Hey. You, over there. Want to have your mind blown by something that’s been hidden in plain sight for almost three decades?
You see these two Pokémon? Notice how unlike the Legendary duos that came after them, there isn’t a third member? Yeah, well, I lied. Players of Pokémon Stadium 2 may already be aware of this, granted, but it turns out that, in a way, Johto’s “third Legendary” is…
Mewtwo? Huh. But it makes a lot of sense when you think about it. Kanto and Johto are tied closer together (story wise and literally) than any other pair of regions, and quite frankly I wish they’d do this again at some point. Just to name some of the similarities these Pokémon have: Lugia’s typing could be seen as a combination of Mewtwo’s and Ho-Oh’s, similar to the Eeveelutions these three have the same number values for their base stats and are just distributed differently, they’re found at Level 70 in the postgames of Gen 1 and Gen 2 respectively (HeartGold & SoulSilver even gives you all three in one version for the only time in any game so far!), and while it’s not exactly one-for-one, Mewtwo tends to learn its moves at right around the same levels that Lugia and Ho-Oh do, especially in Gens 2 and 3 where the numbers are a perfect match.
In battle it works out, too- if Mewtwo is the offensive one of the three and Lugia’s the defensive wall, Ho-Oh’s that middle ground between the two archetypes while also having the best physical Attack of the three. What about lore? This is admittedly a bit more shaky since Mewtwo’s lore is directly tied to Mew, but maybe- and this is just a guess- they were going for some kind of “Science Vs. Religion” thing? I mean, it kind of tracks with Kanto’s focus on industrialism and technology and Johto’s focus on traditionalism and history. I don’t know. I just think this whole thing is pretty neat. I don’t feel like any of the other third Legendaries (especially Galar which technically has two of them in Eternatus and Calyrex) put this much thought into it.