
It honestly makes me want to see these moments get expanded upon in possible full-fledged anime adaptations of each of the generations (the main anime doesn't count). Luckily, the pacing for most part improves heavily, and it adapts some of the more powerful moments from generations 3-6. They often feel way to disjointed and rushed, with episode 4 being the prime example. However, for the first 6 episodes, the pacing is terrible. They are all just 3 highlight moments in every generation, leading to this pattern of 3 per generation. Each of the 18 episodes present within the series isn't connected to one another. You might find it fruitless to judge an anime like this based on story but here me out. So, did this short episode anime series take us down a grand trip on memory lane? Let's find out, shall we? At the time the anime debuted (September, not December, like MAL claims), there were 6 generations of Pokemon, and this anime was created not just to hype us all up for Gen 7, which would come out 2 months later, but to celebrate all the memories we had within the past 20 years this franchise has Pokemon has thrived for over 20 years now, and with those 20 years, its main gaming series has seen a plethora of installments, resulting in what we like to call: generations, hence the title. Pokemon fans, rejoice, for parts of your childhoods have been animated!
