@Sugar @122 Generation (Not while you're here in Alola--the Pewter Museum has one VMAX screen of each kind--and the dome screen is one of the biggest in Kanto)
@Sugar @122 Generation After an exhilarating hour learning about constellations, the group emerged from the VMAX theater. "How does this compare to the Pewter Museum's two VMAX screens?" Serena wondered. "Pewter's conventional screen could fit inside this one." Brock replied. "The dome, however, is the biggest VMAX dome in Kanto. Only two domes are bigger." He went on "The conventional screen is used for traditional movies and travel documentaries. The dome is used for space documentaries, some water documentaries, and anything else best seen in a 360 degree view."
@Sugar @122 Generation From the VMAX theater, the tour moves through the museum. The training simulations are housed in a particular wing in the museum, and are typically included in your admission ticket.
@Sugar @122 Generation After the group's tickets were scanned again, they were led into a recreation of an astronaut training area. The guide explains that while not a perfect one to one experience of what astronauts experience, it is enough to give museum guests an idea of what astronauts do to prepare for going into space.
@Sugar @122 Generation "If you are prone to motion sickness, don't worry." the guide assures you. "The more intense simulations have less intense versions too.
@Sugar @122 Generation The first of the training sims could be found in most any science museum--the antigravity room. But instead of a cramped chamber, this was an actual room filled with objects--so that visitors could see how different items reacted to zero gravity.
@Sugar @122 Generation Once everyone is inside, the guide turns the gravity off. But Serena can't help laughing at Ash doing martial arts in weightlessness.
Martine felt uneasy, seeing she wasn't used to the feeling of no gravity beneath her feet. She took it slow to get used to things.