Many of you are likely looking through the pokedex and wondering why, in some cases, I bothered to place some pokegirls in multiple pages, but not in other cases.
The simple answer: My arms hurt from typing all the fucking code.
Believe it or not, but html is INCREDIBLY bulky. To create an html just to go from one place to another takes a lot of typing. And frankly, I don't have _that much_ time on my hands.
Long answer: For things like type and frequency, to have them in multiple places undermines the core reason of letting people search for them. If a pokegirl is common in one area and very rare in another, realistically, I have to list the pokegirl in common, uncommon, very uncommon, rare, and very rare, because in various unspecified leagues, their frequency might vary between common to very rare. And I don't want to have to keep redoing the codes and pages when a new author pops up and says, "Growlies are extremely rare in Brand New League.", or "The Hitsuzen pokegirl is a near human anthropromorphic metamorph!". So, I'm basically saving myself from the headache of having to constantly update numerous pages by listing them by ALL of their frequencies or types.
So, for elements, I do duplicate. That's obvious.
However, I only choose the most important part of a Type or Frequency to decide where it goes. Because frankly, the number of places I'd have to place some of these pokegirls would render the pokedex far too complex to maintain.
So if you're looking a Very Near Human Anthropromorph Metamorph, she'll be in the Metamorph pile.
If you're looking for a Very Uncommon to Very Rare pokegirl, she'll be in the Very Uncommon pile.
You might also notice that I didn't bother with some classifications, like Semi-Human (which is under Humanoid) or Extremely Rare (which is under Very Rare). Plus, some authors labeled some pokegirl's frequency as "normal", which I took to be "Common". This is to keep from splitting too many hairs.