>>57980103>on the spotLook, we have absolutely zero other explanation for it. It's bad, but this world very clearly has a different set of universal laws.
As for their attacks, I take the Z-move logic. The reason that the hologram can only last for 3 turns is because they're using whatever's powering the hologram to charge up their attacks, draining it quicker. It soft-explains the cards and the dynamax raid Pokemon too.
>Polygon was never stated to be a hologramNo, but it does make the simplest explanation. However, I do admit that it could just be that pure code weighs the same as a Malamute and has unique material properties. This is, after all, a different world, with vastly different rules. Everything's on the table.
Also aren't Digimon entirely within a cyberspace? You can use Porygon against flesh and blood Pokemon in meatspace, which if I'm not mistaken is fairly different to Digimon... but also I don't know enough about Digimon to be confident so I could be wrong.
>Zoroark's "illusion" abilityOkay, firstly, source on the inability to talk when not disguised? We don't see it, but we also don't see the same Zoroark attempt communication while undisguised either, so there's no proof about that, unless something's happened that I'm not aware of.
Secondly, you're probably not wrong about it doing more than tricking the eyes. Auditory, tactile, olfactory and even taste illusions DO exist in real life by the ways, but disregarding that I believe Lostlorn actually receives a different collision map after you battle the Zoroark there in the original games, which gives some evidence towards it being a lower level reality warp. I, however, disregard that usually, because that makes Zoroark a /ridiculously/ powerful Pokemon which doesn't add up given everything else we know about Zoroark and how its treated.
lol look at us taking the anime and card game as canon