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Owning this specific cartridge means owning the moment the Korean government finally relaxed its draconian ban on Japanese cultural imports (lifted effectively in 2004, but slow to implement for games). This cart is a silent witness to the thawing of a 60-year cultural cold war.
It is a masterpiece, not in spite of its regional quirks, but because of them. Pocket Monsters - HeartGold -Korea-
Pocket Monsters - HeartGold -Korea- is not the "best" version of HeartGold (the Japanese cartridge has more event distributions; the English has broader readability). It is, however, the most poignant one. Owning this specific cartridge means owning the moment
Unlike SoulSilver , which was released under the unified Nintendo of Korea (한국닌텐도) banner in 2010, HeartGold (released February 2010) carries the logo of Nintendo Korea (닌텐도코리아), the short-lived, direct subsidiary that existed only from 2006 to 2010. This was a volatile era. Prior to this, Korean Pokémon games were either Japanese imports or the infamous, buggy, and unlicensed "Bread" (Bread Software) distributions. The Nintendo Korea era was the first legitimate , localized mainstream release. Pocket Monsters - HeartGold -Korea- is not the