Article 49C1D The mythos and meaning behind Pokémon’s most famous glitch

The mythos and meaning behind Pokémon’s most famous glitch

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Ars Staff
from Ars Technica - All content on (#49C1D)
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Enlarge / Being the result of a glitch doesn't make MissingNo any less real to players-or researchers. (credit: Nintendo / Wilma Bainbridge)

Warning: This article contains references to the plot of Poki(C)mon: Red and Blue and the more recent (but related to the topic here) game, Doki Doki Literature Club.

In my flowery ring binder of Poki(C)mon Redand Blue cheats, there was one set of instructions that spoke to my eight-year-old self most of all. I'd heard from friends (and many, many GeoCities pages) that 'the MissingNo cheat' could destroy your game-but it could also get you unlimited Rare Candy. This seemed like a fair trade to me.

The first Poki(C)mon games for the Game Boy included 151 Poki(C)mon (including the ultra-rare Mew, if your parents were long-suffering enough to drive you to one of the Nintendo promo events where it was distributed). But by following a seemingly random series of steps, players could encounter a 152nd Poki(C)mon, MissingNo (Missing Number), which took the form of an L-shaped block of pixels.

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