He was no longer the hacker.
The name came from a dream—a misspelling of "Infinite Evolution," or "Native Evolution," he could never decide. But the concept was pure. In the official games, evolution was a dead end. A Chrysalis became a Beautifly and stopped. In Ntevo , evolution was a branching, ever-changing river. Pokemon Ntevo Roms
Elias chose his starter. Not the usual trio. A strange, egg-like creature called "Morphling." Its only move was "Adapt." He smirked. Perfect. He was no longer the hacker
And then, very faintly, from the broken speakers of his laptop, he heard the Lavender Town theme. Not the one he had hacked in. The original, pitch-perfect, bone-chilling tone. In the official games, evolution was a dead end
By the time he reached Pewter City, the sun was rising outside. But the in-game sky was a perpetual, blood-red dusk. He saved his game at the Pokémon Center. Nurse Joy’s dialogue box flickered. "Your Pokémon are exhausted from infinite becoming. Would you like to RESTORE them to a single, simple form?" He selected "NO."
He had rewritten the very genetic code of the Kanto region. A Bulbasaur could grow towards the sun, becoming a colossal, floral sauropod. Or it could burrow down, its bulb hardening into a jagged, mineral-covered fortress. Every single one of the original 151 had at least seven distinct final forms, triggered not just by level, but by deeds. A Growlithe raised in the volcanic ash of Cinnabar became a magma-furred beast. A Growlithe that never lost a battle to a Flying-type grew celestial wings of pure light.