Okay, so let’s talk about this whole Octillery thing in the Pokémon world. You won’t believe the stuff I dug up.

So, I was browsing around some forums, and stumbled upon this massive Pokémon leak, apparently from Game Freak. It’s crazy, like, terabytes of data just floating around. I decided to take a peek, you know, just curious.
First, I found some beta builds of old games. Like, imagine playing an early version of Pokémon Black 2. That’s wild! I spent a few hours just messing around with those, it was like a trip back in time. The early designs for some Pokémon were hilarious, some were pretty weird, but it was all fun.
Then, I started digging into the source code. Now, I’m no programmer, but even I could tell this was the real deal. It was source code for newer games, and older. The code names, the comments, the whole nine yards. This wasn’t some fan project, this was the actual stuff they used to build the games.
- Beta builds of games,
- Source code for multiple generations of Pokémon games,
- Internal documents, design notes.
And then, things got weird. I found a bunch of documents, all in Japanese, which is a bummer because I can’t read a word of it. But thankfully, someone had already machine-translated a lot of it. Most of it was just boring internal stuff, you know, meeting notes, design documents, that kind of thing. But mixed in with all of that, there was this one story about Octillery that really caught my eye.
Now, this is where it gets really interesting. It seems there was this whole story, apparently based on some Japanese folklore about a creature called a “Mujina”, and it somehow involved Octillery. The translation was a bit rough, so I’m not 100% sure on all the details, but it seemed pretty messed up, maybe even shocking. It was definitely not something you’d expect to find in a Pokémon game. This was, like, dark stuff.

I spent a good chunk of time trying to piece it all together, comparing the translated text with the original Japanese, using online dictionaries, you name it. The story was fragmented, spread across multiple documents, and some parts were just plain confusing.
From what I could gather, Game Freak, yeah that’s the developer, said the leak happened because some hacker got into their servers without permission. It wasn’t just game stuff either. They got employee personal details and a whole bunch of other sensitive information. Imagine waking up one day and finding your personal info all over the internet because of a Pokémon leak. Crazy.
Anyways, after a couple of days of digging and reading, I finally managed to get a decent understanding of the whole Octillery story. I decided to share my findings on the forum, along with some screenshots of the documents. Let me tell you, people went nuts! It was one of the top-rated posts in a matter of hours.
I also saw a bunch of memes popping up about it, especially about this character Skyla, and Typhlosion, which was unexpected but pretty funny.
The Aftermath
This whole experience was a wild ride. It started as a simple curiosity and ended up being this huge thing online. I mean, I’m just a regular dude who likes Pokémon, and suddenly I’m in the middle of this massive leak. I didn’t even make the leak, I just found it! It really makes you think about how much stuff is out there that we don’t know about. And how easily things can get out of hand on the internet. All I did was stumble into a forum and start digging. It’s crazy how things can snowball like that.
So, yeah, that’s my story about the Octillery leak. It’s a reminder that there’s always more going on behind the scenes than we realize. And who knows, maybe there’s even more crazy stuff hidden in that data. Maybe I’ll go digging again sometime, but for now, I think I’ve had enough internet excitement for a while. After all, I was just trying to play some old-school Pokémon, and I ended up in the middle of this whole mess.