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Pokemon Stadium 2 (Germany)

Nintendo 64
🇩🇪
Reviewed in
2001
74
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✪ Reviewed on December 12, 2023
66

Stadium 2 goes further with the 252 Pokémon from the first two generations. Gold and Silver compatibility broadens the game, the mini-games grow more refined and the battle staging gains richness. For Game Boy trainers of the era, it's near-essential.

Your verdict
Category
Strategy 4 players 3+
Description
Sequel to Pokemon Stadium featuring Generation I and II Pokémon, compatible with Gold and Silver games. Published by Nintendo, released in Japan in 2000 as Kin Gin and in 2001 in Europe and North America. Two hundred fifty-two playable Pokémon, battle modes, varied mini-games, and an expanded Gym Leader Castle.

Pokemon Stadium 2 review

4/5
Art direction
"Striking"
4/5
Music
"Excellent"
1/5
Story
"Anecdotal"
Gameplay
"Solid"
Fun
"From the very first minutes"
Addictiveness
"Captivating"
Difficulty
"Balanced"
Lifespan
"Long"
Technical info
💾0,05 GB 📅26/03/2001
Published by Nintendo

Pokemon Stadium 2 (N64) price, value & rarity

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Collector interest

Dedicated German edition of the last Stadium, pressed with packaging and documentation in German for the German-speaking market. The German territory received its own localized allocation, distinct from the pan-European run and distributed in more limited quantity. Its relative scarcity within the PAL line makes it a precise target for German-speaking collectors keen to gather the single-language variants of their market across the console's last Pokemon titles.

A questionable morality

Here exploration is gone: you line up your captured Pokémon in an arena to make them clash to the cheers of the crowd. Billed as the pinnacle of trainer-creature friendship, the concept still amounts to staging critter fights for spectacle and glory. You root for your champions with fervor, never quite finding the idea all that strange.

Is Pokemon Stadium 2 still worth playing in 2026?

A sequel to Pokemon Stadium, this entry gathers generation I and II Pokémon in 3D battles, with direct compatibility with the Gold and Silver games allowing you to import your own teams. The staging of the turn based clashes, the profusion of minigames and the demanding tour mode considerably extend the handheld experience on the big screen. The appeal lies mostly in the link with the Game Boy versions and multiplayer. For a Pokémon fan, a turn based strategy fan or a player after duels, the title keeps a definite richness.

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