Eevee (Pokémon)
For Pokémon GO information on this species, see the game's section. | |||||||||
|
|
| |||||||
This article is about the species. For a specific instance of this species, see Eevee (disambiguation). |
| |||||||||||||||||||
Type
| |||||||||||||||||||
Abilities
| |||||||||||||||||||
Gender ratio
|
Catch rate
| ||||||||||||||||||
Breeding
| |||||||||||||||||||
Height
|
Weight
| ||||||||||||||||||
Base experience yield
|
Leveling rate
| ||||||||||||||||||
EV yield
| |||||||||||||||||||
Shape
|
Footprint
| ||||||||||||||||||
Pokédex color
|
Base friendship
| ||||||||||||||||||
External Links
|
Eevee (Japanese: イーブイ Eievui) is a Normal-type Pokémon introduced in Generation I.
It evolves into one of eight different Pokémon through various methods:
- Vaporeon when exposed to a Water Stone.
- Jolteon when exposed to a Thunder Stone.
- Flareon when exposed to a Fire Stone.
- Espeon when leveled up with high friendship during the daytime, including morning (Generation II onward, excludes areas with a Moss Rock or Ice Rock), or when leveled up with high friendship with a Sun Shard in the Bag (Pokémon XD).
- Umbreon when leveled up with high friendship during the nighttime (Generation II onward, excludes areas with a Moss Rock or Ice Rock), or when leveled up with high friendship with a Moon Shard in the Bag (Pokémon XD).
- Leafeon when leveled up near a Moss Rock (Generation IV onward).
- Glaceon when leveled up near an Ice Rock (Generation IV onward).
- Sylveon when leveled up with a Fairy-type move and two levels of Affection (Generation VI onward, excludes areas with a Moss Rock or Ice Rock).
Eevee is the game mascot and starter Pokémon in Pokémon: Let's Go, Eevee!, as well as for the main characters of Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness and Pokémon Conquest. It is also the rival's starter Pokémon in Pokémon Yellow, although Professor Oak originally intended to give it to the player.
Biology
Eevee is a mammalian, quadruped creature with primarily brown fur. The tip of its bushy tail and its large furry collar are cream-colored. It has short, slender legs with three small toes and a pink paw pad on each foot. Eevee has brown eyes, long pointed ears, and a small black nose. This Pokémon is rarely found in the wild, and is mostly only found in cities and towns. However, Eevee is said to have an irregularly shaped genetic structure that allows it to adapt to many different kinds of environments. Eventually, Eevee may evolve to better suit its surroundings. According to Pokémon Mystery Dungeon, Eevee has a naive personality.
Eevee has one alternate form. In Pokémon: Let's Go, Eevee!, the player starts with a special Eevee known as a Partner Eevee. The Partner Eevee has uniquely purple eyes and a lighter shade of fur, design elements likely taken from the anime, which implemented these traits starting in the Advanced Generation series. Female Partner Eevee also have the cream-colored tips of their tails shaped like a heart. This trait is unique and is not found on other female Eevee. Partner Eevee has higher base stats, and has access to moves that normal Eevee do not.
Eevee is the only known Pokémon capable of using the exclusive Z-Move Extreme Evoboost. Partner Eevee are the only Pokémon capable of performing Bouncy Bubble, Buzzy Buzz, Sizzly Slide, Glitzy Glow, Baddy Bad, Sappy Seed, Freezy Frost, Sparkly Swirl, and the Partner Power, Veevee Volley.
In the anime
In the main series
Major appearances
May's Eevee
May received an Egg from a Day-Care Couple in May's Egg-Cellent Adventure. That Egg hatched into an Eevee in Time Warp Heals All Wounds. Eevee eventually evolved into Glaceon before May met back up with the group in A Full Course Tag Battle!.
Serena's Eevee
Serena caught an Eevee in A Frolicking Find in the Flowers!. It later evolved into a Sylveon in Party Dancecapades!.
Nagisa
A recurring wild Eevee first appeared in a series of shorts titled Eevee, Where Are You Going?. The first episode debuted after SM093. It made its main series debut in SM099, where it was caught by Lana and given the nickname Nagisa.
Gary's Eevee
Gary's Eevee debuted in The Rivalry Revival, where it defeated Ash's Pikachu in battle. It evolved into an Umbreon sometime before Power Play!.
Sakura's Eevee
Sakura owned an Eevee in Trouble's Brewing. By the time Ash and his friends met up with Sakura again in Espeon, Not Included, her Eevee had evolved into an Espeon.
Other
Eevee debuted in The Battling Eevee Brothers, under the ownership of Mikey. He was hiding it the Evolution Pokémon from his three older brothers because they wanted him to evolve it just like they did to their own Eevee. However, when Mikey's Eevee single-handedly defeated Team Rocket, Sparky, Rainer, and Pyro accepted the fact that Mikey wanted to keep his Eevee just the way it is.
Two Eevee appeared in Last Call — First Round!, under the ownership of Ursula. Both of them evolved into a Vaporeon and a Flareon during her performance.
A female Eevee, along with all of her evolutions at the time, appeared in Team Eevee and the Pokémon Rescue Squad!, under the ownership of Virgil, who was mentioned to raise many Eevee that all eventually evolved. She was often seen outside of her Poké Ball. Another Eevee, also belonging to Virgil, was also briefly seen in a flashback, in which it evolved into his Umbreon.
An Eevee appeared in Eevee & Friends alongside its evolutions, including the newly introduced Sylveon. It had a playful and friendly personality.
Three Eevee appeared in Mystery on a Deserted Island!, where they befriended Ash, his friends, Alexa, and their Pokémon after Pikachu rescued them from a Nidoking. They eventually evolved into Vaporeon, Jolteon, and Flareon.
An Eevee appeared in A Glaring Rivalry!, during a flashback, under the ownership of Gladion. It is implied that this Eevee is the same one that evolved into his Umbreon.
An Eevee belonging to Ilima debuted in Turning Heads and Training Hard!. It helped its Trainer earn the Eevium Z, which was eventually crucial to the defeat of Team Skull. It briefly reappeared in Smashing with Sketch!. In both episodes, it was often seen outside of its Poké Ball.
An Eevee appeared in The Power of Us, under the ownership of Risa.
Minor appearances
An Eevee appeared in Pikachu's Vacation as one of the Pokémon seen at the Pokémon Theme Park.
An Eevee appeared in The Power of One.
A wild Eevee appeared in Pikachu's Rescue Adventure.
An Eevee briefly appeared in Hour of the Houndour.
An Eevee appeared in a fantasy in the Fortune Teller book in The Fortune Hunters.
An Eevee appeared in Will the Real Oak Please Stand Up?, under the ownership of a child.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in You're a Star, Larvitar!.
An Eevee appeared in Gary's demonstration in Johto Photo Finish, where it evolved into its five Eeveelutions at the time.
An Eevee appeared in Brock's demonstration in A Bite to Remember, where it evolved into its five Eeveelutions at the time.
An Eevee was used by one of the students of the Pokémon Trainers' School in Gonna Rule The School!.
Multiple Eevee appeared in the opening sequence of Destiny Deoxys.
A Coordinator's Eevee appeared in Hi Ho Silver Wind!.
An Eevee made a small cameo appearance in the opening sequence of Giratina and the Sky Warrior together with its seven Eeveelutions at the time.
An Eevee appeared in A Rivalry to Gible On!.
An Eevee appeared in Genesect and the Legend Awakened.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in A Battle of Aerial Mobility!.
An Eevee appeared in Diancie and the Cocoon of Destruction as a resident of Allearth Forest.
An Eevee appeared in a flashback in Bonnie for the Defense!, where it was taken away from Heidi, Kye, and Jay by their teacher, who told them they were too young to have a Pokémon. This caused them to harbor a strong distrust of adults, but they later learned that it had been taken back to its true owner after being delivered to Nurse Joy.
An Eevee appeared during the Mega Audino journal in A Race for Home!.
Two Trainers' Eevee appeared in Alola to New Adventure!.
A student's Eevee appeared in The Guardian's Challenge!. It appeared again in the banned episode SM064.
Five Trainers' Eevee appeared in A Shocking Grocery Run!.
Three Trainers' Eevee appeared in Crystal-Clear Sleuthing!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in One Journey Ends, Another Begins....
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Getting the Band Back Together!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in A Glaring Rivalry!. It reappeared in a flashback in A Masked Warning!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in I Choose You!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Alola, Kanto!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Faba's Revenge!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in the banned episode SM064.
An Eevee appeared in Turning Heads and Training Hard!, under the ownership of Kagetora. It was defeated in a battle by Ilima and his own Eevee.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Twirling with a Bang!.
Two Trainers' Eevee appeared in A Young Royal Flame Ignites!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Dummy, You Shrunk the Kids!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Securing the Future!, where it joined the rest of Alola in showering Necrozma with light so it could return to its true form.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in Turning the Other Mask!.
A Trainer's Eevee appeared in SM103.
Pokédex entries
|
|
|
|
|
In Pokémon Origins
An Eevee appeared in File 1: Red with Professor Oak.
In the manga
In the Electric Tale of Pikachu manga
Like in the anime, Mikey owns an Eevee in the The Electric Tale of Pikachu manga. Mikey and his Eevee appear in the chapter To Evolve or Not to Evolve, That is the Question!.
In the Magical Pokémon Journey manga
- Main article: Coconut's Eevee
- Main article: Lu
An Eevee is owned by Coconut in Magical Pokémon Journey. This Eevee is a smart Pokémon who is very loyal to Coconut.
Later in the series, another Eevee named Lu appears. Coconut's Eevee falls in love with Lu, who confesses her own love to Eevee before moving away.
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
- Main article: Vee
In Blame it on Eevee an Eevee is seen as a Pokémon experimented on by Team Rocket, in their tests to attempt merging Articuno, Zapdos, and Moltres into a single Pokémon. The experiments gave Eevee the characteristic of being able to mutate into three of his evolved forms, namely Vaporeon, Jolteon, and Flareon and revert, though he still requires the energies of an evolutionary stone. Red eventually captures this Eevee as a prerequisite for challenging Erika and gave him the name Vee. When he evolved into Espeon, however, he lost his mutation ability and became unable to revert to his base form.
Yellow fantasized about Pokémon that could evolve via stone in The Kindest Tentacruel which an Eevee was one of them.
Another Eevee was seen under the ownership of Karen in The Escape, during her childhood as one of the children captured by the Masked Man. It is presumed that this Eevee eventually evolves into her Umbreon, which she used to fight Green.
Sometime off-panel during the X & Y arc, Y caught an Eevee, which she named Veevee. When she used her in a battle against Team Flare, she evolved into a Sylveon.
In the Pokémon Pocket Monsters manga
An Eevee is seen with Red during the curry cooking competition that went on in Curry Showdown! Which is the Most Delicious?.
In the Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Adventure! manga
Mitsumi has an Eevee as seen in Clash! Hareta vs. Mitsumi!!.
Pokédex entries
|
In the TCG
- Main article: Eevee (TCG)
As in the games and anime, Eevee is notable in the TCG for being able to evolve into the most differently-named Pokémon cards, with its eight normal evolutions, as well as Dark forms of the Generation I evolutions and Espeon, and Light forms of the Generation I evolutions.
In the TFG
One Eevee figure has been released.
Other appearances
Super Smash Bros. Melee
Eevee only appears as a random trophy.
Trophy information
As adaptable a Pokémon as any yet discovered, Eevee's evolutionary progress changes to meet the conditions of its environment. So far, five evolutionary forms have been discovered and then catalogued for this unique Pokémon; Vaporeon, Jolteon, Flareon, Espeon, and Umbreon. All evolutions have special benefits.
Super Smash Bros. for Nintendo 3DS/Wii U
Eevee appears as a Poké Ball Pokémon. It uses Take Down to hit opponents.
Trophy information
NA: This Normal-type Pokémon is as adaptable to evolution as they come, with eight evolutions discovered thus far. If you pair that potential with its adorable features, it's no wonder Eevee is so popular! In Smash Bros., Eevee will attack a nearby opponent with Take Down. Sadly, this attack isn't incredibly powerful.
PAL: This adorable Normal-type Pokémon's ability to evolve in so many different ways makes it a popular choice with trainers. When brought out in battle, Eevee uses Take Down on the first opponent it sees, but...it's not very effective. Never mind. Eevee may not be the toughest Pokémon, but it'll always be one of the cutest.
Super Smash Bros. Ultimate
Eevee returns as a Poké Ball Pokémon. It uses Take Down to attack foes, moving from left to right and vice-versa up to five times. It also appears as a Spirit.
Detective Pikachu
An Eevee will appear in Detective Pikachu. It evolved into a Flareon.
Game data
NPC appearances
- Pokémon Stadium 2: Eevee stars in the mini-game "Eager Eevee".
Pokédex entries
| |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||
|
Game locations
In side games
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
In events
Games | Event | Language/Region | Location | Level | Distribution period |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
GSC | Gotta Catch 'Em All Station! Growth Eevee | English | United States | 5 | February 21 to 27, 2003 |
DPPt | Pokémon Center Eevee | Japanese | Japan | 10 | December 6, 2008 to January 12, 2009; March 6 to 19, 2009 |
HGSS | 2010 World Championships Eevee | Japanese | Japan | 50 | January 11 to May 9, 2010 |
HGSS | Video Game Championships 2010 Eevee | English | United States | 50 | May 8 to June 27, 2010 |
HGSS | Video Game Championships 2010 Eevee | English | United Kingdom | 50 | May 29, 2010 |
HGSS | Video Game Championships 2010 Eevee | German | Germany | 50 | June 5, 2010 |
HGSS | Video Game Championships 2010 Eevee | French | France | 50 | June 12, 2010 |
HGSS | Video Game Championships 2010 Eevee | Spanish | Spain | 50 | June 19, 2010 |
BWB2W2 | Kiyo Eevee | Japanese | Japan | 50 | July 13, 2013; July 14 to September 1, 2013 |
XYORAS | Pokémon Center Birthday Eevee | All | Japan | 10 | October 12, 2013 to December 31, 2016 |
XYORAS | Pokémon Scrap Eevee | Japanese region | Online | 15 | March 1 to August 31, 2016 |
XYORAS | Korean League Eevee | All | South Korea | 15 | October 22 to 23, 2016 |
SM | Pokémon Center Birthday Eevee | All | Japan | 10 | November 18, 2016 to ??? |
In-game events
Games | Event | Language | Level | Distribution period |
---|---|---|---|---|
RGBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | Japanese | 25 | April 30, 1999 onwards |
RBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | English | 25 | February 29, 2000 onwards |
RBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | French | 25 | April 7, 2000 onwards |
RBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | German | 25 | April 7, 2000 onwards |
RBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | Italian | 25 | April 7, 2000 onwards |
RBY | Gym Leader Castle Eevee | Spanish | 25 | April 7, 2000 onwards |
Held items
Game | Held Item(s) | ||
---|---|---|---|
Red* | Blue* | Bitter Berry (100%) | |
Yellow* | |||
Stadium* | Normal Box (100%)* | Gorgeous Box (100%)* | |
Ranch | Haban Berry (100%) | ||
Events* | Focus Sash (100%) | Silk Scarf (100%) |
Stats
Base stats
Stat | Range | ||
---|---|---|---|
At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 55
|
115 - 162 | 220 - 314 | |
55
|
54 - 117 | 103 - 229 | |
50
|
49 - 112 | 94 - 218 | |
45
|
45 - 106 | 85 - 207 | |
65
|
63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
55
|
54 - 117 | 103 - 229 | |
Total: 325
|
Other Pokémon with this total | ||
Partner Eevee
Stat | Range | ||
---|---|---|---|
At Lv. 50 | At Lv. 100 | ||
HP: 65
|
125 - 172 | 240 - 334 | |
75
|
72 - 139 | 139 - 273 | |
70
|
67 - 134 | 130 - 262 | |
65
|
63 - 128 | 121 - 251 | |
85
|
81 - 150 | 157 - 295 | |
75
|
72 - 139 | 139 - 273 | |
Total: 435
|
Other Pokémon with this total | ||
- Due to how stats are calculated differently in Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee! compared to the other core series games, maximum stats are not reflected on the table above.
Pokéathlon stats
|
| ||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||
|
|
Type effectiveness
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Learnset
Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!
By leveling up
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By TM/HM
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Pokémon Sun, Moon, Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon
By leveling up
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By TM/HM
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By breeding
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By tutoring
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
By events
| ||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||
|
TCG-only moves
Move | Card |
---|---|
Astonish | Lt. Surge's Eevee (Gym Challenge 51) |
Bounce | Eevee (Rising Rivals 59) |
Scratch | Lt. Surge's Eevee (Gym Challenge 51) |
Side game data
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
In Pokémon GO, if Eevee has a particular nickname, then once per nickname, it is guaranteed to evolve into the following, regardless of other conditions:
- Rainer → Vaporeon
- Sparky → Jolteon
- Pyro → Flareon
- Sakura → Espeon
- Tamao → Umbreon
Eevee cannot yet evolve into Leafeon or Glaceon in GO.
Evolution
| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Water Stone ↓ |
Thunder Stone ↓ |
Fire Stone ↓ |
Friendship (day) Level up with Sun Shard in BagXD ↓ |
Friendship (night) Level up with Moon Shard in BagXD ↓ |
Level up near Moss Rock Leaf StoneVIII+ ↓ |
Level up near Ice Rock Ice StoneVIII+ ↓ |
Level up
Fairy-type move ↓ | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sprites
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Trivia
- Eevee's English name is a palindrome.
- Eevee's English name also contains only two unique letters, less than any other Pokémon's English name.
- Eevee was designed by Motofumi Fujiwara.[1]
- Eevee has the most branched evolutions with a total of eight.
- Eevee bears many distinguishing characteristics because of its evolved forms:
- Eevee is the only Pokémon to not share any types with any of its evolutions.
- Eevee has the most evolutions of any Pokémon and is the only Pokémon which has more than three evolutions.
- The fan-made term to describe the evolutions of Eevee, Eeveelutions, was made official after its use in the strategy guide for Pokémon Stadium 2, followed by a TCG Theme Deck.
- In early English promotional material for Pokémon Red and Blue, Eevee was called "Eon", the suffix of all of the evolved forms of Eevee.
- In Generation I, Eevee is the only Pokémon to have a branched evolution.
- It is impossible for Eevee to evolve into Espeon and Umbreon in Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen because the games lack a time system. It is also impossible for it to evolve into Leafeon and Glaceon in Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver since neither Johto nor Kanto has a Moss Rock or an Ice Rock.
- Despite Eevee being obtainable before the Pokémon League in Pokémon Black 2 and White 2, it cannot evolve into Leafeon or Glaceon until after entering the Hall of Fame. This is because Twist Mountain and Pinwheel Forest are inaccessible before then.
- Eevee is the only pre-existing Pokémon to receive an evolution in Generation VI, though many received Mega Evolutions.
- Four of Eevee's evolutions evolve through abnormal means in the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series (Espeon, Umbreon, Leafeon, and Glaceon).
- In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series, Eevee evolves using the Sun Ribbon, or Lunar Ribbon with at least 1 star of IQ, a Mossy Rock, or a Frozen Rock into its respective evolutions.
- In Pokémon Ranger, all of Eevee's evolutions up to the third generation can be captured; however, Eevee is completely unobtainable. This was changed in Pokémon Ranger: Shadows of Almia.
- Despite the fact that May, Gary, and Sakura each owned an Eevee that went on to evolve, Eevee was never seen evolving onscreen in the anime until Last Call — First Round!, when Ursula evolved her two Eevee into Flareon and Vaporeon during a Contest appeal, over thirteen years into the series.
- As a species, Eevee has appeared in the teams of the most main characters in the anime, with May, Serena, and Lana each owning one.
Origin
Eevee shares traits with various mammals, specifically the fennec fox, dogs, and cats. It could also be based on the Gulon, a mythical, dog-sized Scandinavian creature with a coat of brown fur; a catlike head, ears, and claws; and a fox-like tail.
Name origin
Eevee and Eievui are the pronunciations of E-V, the first two letters in the word evolution.
In other languages
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Related articles
- Gary's Eevee
- May's Eevee
- Sakura's Eevee
- Serena's Eevee
- Nagisa
- Vee
- Coconut's Eevee
- Lu
- Partner Pokémon (game)
- Starter Pokémon
- Partner Pokémon (Mystery Dungeon)
External links
Notes
|
|
|
|
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. |
- Pokémon
- Generation I Pokémon
- Normal-type Pokémon
- Single-type Pokémon
- Pokémon with a gender ratio of seven males to one female
- Pokémon in the Medium Fast experience group
- Brown-colored Pokémon
- Body style 08 Pokémon
- Pokémon with different forms
- Field group Pokémon
- Pokémon with wild held items
- Pokémon with a base stat total of 325
- Pokémon whose Special stat became their Special Defense
- Pokémon with a base stat total of 435
- Pokémon with 19 max performance stars
- Body size 1 Pokémon
- Pages with broken file links
- Pokémon that are part of a two-stage evolutionary line
- Pokémon with branched Evolutions
- First partner Pokémon
- Mystery Dungeon starters
- Pokémon with cross-generational evolutions
- Pokémon that evolve by evolutionary stone
- Pokémon that evolve using Fire Stone
- Pokémon that evolve using Water Stone
- Pokémon that evolve using Thunder Stone
- Pokémon that evolve by friendship
- Pokémon that evolve by friendship during the day
- Pokémon that evolve by friendship during the night
- Pokémon that evolve by training in a certain location
- Pokémon that evolve based on time
- Pokémon that evolve with certain moves
- Pokémon that run from battle
- Starter Pokémon
- Pokémon that evolve through a unique method
- Game mascots