From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
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| Due to its connection with Hatterene, its exclusive G-max move ability to cause sleepness and full male gender ratio, Grimmsnarl may be inspired by the{{wp|Coco (folklore)|Coco}}, the male counterpart of a forest witch, depicted as a shapeshifting {{wp|bugbear}}, both mentioned in lullabies and used in some cultures to frighten children that do not want to sleep or stay quiet. | | Due to its connection with Hatterene, its exclusive G-max move ability to cause sleepness and full male gender ratio, Grimmsnarl may be inspired by the {{wp|Coco (folklore)|Coco}}, the male counterpart of a forest witch, depicted as a shapeshifting {{wp|bugbear}}, both mentioned in lullabies and used in some cultures to frighten children that do not want to sleep or stay quiet. |
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| Given the backstabbing motif carried through Grimmsnarl's evolutionary line, it also seems to be based on the {{wp|ogre}} from the {{wp|Hop-o'-My-Thumb}} fairytale by {{wp|Charles Perrault}}, that allows children to sleep in his house for a night with the intent to devour them. In addition, It may also be inspired by large other malevolent folkloric monsters such as {{wp|troll}}s and {{wp|oni}}s which are commonly depicted with grotesque appearances and abundant hair. The fact that its strength comes from its hair may be a reference to {{wp|Samson}} from the {{wp|Book of Judges}}. | | Given the backstabbing motif carried through Grimmsnarl's evolutionary line, it also seems to be based on the {{wp|ogre}} from the {{wp|Hop-o'-My-Thumb}} fairytale by {{wp|Charles Perrault}}, that allows children to sleep in his house for a night with the intent to devour them. In addition, It may also be inspired by large other malevolent folkloric monsters such as {{wp|troll}}s and {{wp|oni}}s which are commonly depicted with grotesque appearances and abundant hair. The fact that its strength comes from its hair may be a reference to {{wp|Samson}} from the {{wp|Book of Judges}}. |
Revision as of 20:59, 3 January 2020
Grimmsnarl (Japanese: オーロンゲ Ōronge) is a dual-type Dark/Fairy Pokémon introduced in Generation VIII.
It evolves from Morgrem starting at level 42. It is the final form of Impidimp. It also has a Gigantamax form.
Biology
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Grimmsnarl and its pre-evolution Morgrem are the only known Pokémon capable of using the move False Surrender. In addition, Grimmsnarl is the only Pokémon capable of using the move Spirit Break, and the exclusive G-Max Move G-Max Snooze. It has hair wrapped around its body helping to enhance its muscles, allowing it to even overwhelm Machamp. Furthermore, Grimmsnarl can unfurl these hairs to latch onto opponents, ensnaring them.
In the anime
Major appearances
Minor appearances
In the manga
In the TCG
Game data
Pokédex entries
Grimmsnarl
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation VIII.
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Generation VIII
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Galar #240
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Sword
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With the hair wrapped around its body helping to enhance its muscles, this Pokémon can overwhelm even Machamp.
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Shield
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Its hairs work like muscle fibers. When its hairs unfurl, they latch on to opponents, ensnaring them as tentacles would.
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Gigantamax Grimmsnarl
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation VIII.
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Generation VIII
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Galar #240
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Sword
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By transforming its leg hair, this Pokémon delivers power-packed drill kicks that can bore huge holes in Galar's terrain.
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Shield
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Gigantamax energy has caused more hair to sprout all over its body. With the added strength, it can jump over the world's tallest building.
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Game locations
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation VIII.
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Stats
Base stats
Stat
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Range
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At Lv. 50
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At Lv. 100
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95
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155 - 202
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300 - 394
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120
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112 - 189
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220 - 372
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65
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63 - 128
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121 - 251
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95
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90 - 161
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175 - 317
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75
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72 - 139
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139 - 273
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60
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58 - 123
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112 - 240
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Total: 510
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Other Pokémon with this total
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- Minimum stats are calculated with 0 EVs, IVs of 0, and (if applicable) a hindering nature.
- Maximum stats are calculated with 252 EVs, IVs of 31, and (if applicable) a helpful nature.
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Type effectiveness
Under normal battle conditions in Generation IX, this Pokémon is:
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Learnset
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- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Grimmsnarl
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Grimmsnarl
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- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Grimmsnarl
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Grimmsnarl
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- Moves marked with an asterisk (*) must be chain bred onto Grimmsnarl in Generation VIII
- Moves marked with a double dagger (‡) can only be bred from a Pokémon who learned the move in an earlier generation.
- Moves marked with a superscript game abbreviation can only be bred onto Grimmsnarl in that game.
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Grimmsnarl
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Grimmsnarl
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- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Grimmsnarl
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Grimmsnarl
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- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Grimmsnarl
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Grimmsnarl
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Evolution
Forms
Gigantamax
Trivia
- No Pokémon have the same type combination as Grimmsnarl and its evolutionary relatives.
- Grimmsnarl and its evolutionary relatives are also the only Fairy-type Pokémon to have a double resistance to Dark-type moves.
- Grimmsnarl, Hatterene, and their evolutionary relatives can be considered counterparts. Both are Generation VIII Pokémon evolving once at level 32 then at level 42. Grimmsnarl and its evolutionary relatives are male only, while Hatterene and its evolutionary relatives are female only. Their final evolutions are both Fairy-type Pokémon with identical base experience and catch rates, and each Pokémon in each evolution line have the same base stat total as their counterpart (e.g. Grimmsnarl and Hatterene both have a base stat total of 510). Both Pokémon also have a Gigantamax form, a signature G-Max move, and use their body hair as their primary weapon. Both pokemon are also based on mythical beings from European folklore and mythology: Grimmsnarl resembles trolls and ogres and Hatterene resembles witches.
- Grimmsnarl and its evolutionary relatives are the only Pokémon that are in the Fairy and Human-Like Egg Groups.
Origin
Due to its connection with Hatterene, its exclusive G-max move ability to cause sleepness and full male gender ratio, Grimmsnarl may be inspired by the Coco, the male counterpart of a forest witch, depicted as a shapeshifting bugbear, both mentioned in lullabies and used in some cultures to frighten children that do not want to sleep or stay quiet.
Given the backstabbing motif carried through Grimmsnarl's evolutionary line, it also seems to be based on the ogre from the Hop-o'-My-Thumb fairytale by Charles Perrault, that allows children to sleep in his house for a night with the intent to devour them. In addition, It may also be inspired by large other malevolent folkloric monsters such as trolls and onis which are commonly depicted with grotesque appearances and abundant hair. The fact that its strength comes from its hair may be a reference to Samson from the Book of Judges.
Name origin
Grimmsnarl may be a combination of grim and snarl. Grimmsnarl may also be named after the Brothers Grimm, a duo of brothers who traveled Europe gathering folklore and oral fairy tales and cataloging them all into a singular book. It also bears resemblance to the words grimoire, a type of spell book, and Grímnismál, a mythological poem in the Poetic Edda.
Ōronge may be a combination of ogre and ロン毛 ronge (long hair).
In other languages
Language
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Title
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Meaning
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Japanese
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オーロンゲ Ōronge
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From ogre and ロン毛 ronge
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French
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Angoliath
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From angoisse, angora, and Goliath
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Spanish
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Grimmsnarl
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Same as English name
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German
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Olangaar
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From Oger, laang, and Haar
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Italian
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Grimmsnarl
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Same as English name
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Korean
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오롱털 Orongteol
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From ogre, long, and 털 teol
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Mandarin Chinese
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長毛巨魔 / 长毛巨魔 Chángmáojùmó
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From 長毛 / 长毛 chángmáo, 巨 jù, and 魔 mó
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Cantonese Chinese
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長毛巨魔 Chèuhngmòuhgeuihmō
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From 長毛 chèuhngmòuh, 巨 geuih, and 魔 mō
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Related articles
External links
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This Pokémon article is part of Project Pokédex, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on each Pokémon species, as well as Pokémon groups and forms.
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