Ever since I stumbled across 'Pokemon A New Path', I've been trying to explain its plot to friends and it's surprisingly layered. It's an isekai story where a modern adult ends up in the Pokemon world as a young boy, but it avoids the typical power fantasy. The core isn't about becoming the champion overnight. It's about a guy using his advanced knowledge carefully to survive and make a better life, with a heavy focus on the logistics and ethics of living in this world.
He starts in the Hoenn region, but things are subtly different, more grounded. Pokemon battles are treated with real danger. The plot follows his journey to gather badges, but the driving force is his relationship with his starter, a Mudkip he names Nile, and his goal to build a safe haven. He's constantly weighing the moral implications of his actions, like whether using type advantages from his future knowledge is fair. The main storyline becomes this tense balance between his desire to live peacefully, the shady organizations that start noticing his unusual foresight, and his own internal conflict about changing a world he loved from afar.
Honestly, I think some readers get bored because it's not battle-heavy enough, but that's what I appreciate. The 'main storyline' is his personal path to finding a place in this new life, protecting his small circle, and dealing with the consequences of being an outsider with a cheat code. The last arc I read had him confronting a version of Team Magma that was far more competent and threatening than in the games, which really raised the stakes.