 Pokemon Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon have a neat reference in it, possibly even considered a tribute to Satoru Iwata. So you can get an exchange to happen in the Virtual Game Freak offices which are located in Ultra Sun and Moons Hia Hia City, but the exchange only happens if you happen to be holding a monster from the 3DS Virtual Console. And I discovered this through Joe Merrick from SarahB.net and when he discovered it he said in this case it's a Pokemon from Pokemon Silver and it says, if you meet those requirements a character can say the following to you. Boy, when we were told halfway through development to make Kanto 2 I thought I must just expire on the spot, but I'm glad we made it that way. When we were having trouble fitting all the data in for gold and silver and we were really in a pinch this amazing guy came along and made a program for us that solved all of our problems. He went on to become the amazing president of a real big company soon after that too. Now when you hear that you might be thinking, oh I must be reading an interview, no no no I'm actually reading and I'm showing on the screen screenshots of this conversation happening inside Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon and of course the guy that saved Pokemon Silver and Gold, the guy that made Pokemon Stadium possible, the guy who went on to become the amazing president of a real big company was the late Satura Owada. He was an essential part of many aspects of Nintendo before he ever technically worked at Nintendo. He was at HAL laboratories at the time. So it's amazing just seeing that this reference is in there and it lets you know just how far reaching Satura Owada's influence was across every company that had any association with Nintendo dating back decades. And it's just really interesting because for those who don't know, Owada played a major role in the Pokemon franchise in so much as he created a compression algorithm that allowed Pokemon Silver and Gold to be compressed down into Game Boy cartridges. He made the battle system functionally work properly on the Nintendo 64 for Pokemon Stadium. He made Smash Bros possible on the Nintendo 64 by recoding a bunch of stuff. I mean it's no secret by now, if you know anything about Satura Owada beyond his CEO days is that he was probably one of the greatest mastermind video game programmers of all time. He was just truly a savant when it came to video game programming. I mean he himself in an Owada ask where he talks about, I'm sorry, Owada asks, where he talks about how he became part of this whole Pokemon thing where he talks about his experiences in creating these algorithms and condensing things and making all this Pokemon stuff possible. He talks about that, about how he's a programmer. They mentioned him as CEO here but he was very literally a programmer there even though he was a higher up at Hell Laboratories. He was more so a programmer than anything else. It's just a very touching story because I'm not buying Pokemon Ultra Sun, Ultra Moon, I didn't buy Sun and Moon, I am going to buy Pokemon on Switch but it's still really nice here to see the Game Freak Studios, the people making these games put in this small mention in tribute to Owada. It kind of fits the theme for this year because Nintendo Switch also, if you guys remember we reported on the story before, the Switch itself has a tribute, a hidden tribute to Owada in the Mario Golf game which was one of the very first games Satura Owada ever worked on at Hell Laboratories for the NES and how you have to do the direct to you on the day of his death to make the game launch on Switch and so a lot of us coming up in June will be attempting to do that because we ourselves, I don't know about you guys but I myself have always wanted to pay tribute to him or at least enjoy a tribute to him. I've obviously made a video way back when he passed away talking about how he's affected my life inadvertently, he didn't know me but through his work it massively impacted my life growing up and it was a very hard video for me to make back then, I cried I think throughout the whole video because of how much Satura Owada meant to me just in terms of my childhood and it's rare that you find out about just a programmer right, programmers generally don't rise to become massive CEOs of huge companies like Nintendo, it doesn't happen like Miyamoto is not a programmer, he's a well-known figurehead and he's created a lot of amazing stuff but he himself is not actually like this savant programmer like Satura Owada is, so it's just or was, that's the weird thing, we're talking about this person who passed away and the Pokemon Company game freak, throw in this little tribute in there and I guess there's only one fitting way to end this video and it's the same way that Joe Merrick ended his tweet on Twitter about this specific instance in the game, thanks Owada. I'm Nathaniel Rumpeljantz from Nintendo Prime, if you liked this video you know what to do and if you disliked the video hit that dislike button, subscribe for more content and I'll catch you in the next one.