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Pokemon Sun And Moon No Line Patch Download: Save Time and Battery with This Easy Fix



This latest news is good for die-hard fans of Pokemon Sun and Moon. It appears that its publisher, Game Freak, is fulfilling its promise to support the title continuously by releasing Version 1.2, the game's latest update. This patch is now ready for download and comes with a lot of bug and glitch fixes.


Online players of Pokemon Sun and Moon will not miss getting this latest update. When they start the game using the 3DS menu, they will be prompted get the patch. If they choose to get this patch, they can readily download it from the 3Ds eShop. Version 1.2 is required if players want to join online battles.




Pokemon Sun And Moon No Line Patch Download



This latest patch of Pokemon Sun and Moon will also fix the problem of Pokemon not being able to attack and switch when the player uses Sky Drop, or when he is beaten down because of Spiky Shield's destructive move. Version 1.2 will also correct the glitch that bothers players at the end of a tournament if they had pre-registered in a Friendly Competition online.


Pokemon Sun and Moon Version 1.2 will also eliminate the problem of Scatterbug not being able to learn Egg Moves sometimes, and eggs occasionally being able to be given items. This update also aims to solve a rare problem where the game stops when the player uses an Evolution item if it is the last item in his bag. Hopefully, once this patch is downloaded, players will no longer be bothered by these problems when they're playing the game.


Now then, if players are having trouble patching a ROM of Firered, they can download the patched ROM itself. Players can visit romspure.cc and download the hack itself. All they have to do then is have their emulator ready and start. ROMspure.cc is safe and players should not have any trouble with the Radical Red ROM they download from there.


When I hear and read about video game preservation I always see it in the context of people's personal collections. No one is safely "preserving" games for historical purposes in a museum or library type of setting. They are uploading and downloading entire libraries of games online to load into Chinese made emulation boxes.


Why? Because servers are pulled, licenses revoked, and sometimes games are patched to be locked out, from online multiplayer, for example, making games either partially unplayable, with only the offline/single player portion left, or with even that disabled as well. Meanwhile, my unpatched physical edition will still fully work, depending on the nature of the title.


Obviously, the example that I gave earlier still applies to unpatched games as well: if there's no online/multiplayer support anymore, then you're basically stuck with half a game, but still: always better than having it entirely disabled because of some "sorry, but we're not supporting this game anymore and so you're not allowed to play it anymore" patch...


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