The Universal Warp Randomizer is a tool that will allow you to randomize the warp points in a Pokemon game, resulting in a fresh experience. Originally made for Twitch Streamer Pointcrow, this web version was made to fix issues with the standalone builds. This version is compatible with any computer and phone, as long as you have access to a web browser.
Theres a couple reasons why. First of all, you tried to randomize a game that is not supported. Please check the compatibility list at the top for supported games. Please note that we only support USA games. Support for other regions is currently not planned. Also, Chromium based browsers will offer the best stability and performance. This means that browsers like Chrome and Opera will have tremendously better performance over browsers like Firefox.
Currently, there is a specific bug that ONLY happens if you try to randomize specifically Pokemon Fire red twice in a row. We are investigating the bug. A current fix is to either refresh the page, or randomize a different game in between.
Example: Page 34 – ⚠️ FAIL – Welded mild steel to stainless with wrong rod → brittle joint. Index entry also appears under 🔗 REF on page 12 (where you listed favorite filler metals) and page 41 (a successful stainless repair later).
Now go index your chaos.
The isn’t just a table of contents. It’s a living retrieval system for your analog-digital workshop brain. What Makes It Interesting? Most people treat shop notes as a diary. You write something down, flip the page, and never look back. The Shop Notes Index turns your notes into a searchable, cross-referenced knowledge base — without forcing you to digitize everything. Core Features (Pick your format: bullet journal, whiteboard, or a simple binder) | Index Tag | Meaning | |-----------|---------| | 🔧 FIX | A repair that worked (or spectacularly didn’t) | | 📏 MEASURE | Critical dimensions, tolerances, or offsets | | ⚠️ FAIL | What broke, why, and what not to do again | | 🔄 REPEAT | A process you’ll need again (e.g., calibrating a saw fence) | | 🔗 REF | Links to another page, tool manual, or video | | ⏱️ TIME | How long a job actually took (vs. planned) | How It Works (In Practice) You keep your regular shop notebook — messy sketches, measurements, cursing. But on the inside front cover (or a dedicated index page), you log: Page 23 – 🔧 FIX – Rattling bandsaw wheel → shimmed with 0.2mm brass. Page 24 – ⚠️ FAIL – Tried heating cast iron flange. Cracked. Next time: slow cool. Page 25 – 📏 MEASURE – Bolt pattern: 78mm PCD, M6x1.0. Then, months later: your bandsaw rattles again. Flip to the index. 🔧 FIX → page 23. Done. The Magic: Cross-Indexing The real power comes from linking concepts instead of pages. shop notes index
Here’s a creative, feature-style concept for a — designed for makers, mechanics, engineers, and DIY enthusiasts who keep a workshop journal. Feature: The Shop Notes Index – Your Workshop’s Collective Memory Never lose a brilliant mistake again. Every workshop has a black hole: the drawer, the notebook stack, or the cluttered desktop where brilliant ideas, half-sketched fixes, and “that weird bolt size from 2019” go to die. Example: Page 34 – ⚠️ FAIL – Welded