Safari Zone's Pokémon will get stronger and stronger.
This is inevitable. As Pokémon get stronger, the danger increases, which means that the Safari Zone has to move Pokémon of different strengths to different zones for zoning purposes.
Pokémon that have reached a certain level of growth will be sent to another zone, mainly to prevent people from encountering Pokémon in the zones that they can't fight against, which can lead to danger.
The wilderness is fine, it's under the control of the League and certainly doesn't put humans or Pokémon in too much danger.
So Nidoking, and the Pokémon that escaped with him, had indeed misunderstood the Safari Zone staff.
But this misunderstanding isn't incomprehensible; after all, communication between Pokémon and humans is practically non-existent.
Humans usually only communicate with the Pokémon they have taken in. This was indeed the normal thing to do. But that also led to this kind of misunderstanding from time to time.
Rope helplessly held his forehead, after all, there were too few humans who could communicate with the Pokémon without obstacles. There were too few Pokémon and humans who could communicate telepathically. And the Power of Viridian and Aura Power were psychic powers that very few people had.
Normal human-Pokémon communication is essentially a mutual understanding developed over a long period of time; after all, Pokémon are very intelligent creatures. Pokémon with psychic often have higher IQs than humans.
Of course, high IQ is not the same as creativity and mindfulness, which is why humans are able to maintain a relatively strong position.
It seemed that there was still a long, long way to go before humans and Pokémon could understand each other in the true sense of the word.
Rope turned around helplessly, then sighed softly.
He felt something behind him tugging at the corner of his coat, Rope turned around again, then saw Chimchar, who had just jumped from Whitley's head to the ground, tugging at the corner of his coat.
Chimchar sees Rope turn his head and then takes a deep breath.
Rope looked at Chimchar rather puzzled, momentarily confused as to what the little guy was up to.
Chimchar pulled his fingers away from the corners of his mouth and eyes, then stuck his tongue out and made a face at Rope.
It looked quite funny, jumping up and down in a rather comical manner.
Rope couldn't help but laugh a little, and then Chimchar made the face even more vigorously.
Whitley, on the other side of the room, watched the interaction between the monkey and the man, and gave a warm smile.
The shutter clicked and Rotom jumped up and down in the air!
"Got a precious picture loto! Name it partner! Loto! ∩▽∩"
Whitley grabbed Rotom in her hand and looked at Chimchar, who was making a face on the screen, and Rope, who was laughing happily on the side, and gave a big smile.
Tapping send, a 'ding dong' came from Whitley's cell phone.
Whitley let go of Rotom and looked at the picture on her phone, smiling as she sent it to Cynthia.
Whitley: Sister Cynthia!
[Picture]
o(^▽^)o
Cynthia: (*︾▽︾) Pretty good, where is this going, be safe.
Whitley quickly and succinctly reported what happened here to Cynthia, adding a couple of words about Rope wanting to teach herself a lesson along the way.
Cynthia: Although Rope was a little overzealous in letting you walk around for over three hours for nothing, he had the best of intentions. You need to learn a lesson, it's no joke in the wild. Would you have been able to handle that Nidoking if Rope hadn't been there?"
Whitley: ε(┬┬﹏┬┬)3
Cynthia: Rub head.JPG
Cynthia: And don't worry, just get stronger, I'm no longer by Rope's side, so Rope's in your care!
Whitley: Don't worry about it sister Cynthia!
The two chatted some more about what was going on then quickly stopped talking, after all Cynthia had a job to do as well and on Whitley's side, Rope's business should not be finished and she had to see what Rope was planning to do with the whole thing.
Rope put Chimchar to his head. Of course he knew what Chimchar meant. It's just that he doesn't want to make him too distressed, it's kind of a relief or a distraction.
And the three Pokéballs around his waist wiggled around, accentuating his presence a bit.
"Alright, don't worry about me, isn't that my goal! If it's already hit then I have no goal instead!"
Rope spoke up as well. After all, if humans and Pokémon were already able to easily understand each other, then all the disciplines that Rope had started, and the things she had researched, and even the duties given by Alzheimer's would be meaningless.
While Rope didn't feel that this was bad, he didn't really feel that it was good either.
This who he had topped himself with, not who gave him meaning.
Rope was Rope himself.
"Whitley pack up and let's wander around the forest a bit longer. I'm guessing there are quite a few other Pokémon here who escaped from the Safari Zone just like Nidoking did."
Rope said as he looked at Whitley, who was playing with his phone, and rolled his eyes.
"Okay, but why? Didn't you say that Nidoking and the rest of them and the managers of Safari Zone were all misunderstandings?"
If it's a misunderstanding, what more is there to know?
"You have to know that although the escape because they were being sent away was indeed a misunderstanding, and Safari Zone also reported similar situations to the Alliance at the time, being sent away was only the trigger for their escape. The real reason for their escape was that they were afraid of humans. We need to communicate with more Pokémon and then get a relatively comprehensive image of Safari Zone from the perspective of Pokémon."
Rope spoke lightly, a thoughtful look in his eyes.
Whitley nodded, and after this reminder from Rope she did manage to figure out the problems. However, the problem was that so many Pokémon were scattered, if they were looking for them, they could let Nidoking be their guide, but even with Rotom as their translator, there were still quite a few of them who would refuse to communicate with humans.
After all, although he didn't know what they had gone through, but from Nidoking's words, he could tell that they didn't necessarily have any good feelings towards humans.
"Do you have any ideas on how to get them to talk?"
Whitley asked looking at Rope in confusion.
If you don't understand, ask, if you don't understand, say you don't understand. This was a habit Whitley had learned from Rope. There was no shame in asking, and being poked and prodded for not understanding was the real social death.
Rope cocked her head and gave a puzzled look, then one pointed at Nidoking and waved a fist with one hand and said, "That's how you open your mouth..."
Whitley: ...
All right, simple and brutal may not be a beauty... Violence isn't a good habit, but violence does work sometimes!