From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Mamoswine (Japanese: マンムー Mammoo) is a dual-type Ice/Ground Pokémon introduced in Generation IV.
It evolves from Piloswine when leveled up while knowing Ancient Power. It is the final form of Swinub.
Biology
Mamoswine is a large quadruped Pokémon resembling a wooly mammoth crossed with a boar. Its brown fur is very thick to endure harsh cold and protect from snow and ice. Its tusks, which are smaller on a female Mamoswine than on a male, are made of pure, solid ice. Mamoswine has a blue mask-like pattern with a white rim around its face and eyes, resembling ski goggles. The fur on its muzzle is tan and shaggy, and its nose resembles that of a pig. Mamoswine's feet are black with three thick toes, and its tail is small.
It can endure harsh cold and hunger for an almost indefinite amount of time, as indicated by a ten-thousand-year-old specimen reviving. Mamoswine lived all around the world during the last ice age, but its population thinned when the climate grew warmer. Mamoswine inhabit cold places, such as mountainous regions and frozen tundra. Weavile is a natural predator of Mamoswine.
In the anime
Major appearances
Dawn has a Mamoswine, which evolved from a Piloswine in A Breed Stampede!, which also marked the species' main series debut. There was a time where Mamoswine would not listen to Dawn's commands, but it eventually realized how deeply she cared for it in Trials and Adulations! and started obeying her. Since then, Mamoswine became a reliable partner and was used in many Contest Battles.
Other
Mamoswine debuted in Giratina and the Sky Warrior, where a herd helped Regigigas stop a sliding glacier that endangered a nearby Gracidea garden and several towns and villages.
A Mamoswine appeared in a flashback in Survival of the Striaton Gym!, under the ownership of Morana. It was seen battling and defeating Chili's Pansear.
Multiple Mamoswine appeared in Over the Mountain of Snow!, including two of them that were hired by Ash and his friends to take a shortcut on Route 17.
Minor appearances
A Mamoswine appeared in a fantasy in A Dancing Debut!.
Pokédex entries
Episode
|
Pokémon
|
Source
|
Entry
|
DP106
|
Mamoswine
|
Dawn's Pokédex
|
Mamoswine, the Twin Tusk Pokémon and the evolved form of Piloswine. Distinguished by its large tusks, its weight is more than five times that of Piloswine, and is less commonly found since the end of the ice age.
|
|
Episode
|
Pokémon
|
Source
|
Entry
|
BW091
|
Mamoswine
|
Georgia's Pokédex
|
Mamoswine, the Twin Tusk Pokémon. Since the Ice Age, the Mamoswine population has gotten smaller as the climate has warmed. Its tusks are made from ice.
|
|
Episode
|
Pokémon
|
Source
|
Entry
|
XY083
|
Mamoswine
|
Serena's Pokédex
|
Mamoswine, the Twin Tusk Pokémon. As the temperature got hotter after the ice age, it is said many Mamoswine disappeared.
|
|
In the manga
In the Pocket Monsters Diamond & Pearl manga
- Main article: Dawn's Mamoswine
Dawn's Mamoswine appeared in PDP29.
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
Prior to Double Trouble with Dialga and Palkia I, Platinum was revealed to have caught a Mamoswine. She gave him to Diamond without using him, as he reminded her of the boy. He nicknamed him "Moo".
In Hawlucha Attack, X and his friends rode on five Mamoswine while going through Kalos Route 17 to reach Anistar City, to meet Professor Sycamore at the Sundial.
In the Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Adventure! manga
Koya has a Mamoswine was used in the battle against Hareta in Hearts and Spirits Collide. It took down Regigigas with a single Take Down, then used Hail in combination with its Snow Cloak to dodge Empoleon's Hydro Pump. However, Hareta was able to feel the vibrations created by Mamoswine's charge, allowing him to locate and defeat it.
In the Pokémon Pocket Monsters manga
A Mamoswine appeared in PMDP16.
A Mamoswine appeared in PMHGSS14.
In the TCG
- Main article: Mamoswine (TCG)
Game data
NPC appearances
Pokédex entries
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IV.
|
Generation IV
|
|
Sinnoh Pt: #205
|
|
Johto #197
|
Diamond
|
Its impressive tusks are made of ice. The population thinned when it turned warm after the ice age.
|
Pearl
|
Platinum
|
A frozen one was dug up from soil dating back 10,000 years. It woke up to much amazement.
|
HeartGold
|
A frozen Mamoswine was dug from ice dating back 10,000 years. This Pokémon has been around a long, long, long time.
|
SoulSilver
|
It flourished worldwide during the ice age but its population declined when the masses of ice began to dwindle.
|
|
|
Generation V
|
|
|
Unova B2W2: #260
|
Black
|
A frozen one was dug up from soil dating back 10,000 years. It woke up to much amazement.
|
White
|
Black 2
|
When the temperature rose at the end of the ice age, most Mamoswine disappeared.
|
White 2
|
|
|
Generation VI
|
|
Kalos Mountain #078
|
|
Hoenn #—
|
X
|
A frozen Mamoswine was dug from ice dating back 10,000 years. This Pokémon has been around a long, long, long time.
|
Y
|
Its impressive tusks are made of ice. The population thinned when it turned warm after the ice age.
|
Omega Ruby
|
A frozen Mamoswine was dug from ice dating back 10,000 years. This Pokémon has been around a long, long, long time.
|
Alpha Sapphire
|
Its impressive tusks are made of ice. The population thinned when it turned warm after the ice age.
|
|
|
|
Generation VIII
|
|
|
Galar #077
|
Sword
|
This Pokémon can be spotted in wall paintings from as far back as 10,000 years ago. For a while, it was thought to have gone extinct.
|
Shield
|
It looks strong, and that's exactly what it is. As the weather grows colder, its ice tusks grow longer, thicker, and more impressive.
|
|
|
Game locations
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IV.
|
|
|
|
|
|
In side games
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IV.
|
|
|
|
In events
Pokémon Global Link promotions
Games
|
Event
|
Language
|
Location
|
Level
|
Distribution period
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
Japanese
|
PGL
|
34
|
December 20, 2010 to May 31, 2011
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
Korean
|
PGL
|
34
|
July 1 to August 24, 2011
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
Spanish
|
PGL
|
34
|
October 13, 2011 to January 19, 2012
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
French
|
PGL
|
34
|
October 19, 2011 to January 19, 2012
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
German
|
PGL
|
34
|
October 19, 2011 to January 19, 2012
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
Italian
|
PGL
|
34
|
October 19, 2011 to January 19, 2012
|
BW
|
Global Link Mamoswine
|
English
|
PGL
|
34
|
October 20, 2011 to February 16, 2012
|
Held items
Stats
Base stats
Stat
|
Range
|
At Lv. 50
|
At Lv. 100
|
110
|
|
170 - 217
|
330 - 424
|
130
|
|
121 - 200
|
238 - 394
|
80
|
|
76 - 145
|
148 - 284
|
70
|
|
67 - 134
|
130 - 262
|
60
|
|
58 - 123
|
112 - 240
|
80
|
|
76 - 145
|
148 - 284
|
Total: 530
|
Other Pokémon with this total
|
- 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.
|
Pokéathlon stats
Type effectiveness
Under normal battle conditions in Generation IX, this Pokémon is:
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Learnset
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Mamoswine
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Mamoswine
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see level-up moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Mamoswine
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Mamoswine
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see TM moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Moves marked with an asterisk (*) must be chain bred onto Mamoswine 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 Mamoswine in that game.
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Mamoswine
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Mamoswine
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see Egg moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Mamoswine
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Mamoswine
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see Move Tutor moves from other generations
|
|
|
- Bold indicates a move that gets STAB when used by Mamoswine
- Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only when used by an Evolution of Mamoswine
- Click on the generation numbers at the top to see moves from other generations
|
Side game data
Evolution
Sprites
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation IV.
|
|
|
|
|
Trivia
Origin
Mamoswine appears to be based on a combination of a woolly mammoth and a wild boar. The blue around its eyes also resembles ski goggles.
Name origin
Mamoswine is a combination of mammoth and swine.
Mammoo may be a combination of mammoth and ぶうぶう būbū (onomatopoeia for oinking).
In other languages
Language
|
Title
|
Meaning
|
Japanese
|
マンムー Mammoo
|
From mammoth and ブーブー būbū
|
French
|
Mammochon
|
From mammouth and cochon
|
Spanish
|
Mamoswine
|
Same as English name
|
German
|
Mamutel
|
From Mammut and Zottel
|
Italian
|
Mamoswine
|
Same as English name
|
Korean
|
맘모꾸리 Mammokkuri
|
From Mammoth and 꿀꿀 kkulkkul
|
Mandarin Chinese
|
象牙豬 / 象牙猪 Xiàngyázhū
|
From 象牙 xiàngyá and 豬 zhū
|
Cantonese Chinese
|
|
|
|
|
More languages
|
Thai
|
แมมมู Mammoo
|
Transcription of trademarked Japanese name
|
|
|
Related articles
External links
|
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.
|