Bulbasaur (Pokémon): Difference between revisions
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==In the anime== | ==In the anime== | ||
[[Image:Bulbasaur anime.gif|thumb|left|[[Ash's Bulbasaur]] protecting | [[Image:Bulbasaur anime.gif|thumb|left|[[Ash's Bulbasaur]] protecting a wild [[Oddish]]]] | ||
Bulbasaur was mentioned in the first episode of the anime, ''[[EP001|Pokémon - I Choose You!]]'', as one of the three [[starter Pokémon]] new trainers in [[Pallet Town]] can choose from. Ash dreamed of owning one, and it was his second choice of a starter, after {{p|Squirtle}}. However, when he arrived at Oak's lab, it was too late, as an unnamed Trainer who started the same day had already taken it. | Bulbasaur was mentioned in the first episode of the anime, ''[[EP001|Pokémon - I Choose You!]]'', as one of the three [[starter Pokémon]] new trainers in [[Pallet Town]] can choose from. Ash dreamed of owning one, and it was his second choice of a starter, after {{p|Squirtle}}. However, when he arrived at Oak's lab, it was too late, as an unnamed Trainer who started the same day had already taken it. | ||
Revision as of 23:22, 7 November 2008
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Bulbasaur (Japanese: フシギダネ Fushigidane) is a dual-type Grass/Poison Pokémon.
It evolves into Ivysaur starting at level 16, whom evolves into Venusaur starting at level 32.
Along with Charmander and Squirtle, it is one of three starter Pokémon the player can choose to start with at the beginning of Pokémon Red, Green, Blue, FireRed, and LeafGreen and is the first Pokémon numerically in the Kanto Pokédex, the National Pokédex, and the Fiore Browser.
Biology
Physiology
Bulbasaur is a reptilian creature resembling a toad or dinosaur. Its most notable feature, though, is the bulb on its back, which grows from a seed planted on its back when it is born. The bulb is similar to Paras and Parasect's tochukaso mushrooms which are also planted at birth. However, Bulbasaur and its bulb share a symbiotic relationship rather than a parasitic one.
Bulbasaur usually walk around on four legs, but in this stage they also have the ability to rise up on their hind legs.
Gender differences
None.
Special abilities
Bulbasaur has a variety of Grass-type abilities granted to it by the bulb growing on its back. Powders, scents, petals, and seeds can come from the very tip of the bulb, and vines and leaves can come from the base. By manipulating these into moves like Leech Seed, Vine Whip, Razor Leaf, Petal Dance, and Sweet Scent, Bulbasaur have quite an arsenal at their disposal with the bulb.
The bulb also absorbs sunlight. The sunlight can be turned into health through Synthesis or launched at the opponent as a powerful SolarBeam.
Behavior
Most Bulbasaur are domestic Pokémon, raised to be distributed as starters by Professor Oak. As such, they are regarded as well-behaved Pokémon. They are often considered the easiest Pokémon to start with in Kanto since they are strong, not likely to misbehave, and have a type advantage over the first two Kanto Gym Leaders.
They can often have a strong loyalty streak. In The Mystery Menace, a Bulbasaur was abandoned by its Trainer in the sewers, where it lived for many years. When it finally returned to the surface, it was not upset about being abandoned by its trainer. In fact, it was simply glad to see him again.
Bulbasaur can also be found lying in the sun during the day for photosynthesis. They mainly do this during times of scarcity of food.
Habitat
Bulbasaur are scarce in the wild. Sometimes they can be found in secret places such as gardens, plains near large sources of fresh water, or hiding in the forest in hollow logs, but overall they are found far more often in the ownership of Trainers.
Diet
- Main article: Pokémon food
Much like most Pokémon, Bulbasaur appears to be an omnivore. However, in times of scarcity, it does not need to eat much food, since the bulb on its back can store energy from the sun.
In the anime
Bulbasaur was mentioned in the first episode of the anime, Pokémon - I Choose You!, as one of the three starter Pokémon new trainers in Pallet Town can choose from. Ash dreamed of owning one, and it was his second choice of a starter, after Squirtle. However, when he arrived at Oak's lab, it was too late, as an unnamed Trainer who started the same day had already taken it.
A real Bulbasaur first appeared in Bulbasaur and the Hidden Village, as one of the Pokémon in the Hidden Village. Though initially wary of Ash, the two eventually warmed up to one another, and Bulbasaur challenged him to a battle. Using Pikachu, Ash won the battle, and Bulbasaur was captured. Unlike Charmander and Squirtle, which were captured in the two episodes following that of Bulbasaur, Bulbasaur remained in Ash's party until Bulbasaur... the Ambassador!, when Ash sent him to Professor Oak's lab to work as an ambassador between otherwise argumentative groups of Pokémon.
Much later on, when Ash was traveling in the Hoenn region, his companion May captured her own Bulbasaur after being separated from the group in Grass Hysteria. It remained with her throughout the rest of her journey in Hoenn, helping her to compete in the regional Grand Festival. When she traveled to Kanto to continue her journey with Ash in The Right Place and the Right Mime, May too left her Bulbasaur at Professor Oak's lab to learn from Ash's while she and Ash's group traveled throughout the Battle Frontier in Kanto. Somehow, May retrieved it during her travels in Johto, where it evolved all the way into a Venusaur.
A Bulbasaur that used to belong to the Mayor of Trovitopolis appeared in The Mystery Menace. In his childhood, the mayor abandoned his Bulbasaur and sent it into the sewers when it wouldn't evolve into Ivysaur. Aided by Misty and Tracey, Ash found the abandoned Bulbasaur while searching for his own, which had gone missing. After defeating the arrogant mayor and his personal SWAT team, Ash and company left the Bulbasaur, which had grown rather large in its time in the sewers, with Nurse Joy.
In Journey to the Starting Line, Gilbert, the son of the mayor of Pallet Town, was supposed to start his journey as a Pokémon Trainer with one of the three Kanto Starter Pokémon, but they were scared off by Ash's Tauros. Professor Oak, Tracey, Delia and Gilbert set out to find them. The Bulbasaur was the last one to be found and it was stuck in a tree that was surrounded by a group of Primeape. In the end, Bulbasaur was the one that Gilbert decided to start with.
In the manga
In Pokémon PiPiPi Adventure, Pistachio has a Bulbasaur named Danerina. She has a crush on him and is extremely jealous whenever she sees him talking to other females.
Ash's Bulbasaur is shown in several chapters of the Electric Tale of Pikachu.
In the Pokémon Special manga
In the Red, Green & Blue chapter, Red receives a Bulbasaur from Professor Oak in Bulbasaur, Come Home! after helping capture all the Pokémon he accidentally set free. Bulbasaur has since evolved into Ivysaur, and then to Venusaur. It has also been shown in the manga that Bulbasaur also has the ability to suck in air through its bulb (as seen in chapter 14 where it sucked up the mist in the ghost tower as well as the Gastly that made it).
In the TCG
- Main article: Bulbasaur (TCG)
Other appearances
Super Smash Bros. Melee
Bulbasaur only appears as a random trophy.
Trophy information
Bulbasaur is a cute Pokémon born with a large seed firmly affixed to its back; the seed grows in size as the Pokémon does. Along with Squirtle and Charmander, Bulbasaur is one of the three Pokémon available at the beginning of Pokémon Red and Blue. It evolves into Ivysaur.
Game data
Pokédex entries
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Game locations
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In side games
Game | Location |
---|---|
Pokémon Stadium | Gym Leader Castle |
Pokémon Snap | River |
Pokémon Channel | Bus Stop |
Pokémon Trozei! | Phobos Train Endless level 16 Trozei Battle Mr. Who's Den |
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon (Red and Blue) |
Starter Pokémon Joyous Tower (1F-5F) |
Pokémon Ranger | Lyra Forest |
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon (Time and Darkness) |
Starter Pokémon Mystifying Forest (B1-B13) Mystery Jungle (B1-B29) |
Base stats
Stat | Range | ||
---|---|---|---|
At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 45
|
105 - 152 | 200 - 294 | |
49
|
48 - 111 | 92 - 216 | |
49
|
48 - 111 | 92 - 216 | |
65
|
63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
65
|
63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
45
|
45 - 106 | 85 - 207 | |
Total: 318
|
Other Pokémon with this total | ||
Type effectiveness
Template:DP type effectiveness
Learnset
By leveling up
|- style="text-align:center" | style="text-align:left" | grass | style="background:#9141CB" | poison
| style=" background:#FFF" | 4 | style=" background:#FFF" | 1 | style=" background:#FFF" | Bulbasaur | style="display:none; background:#FFF" | {{{6}}} Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Movelist/note
By TM/HM
Template:Movelisttm Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Movelist/note
By breeding
Template:Eggmoves Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Mlentry4 Template:Eggmoves/note
By tutoring
Template:Tutor Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4 Template:Mtentry4
|- style="background:#9DC1B7"
| colspan="13" | Bold indicates a move that gets STAB
Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only from an Evolution of this Pokémon
A colored initial indicates that the move is not available to be tutored in this game,
while a colored background indicates that the move is available.
|}
|}
TCG-only Moves
Move | Card | Set |
---|---|---|
Bite | Bulbasaur | POP Series 2 |
Anime only
Move | Pokémon | Episode |
---|---|---|
Whirlwind | Ash's Bulbasaur | EP032 |
Tickle (debatable) | EP050 | |
Dig (reflex to save life) | EP225 |
Side game data
Evolution
Sprites
Gen | Game | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
I | Red | Blue | Yellow | Red (Ja) | Green | Back | |
II | Gold | Silver | Crystal | Back | |||
III | Ruby | Sapphire | Emerald | FireRed | LeafGreen | Back | |
IV | Diamond | Pearl | Platinum | HeartGold | SoulSilver | Back | |
V | Black | White | Black 2 | White 2 | Back | ||
Trivia
- Bulbasaur is the mascot of Bulbasaur's Mysterious Garden.
- Bulbasaur is the only starter Pokémon that learns the move Vine Whip by leveling up. Chikorita, however, can learn it by breeding.
- Bulbasaur is the only starter Pokémon that is dual-type from the lowest evolution stage, even in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon.
- Bulbasaur's evolution family is the only starter Pokémon evolution family that has each member appear at least once in the Super Smash Bros. series.
- In the initial games, Bulbasaur's body was light green in color. It was changed to blue-green in Ruby and Sapphire.
- Bulbasaur is the first Pokémon in the National Pokédex order. By default, this also makes it the first Template:Type2, Template:Type2 and dual-type Pokémon in National Pokédex order.
- Bulbasaur and its evolutions share the same species name as Sunkern. They are all known as the Seed Pokémon.
- Bulbasaur's number in the Kanto Dex and the Fiore Browser are the same: 001. This makes it and its evolution family one of only three families of Pokémon (comprising ten Pokémon altogether) to have the same numbers in more than one Pokédex-like listing.
- Bulbasaur is the only one of the original starters to become its third form at twice the experience level of its second form, while both Charmander and Squirtle become their final forms at Level 36 instead. It is also interesting to note that, while many of the starter Pokémon receive additional types upon evolution, Bulbasaur is the only one among them to have two types, Grass and Poison, in its basic form.
- Though Bulbasaur have no gender differences in the games, May's Bulbasaur has little hearts on its head while Ash's does not, and since it evolved has been confirmed to be female.
- It's also one of the two Pokémon that appeared in the anime with a heart-shaped spot, the other being Spinda.
- Bulbasaur is the only Pokémon that can learn Petal Dance by breeding, but Template:P2 learns it by leveling up.
- Bulbasaur can no longer learn SolarBeam by level up at level 37. It has been replaced with Seed Bomb.
Origin
Bulbasaur is a lizard-based Pokémon and appears to be based on some form of dinosaur, yet also appears similar to a frog, which the latter theory can be supported by the leaping in-game motions in games such as Mystery Dungeon.
Name origin
Bulbasaur's name is a combination of the words bulb and saur, which is Greek for lizard. Its Japanese name literally means it's strange, isn't it?, and is a pun on, 不思議種 fushigidane, strange seed.
In other languages
- German: Bisasam - Derived from Bisamratte (musk rat) and Samen (seed).
- French: Bulbizarre - A combination of bulb and bizarre, reflected by the Japanese name, a pun on "Isn't it strange?".
- Korean: 이상해씨 Isanghaessi - Translates to Strange Seed.
- Chinese (Taiwan): 妙蛙種子 Mìao Wa Chóng Zí ("weird frog seed")
- Chinese (Hong Kong): 奇異種子 Qí Yì Chóng Zí ("unusual seed")
- Portuguese (Brazilian anime): Bulbassauro
Related articles
External links
- Article on Wikipedia
- Vine Whip, the fanlisting for Bulbasaur
Notes
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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. |
- Featured article candidates
- Pokémon pages lacking disambiguation notices
- Pokémon in the Medium Slow experience group
- Pokémon in the Kanto Pokédex
- Pokémon in the Johto Pokédex
- Body style 08 Pokémon
- Generation I Pokémon
- Grass-type Pokémon
- Poison-type Pokémon
- Dual-type Pokémon
- Pokémon without Hidden Abilities
- Green-colored Pokémon
- Gender-unknown Pokémon
- Monster group Pokémon
- Plant group Pokémon
- Pages with broken file links
- Pokémon with a base stat total of 318
- Pokémon whose Special stat became both Special Attack and Special Defense
- First partner Pokémon
- Pokémon that are part of a three-stage evolutionary line
- Starter Pokémon
- Mystery Dungeon Starters
- Anime starter Pokémon