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Terapagos (Japanese: テラパゴス Terapagos) is a Legendary Pokémon introduced in Generation IX, with The Indigo Disk.
While it is not known to evolve into or from any other Pokémon, Terapagos has two forms: Normal Form and Terastal Form.
Terastal Form Terapagos is the game mascot of The Indigo Disk, appearing in The Hidden Treasure of Area Zero.
Terapagos plays an important role in Pokémon Horizons: The Series.
Biology
Normal Form Terapagos is a reptilian Pokémon that resembles a blue turtle. The body is light-blue with a shell shaped like a crystal with a white hexagon on top of it. The neck and legs each have a green star and ring rub. Each feet has three toes. It has a blue tail with a green star at end. It two light blue eyes with rouge rimming. It has a a diamond shape on forehead and two ear-like diamond on both sides of head. Finally, it has a green diamond ponytail with light and dark purple at end.
Normal Form Terapagos is said to have a splendid aura. It is a small and weak Pokémon, but when necessary, it can crystallize the energy in its body to form a protective shield, and is able to assume a dormant state when it feels that its life is in danger, able to pull its head, limbs, and tail into its shell and make itself look like a jewel[1]. Terapagos can fly in both of its forms. Terapagos has the ability to take on multiples distinct appearances[2].
Forms
Terapagos has two forms: Normal Form and Terastal Form.
Terastal Form Terapagos is a reptilian Pokémon that resembles a light-blue turtle. Terapagos has two light blue eyes with rouge rimming, while the rest of its head is a deeper shade of indigo. Its head is also decorated with small diamond protrusions, with two on top of its head and two more on either side. It has two small hands with 3 fingers each that barely poke out of its fur. Its fur is voluminous, its color varying with a gradiant between a greenish yellow and sky blue. A second patch of fur also appears behind its shell, vaguely forming three separate tails.
Terapagos's shell is made out of crystal, with 18 irregular pentagons on top decorated with differently colored symbols that appear to resemble all 18 type icons. On the center of its shell is a small hexagonal protrusion, with a white hexagon on top of it with triangular extensions on each corner that connects it to the edges of the protrusion, slightly resembling the icon for the Terastal phenomenon. The sides of its shell also have 3 obtuse pentagons each on the rim of the shell; however, these ones are a solid light blue color.
The Area Zero journals and the Scarlet Book/Violet Book describe an unknown Pokémon resembling Terapagos, implying that this Pokémon is responsible for, or at least heavily related to, the Terastal phenomenon.
In the anime
Normal Form Terapagos in the
anime
Major appearances
Normal Form Terapagos debuted in HZ002, where it was revealed that Liko's pendant is actually its dormant form. It briefly awakened again in HZ012, and also reappeared in a flashback in HZ016.
Trivia
Sketch in the Scarlet/Violet Books
Origin
Terapagos may be based on a sea turtle, specifically the Galápagos green turtle, a population of green sea turtles found around the Galápagos Islands. It may also be based on the Galápagos tortoise.
Terapagos may also reference the World Turtle, a mythical turtle found in various mythologies that was said to carry the world upon its back. Its hairy appearance may be a reference to Japanese legends of the minogame, a turtle which lived for 10,000 years and grew a tail made of seaweed.
The tessellation on Terapagos' shell contains type icons. It could also be based on the unique pattern on the back of the diamondback terrapin.
It may also take inspiration from chitons, marine mollusks with flat disk-shaped bodies and eye-like peripherals composed of rock.
Name origin
Terapagos may be a combination of Terastal, terrapin, and galápagos (a Spanish word for turtles, most recognizable because of the Galápagos Islands).
In other languages
Language
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Title
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Meaning
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Japanese
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テラパゴス Terapagos
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From Terastal, terrapin, and galápagos or Galápagos Islands
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French
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Terapagos
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Same as English/Japanese name
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Spanish
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Terapagos
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Same as English/Japanese name
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German
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Terapagos
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Same as English/Japanese name
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Italian
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Terapagos
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Same as English/Japanese name
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Korean
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테라파고스 Terapagoseu
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Transcription of Japanese name
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Mandarin Chinese
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太樂巴戈斯 / 太乐巴戈斯 Tàilèbāgēsī
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Transcription of the Japanese name and 太晶化 Tàijīnghuà
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Cantonese Chinese
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太樂巴戈斯 Taailohkbāgwōsī
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Transcription of the Japanese name and 太晶化 Taaijīngfa
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Related articles
References
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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