RomWize

Pocket Monsters Eun (Korea)

also known as Pokemon - Silver Version
Game Boy Color
🇰🇷
Reviewed in
2001
89
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✪ Reviewed on May 13, 2025
82

The Korean release of Pokemon Eun, the second generation fully localized. Day and night cycle, egg breeding, a hundred fresh species and a Kanto return after Johto. An absolute portable benchmark for Nintendo, smooth, generous and unforgettable.

Your verdict
Category
RPG 1 player 7+
Description
The trainer explores the Johto region and faces Team Rocket in this second Pokémon entry introducing 100 new species. Published by Nintendo, released in Korea in October 2001. Real-time day-night cycle, egg breeding, 100 new Johto Pokémon, Kanto revisitable after the League. Korean Eun (Silver) edition.

Pocket Monsters Eun review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
MAX
Music
"Legendary"
3/5
Story
"Solid"
At the heart of the Johto region, the compositions of Junichi Masuda and Go Ichinose weave unforgettable route themes, at once nostalgic and luminous. From the National Park to the nervy battles, every melody stays etched in trainers' memory. This sonic richness, prodigious on a handheld, remains a benchmark.
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Technical info
💾0,73 MB 📅26/10/2001
Published by Nintendo

Pocket Monsters Eun (GBC) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Korean release of Pokémon Silver, shipped late in October 2001, nearly two years after the Japanese launch and well after the GBA had landed. As the first official Hangul translation of the series, the cartridge uses a custom Korean font and a region-specific pictogram on the label. A short local print run and the absence of any export channel make it one of the toughest second-generation Pokémon pieces to source outside the peninsula.

A cult cover

Against its twin's golden blaze, silver answers with a metallic coolness: Lugia, guardian of the seas, rises from a storm-dark sky in an elegant, somber silhouette. The contrast between the cold grey-blue and the dragon's menacing calm sets a mysterious aura. A restrained, noble cover, now inseparable from Pokémon's golden age.

A questionable morality

The stated dream fits in two words: become a Pokémon Master. In practice you trap wild animals inside little balls, hoard them by the dozen and send them to bash each other senseless to earn gym badges. The adventure is so warm-hearted that you happily overlook this knack for collecting battle-ready creatures, charmed rather than troubled.

Is Pocket Monsters Eun still worth playing in 2026?

Gold and Silver laid down everything that has since defined the series, namely the day and night cycle, egg breeding and the chaining of two complete regions after the credits. Nearly twenty five years later, the pacing still feels remarkably tight and the sense of discovery stays strong, especially at the moment Kanto opens up again. The original Game Boy sprites carry less depth than Crystal's animated ones, yet the journey holds a real collector and gameplay appeal, especially for anyone curious about the turning point of the second generation.

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