@kosakukawajiri5007 Probably a Gastly or Gible two of my favorites. I'm assuming I don't have a starter to weaken them, the 1st stage seems the safer route. Unless I have a shot at Mew then that would be my #1 choice.
I'd say the ball has no chance of failing if you catch your first. That way you are guaranteed a mon, also nice picks as they are mighty. My first would be either Snowver or Shieldon if I could pick.
Actually it make no sense to throw it, it would make sense if it had a mecanism that throw out a net which lock and then close up again but pokemon company will never put this much effort for do it
@@xxdannynlxx4105 general rule of thumb in modern eurocentric markets is that anything you buy thats not a raw material straight from the manufacturer is going to be at least 100 times more than what it costed to produce. people make a lot of money off well off impulse buying
I still have ones from when I was a kid. Small plastic ones about the size of a golf ball. They open up, are able to be thrown, and can even store these tiny plastic pokemon figures they made for it. Kid me would be so disappointed at knowing in the future all we got is essentially a metal lamp
Yeah, honestly like 300 is way over priced like it’s not a freaking video game console. If anything I think 50 to 100 would be a better price range in my opinion.
In the pokeverse they sell these for like 2 dollars per ball like theyre fucking candy, here we make them "not throwable" trophies to clog space in our room.
@@VelvetIcematoro Despite being called Pokedollars, their value is more akin to yen than dollars (mainly cause, in the og japanese games it WAS yen). So, 200p is closer to, 1.40$ Literally pocket change.
That’s my problem with this stuff. There is no excuse for the price. And I think it’s a little sad for anyone regardless of income to spend almost $1000 dollars on this. It’s and example of how much wealth stealing goes on.
slight clickbait, these are $100 each. title says $300 because he’s demonstrating 3 Pokéballs. a *bit* more justifiable as a really nice collectors piece :)
If I can be honest the $15 ball tins with cards in them are better and significantly cheaper. Them being bigger and stand alone is more appealing than lights inside as well imo
@@PKMNcastAre you not old enough to remember the burger king promotional pokeballs? I know you're being paid to rep and defend this cash grab product. But the truth is the comment above you has a very REAL point. The burger king pokeballs were superior. They opened. And they were worth the price. Unlike these. Sam's club or whatever has nothing to do with it. Plus? I threw them. At EVERYTHING.
@@PKMNcastthese aren't even pokebals tho. You gave $300 to a bootleg seller on Amazon. And why do you get so defensive in your comment section all the time?
I've been wanting to pick one of these up for a while now, they would look fantastic on my Pokemon shelf, I just can't justify dropping $100 on one but really want to lol.
I was so glad to see the Apricorn Balls make a return in Sword and Shield, and getting access to them wasn't too convoluted outside of being locked behind a DLC.
Making metal pokeballs and asking people not to throw them? You're kidding right? That's like asking Norwegians to stop throwing snowballs for 6 months. Impossible.
1. Grab a M67 handgrenade. 2. Dip it in red and white paint, draw a black line on it. 3. Play ball with them in the other trench. They might laugh for up to 4 seconds.