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Lavender Town

Junichi Masuda

This is the original version of the Lavender Town theme, straight from the Japan-only Pokemon Green version for the Game Boy.

Sorry about the stuff at the beginning. Not sure what that’s all about, as I downloaded the audio from a video.

Lavender Town Syndrome

This story contains Japanese characters. If you don’t have Japanese language packs installed, you’ll see boxes or gibberish where Japanese characters should be. It’s nothing I can fix, so don’t bother telling me about it.

Overview
The phenomenon of the Lavender Town Tone is a legend that involves a bizarre spate of medical cases and deaths from around the country that have been connected to the Pocket Monsters (Pokémon) series of games (in particular, the first two games of the series: Red and Green).

Though the event is largely unheard of due to disclosure laws for companies based in the Kyoto Prefecture, there is a large amount of information that has been brought into the open by a number of dedicated individuals, including Seki Uchitada, Ise Mitsumoto, and Satou Harue (to whom this page is dedicated). Thanks also goes out to Andou Kagetada for providing images and animated gifs of the visual phenomena.

This analysis will discuss the other phenomena that is often confused with the Lavender Town Tone, known as the White Hand Sprite, Ghost Animation, and Buried Alive Model, as well as the semi-related developer tag that was inserted into the game and how to safely perform these “Easter Eggs” in post-first wave cartridges.

History of the Game
The first cases of the Lavender Town Tone and associated events were reported a few months after the release of Pocket Monsters Red and Green for the handheld Game Boy video console. These video games were wildly popular with children between the ages of seven and twelve (the core demographic), which was no doubt one of the reasons why the Lavender Town Tone had the level of severity that it did.

In the game, the player takes on the role of a Trainer, whose task it is to capture, tame, and train wile creatures called Pocket Monsters for battle. These games and the two newest additions to the series, Pocket Monsters Gold and Silver, an anime, manga, figurine set, collectible card game, and home console games have resulted in Pocket Monsters becoming a multi-billion dollar franchise.

In one part of the game, the Trainer comes to a small, out-of-the-way place called Lavender Town. This town is one of the smallest hamlets in the game, aside from the Trainer’s own hometown, and possesses very few of the services available to the Trainer in every other city of the game.

Indeed, the location would be unremarkable were it not for the Pokémon Tower located there - a colossal building that holds the graves of hundreds of deceased Pokémon. It is theorized that because of this location in the game, at least two hundred children lost their lives and many more developed sudden illnesses and afflictions. In fact, this doesn’t even consider the vast waves of unreported illnesses or deaths whose cause went unnoticed.

History of the Pathology
It was not until Spring/Summer of 1996 that cases that would eventually become linked to the Lavender Town Tone began to surface. The earliest record of acknowledgement of the effects of the Lavender Town Tone that the author could find came from an internal report made in June 1996 by the company Game Freak Inc., which was then leaked by one of its former employees, Ms. Satou harue.

In it, the employees give a list of names, dates, and symptoms - records of children between the ages of seven and twelve who had suffered various medical problems as a result of playing Pocket Monsters Red and Green. Some records are listed below, with the full listing in Appendix A.

(It should be noted that entries in the Appendix also include symptoms borne not from the Lavender Town Tone but from the so called White Hand Sprite, Ghost Animation, and Buried Alive Model, all of which were visual phenomena that provoked similar but distinct symptoms. More details on part two.)

  • 京极 勝女; April 12 1996 (11). Obstructive sleep apnea, severe migraines, otorrhagia, tinnitus.
  • 千葉 広幸: May 23 1996 (12). General irritability, insomnia, addiction to videogame, nosebleeds. Developed into violent streaks against others and eventually himself. [自殺]
  • 桃井 久江: April 27 1996 (11). Cluster headaches, irritability. Eventually took mixed painkillers. [自殺]
  • 吉長 為真: March 4 1996 (7). Migraines, sluggish and slow behaviour, unresponsiveness. Developed into deafness, and went missing. Body discovered beside road April 20 1996. [死出]

The document that was circulated internally was the first time these incidents had been connected with the Pocket Monsters video games; until then, the cause had not been discovered or diagnosed by medical professionals. Indeed, it is uncertain how the company themselves managed to find the cases related to the event without seeking advice from health services.

Pathology Detail — Lavender Town Tone
The predominant symptoms related to what would become known as the Lavender Town Tone included headaches and migraines, bleeding from eyes and ears, mood swings and irritability, addiction to the games, unprovoked violence, withdrawl and unresponsiveness, and (in approximately 67% of cases) suicidal tendencies. However, these symptoms only manifested in children between the ages of seven and twelve years old who had reached the area in the game known as Lavender Town. Most of them were revealed to have been wearing headphones or earphones while playing the game at the time (see Appendix A).

As it turns out, the developers of the Lavender Town area had sought to make an area that would “leave an impression on the player,” according to Seki Uchitada, a member of the development team. Seki claimed that at the time of the development, a number of the team were interesting in making Lavender Town a little different from the rest of the game.

“The Pokémon Tower is a visible result of that,” Seki told Game Dimensions Magazine in an interview earlier this year. “That and the fact that Lavender Town is so different from all other cities in the game. It is smaller, has fewer people occupying it, no gym, and…of course, the music was very, very eerie. In fact, in the first version of the game, we were told to slightly change the song played in the background of Lavender Town…because our manager told us it would make children upset. The music used in subsequent versions is different.”

Either Seki was unaware of the full impact of the Lavender Town Tone or was vastly under-exaggerating how “upset” children would get. No more is said of the music in the article, but there are mentions of Lavender Town’s other macabre features (see below). What Seki failed to disclose to Game Dimensions Magazine was that the music used in the first-wave release of Pocket Monsters Red and Green was formulated out of an experiment in “binaural beats.”

Using slightly different frequencies of sound, each frequency played in one ear through earphones or hedphones and various psychological effects can be induced upon the listener. In most versions of the first-wave releases, this resulted in the player feeling easy, apprehensive, and mildly disturbed. However, for upwards of 200 children, it provoked a variety of disturbances in the brain that went undetected purely because it was undetectable by fully-developed human ears. Instead, only children fell victim to the tones, resulting in psychological and physiological problems that, in some cases, led to death (many of which were suicides).

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Do you believe in Lavender Town Syndrome?

If you don’t know what it is, you can read this.

I believe in it. I got a headache and I got nauseous.

Lavender town syndrome

The Lavender Town Syndrome (also known as “Lavender Town Tone” or “Lavender Town Suicides”) was a peak in suicides and illness of children between the ages of 7-12 shortly after the release of Pokémon Red and Green in Japan, back in February 27, 1996.


Rumors say that these suicides and illness only occurred after the children playing the game reached Lavender Town, whose theme music had extremely high frequencies, that studies showed that only children and young teens can hear, since their ears are not fully developed.

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Listen

Lavender Town Syndrome

In the beta version of Pokemon Red and Green (the Japanese name for Pokemon Blue), the Lavender Town theme had hidden frequencies which caused children ages 7-12, who were playing while wearing headphones, to have the following: discomfort, bloody noses, addiction to gaming, and, in some cases, committed suicide. In reality, the Beta version of the Lavender Town theme was harmful to children in those ages, but it only caused major headaches, and none of the children killed themselves. Also, there isn’t really that many copies of the Beta version released, so there really is very few children who fell victim to this song.

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