- No pokémon book would be complete without a type chart—and spot for even more notes.
- name, type, moves, move type, held item, notes
- Trading partner, date, what pokémon you received, pokémon you gave, and notes.
- Movie title, pokémon you used, moves used and dialogue and other stuff I haven’t bothered to figure out. 😛
- Hint, Medal name, the date you got it. I guess you can sketch what it looks like or something in the big circle.
- Info for each pokémon you catch: Pokédex number, name, type, sex, nature, place you caught it, date you caught it, and memo fields.
- Here you can enter info for each location: items you found, pokémon encountered, season and daily changes/events, necessary HMs, things sold at the Pokécenter, important info and any other notes.
- Has a place for your name and the date you started.
One of the reasons Japanese (kids) magazines are so awesome is all the swag they come with. The August issue of DS + Wii had this Pokémon notebook. It’s extremely detailed for noting every aspect of your pokéjourney. I started to use mine, and while I doubt I’ll ever fill it up (I’m not patient enough to jot everything down), I think it will be fun to use along the way. I am curious if Japanese kids actually use things like this and take notes. I can’t see American kids (except the total fanatics) using it much. We’re much too ADD over here.