We present two pediatric patients with an uncommon electrophysiological seizure propagation pattern. Both had dialeptic seizure as the main or only symptom. Case 1 had a small mass in the left medial temporal structures; Case 2 had no lesion in MRI. In both, EEG showed not only left temporal spikes but also bilaterally synchronous 3Hz spike-and-wave complexes (SWC) from onset and unusual secondarily generalized 3 Hz SWC patterns arising from the left temporal region. Case 1 was seizure-free following mass resection; focal or generalized epileptiform EEG abnormalities were no longer present. In Case 2, magnetoencephalography localized the spikes to the left superior and mid-temporal gyrus, which ictal SPECT suggested was the origin of onset. These cases illustrate the close relationship between focal epileptic area and 3 Hz SWC and suggest that the focal area can trigger 3 Hz SWC. The therapeutic strategy may need to be altered in such patients.