Ash Ketchum—renamed simply "Satoshi" after the Japanese creator, a bizarre hybrid of dubs—sounded like a 35-year-old chain-smoking uncle from Surabaya trying to imitate a teenager. His battle cry, "Pikachu, serangan kilat!" (Pikachu, lightning attack!), was delivered with such gruff, gravelly intensity that you half-expected him to ask for a kretek cigarette afterwards.
It wasn't the pristine, high-definition version the Japanese or Americans saw. It was something rawer. A third-generation copy of the English dub, with the English text clumsily covered by a white box and replaced with clunky, all-caps Indonesian words. The opening theme song, "Gotta Catch 'Em All!" was left in English, a strange, foreign chant that every kid mangled with pride. Pokemon Dubbing Indonesia
The dubbing was riddled with errors. "Gym Leader" became "Kepala Sekolah Pertarungan" (Fighting School Principal). "Pokémon League" was "Liga Desa" (Village League). When a character said "I'm shocked!" it was translated literally to "Saya adalah sebuah kejutan!" (I am a surprise!). But none of it mattered. The heart was there. When Pikachu cried after being defeated by a Raichu, Pak Bambang, in a moment of unscripted genius, had Satoshi whisper, "Tidak apa-apa, Pikachu. Kita belajar hari ini." (It's okay, Pikachu. We learned something today.) It was something rawer