Nickname

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Revision as of 17:31, 22 September 2023 by Chordsofsteel (talk | contribs) (→‎Nicknames used by NPCs: Corrected "Secrutiy" to "Security.")
Jump to navigationJump to search
A Bulbasaur being nicknamed "Bulbagarden" in Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire

A nickname (Japanese: ニックネーム nickname) is a name given to a Pokémon by its Trainer.

In addition to the games, nicknamed Pokémon have also been shown in the Pokémon anime and several manga series.

In the core series games

Setting nicknames

Initial nickname

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: All instances in which the player is given the opportunity to nickname a Pokémon after receiving it

In all core series games except Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee! and Pokémon Legends: Arceus, the player is given the option to nickname their Pokémon immediately after obtaining them: upon catching a Pokémon, receiving a Pokémon as a gift from an NPC, or hatching a Pokémon from an Egg. In Generation VIII and IX, the player can disable being prompted to nickname Pokémon in the settings menu.

In some games, the player receives a Pokémon but is only given the opportunity to set its nickname after some amount of gameplay:

  • In Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, Emerald, Omega Ruby, and Alpha Sapphire, the player cannot nickname their starter Pokémon when they first take it from Professor Birch's bag; instead, they are given the opportunity to give it a nickname after returning to Professor Birch's lab.
  • In Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, Platinum, Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl, the player cannot nickname their starter Pokémon when they first receive it; instead, they are given the opportunity to give it a nickname after showing it to Professor Rowan in Sandgem Town. In Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, Brilliant Diamond, and Shining Pearl, this is because the player initially took the Pokémon from a suitcase to defend themselves from a wild Starly.
  • In Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD, the player cannot nickname a Shadow Pokémon when it is snagged; instead, the player is given the opportunity to nickname the Pokémon when it is purified.

Changing nicknames

In most games, the player can change a Pokémon's nickname by taking it to the Name Rater. In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu!, Let's Go, Eevee!, Legends: Arceus, Scarlet, and Violet, a Pokémon can be given a nickname or have its nickname changed at any time on its status screen.

If the player is a Pokémon's Original Trainer, they can change or give it a nickname, unless that Pokémon was met in a fateful encounter. The game checks the Original Trainer name, gender (Generation V onward), Trainer ID number, and Secret ID (Generation III onward)—except in Generation IV, in which only the Trainer ID is checked.

In Pokémon Sword and Shield and Pokémon Scarlet and Violet, the player can give a nickname to any unnicknamed Pokémon, even outsider Pokémon, as long as the Pokémon name is in the same language as the current Trainer's game language and it was not met in a fateful encounter; however, once an outsider Pokémon is given a nickname this way, it is now a nicknamed Pokémon, so its name cannot be changed without trading it back to its Original Trainer. In Pokémon Sword and Shield only, the player can change the nicknames of all Pokémon they are the Original Trainer of, even if they were met in a fateful encounter; this feature is not present in any previous or subsequent games.

Entering nicknames

Main article: Text entry in the Pokémon games

In Generation I to V, nicknames have a maximum length of 10 characters in Western languages and 5 characters in Japanese and Korean. Starting in Generation VI, nicknames have a maximum length of 12 characters in Western languages and 6 characters in Japanese, Korean, and Chinese (Generation VII onward).

These characters are in turn limited by the character palette of the game's text entry system, which varies between game languages. The characters available have expanded over the generations: for example, numbers were not available to be added to nicknames in Generation I, while later generations allow them. Originally, Pokémon games always used a proprietary text encoding system; however, games released on the Nintendo Switch or mobile use that system's native text-entry system.

In Generation I, a name consisting of only spaces can be used. In subsequent generations, submitting such a name is treated as exiting without entering a nickname; if such a name is submitted, a newly obtained Pokémon will use its species name, and a Pokémon at the Name Rater will keep its current name.

From Generation V onward, the game will recognize when a nickname contains inappropriate text, and will not allow the player to use this as a nickname. The Generation V games contain an internal list of censored words which only censors case-insensitive matches. From Generation VI onward, the game system (Nintendo 3DS or Nintendo Switch) has its own built-in profanity filter which is used instead; these filters use regular expressions to censor a wide range of attempts to circumvent it. If a Pokémon transferred via Poké Transporter has a nickname that would not be permitted to be entered in Generation V (when transferring from a Generation V game) or on the Nintendo 3DS system (when transferring from a Generation I or II game), the Pokémon's nickname is removed and it uses its species name instead.

In Generation V, nicknames the player enters can only contain up to 4 numeric characters. From Generation VI onward, nicknames the player enters can only contain up to 5 numeric characters. However, Pokémon transferred from previous generations can violate these limits, and their names will not be changed upon transfer.

In Generation V and VII, tapping the Pokémon's sprite on the nickname screen replaces the currently entered text with the Pokémon's species name. In Generation VI, this replaces the currently entered text with the Pokémon's current nickname, or its species name if it has not been nicknamed.

Displaying nicknames

Comparison of the same English Mewtwo in Japanese and English Generation III games
050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Details on the specific battle modes and competitions during which nicknames are hidden

In the Generation III games, a Pokémon named in a Western game traded to a Japanese game will have its name rendered in fullwidth characters, making it impossible to display the full name if it is longer than five characters.

In the 1.0 release of the English versions of Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire, the nickname flag of Japanese Pokémon is not set when they evolve, so the Pokémon's species name will be adjusted accordingly (e.g. Pichu's Japanese species name is ピチュー and the player nicknames it PICHU, then trades it to an English version and evolves it, causing its name to become PIKACHU). However, since the English games still render the name in the Japanese font, an evolved Japanese Pokémon that has a name longer than five characters will cause a crash while attempting to load the Pokémon List or send it out to battle (in the aforementioned case, the game will try to render it as PIKACHU instead of PIKACHU). This was fixed in the 1.1 release by adding an additional check to the name function used during evolution so that the Japanese Pokémon's name is not altered, effectively treating it as if it were a nickname. The European releases and subsequent Generation III games also have this check.

In Generation IV, Pokémon with nicknames deemed "inappropriate" may show up in Battle Videos as Pokémon without a nickname (i.e. a Staraptor named inappropriately would have its nickname reverted to "STARAPTOR"). It is unknown if this censoring was automatic or done on a case-by-case basis by employees. From Generation V onward, there is instead a profanity filter applied when attempting to nickname Pokémon or when transporting them using Poké Transporter.

In the Japanese and Chinese versions of Pokémon Sun, Moon, Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon, due to a bug, the emoticons are displayed incorrectly in the game's main font, which is used on the nickname screen (among other places). The small font used to display nicknames in battle does not have this issue, so a Pokémon whose nickname includes these characters will display a different nickname between these two interfaces. This is fixed in later games, so Pokémon who were given nicknames including these characters in these games will appear to have their nicknames changed when sent to a Nintendo Switch game. Likewise, Pokémon transferred from older games to these games whose names include these characters will also appear to have their names change in the main font. For example, a Pokémon nicknamed neutral facehappy facesad faceangry face in a Japanese-language Generation VI game will have its name displayed as happy faceangry facesad faceneutral face in the game's main font

In Pokémon: Let's Go, Pikachu! and Let's Go, Eevee!, if a Pokémon that is Japanese in origin has a name that contains Korean or Chinese characters, those characters will display as question marks instead. This is because those languages do not share typesets.[1] It is unconfirmed if other pairs of languages can cause this behavior, or if it can occur in other Generation VII games.

Unnicknamed Pokémon

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: How unnicknamed Pokémon from different language games are treated in Gen 1-3
Details on how the renamed Simplified Chinese Pokémon function when unnicknamed
If the question marks bug occurs in SM/USUM, or if it doesn't, what mechanic stops it from happening

Unnicknamed Pokémon use their species name in place of a nickname. The language and capitalization of this name can vary depending on the generation and language of the current game, as well as the generation and language of the games they were obtained, hatched and evolved in.

If an unnicknamed Pokémon evolves or a Pokémon is hatched without being nicknamed, its name is set to its current species name. From Generation IV to VII, it uses its species name in the language of its current game (regardless of its language of origin). In Generation VIII, its name is set to its species name in its language of origin (regardless of the language of the game it is currently in).

From Generation I to IV, unnicknamed Pokémon from Western language games have their names displayed in ALLCAPS. When transferred to Generation V, the names of unnicknamed Pokémon transferred from previous generations continue to be displayed in ALLCAPS (in contrast to unnicknamed Pokémon caught in the Generation V games, which are displayed in title case); however, if an unnicknamed Pokémon is evolved in Generation V, its new species name will always be displayed in title case (in the language of the game in which it was evolved).

When transferred via Poké Transporter, unnicknamed Pokémon have their name reset to their species name in their language of origin (in title case for Western languages).

Detecting unnicknamed Pokémon

From Generation I to III, unnicknamed Pokémon are simply Pokémon whose current name matches their species name in their current game's language; as a result, in these games, an unnicknamed Pokémon traded to a game of a different language will be treated as nicknamed if its species name is different in that language. From Generation IV onward, nicknamed Pokémon are distinguished from unnicknamed Pokémon by an internal flag; this allows Pokémon to be recognized as unnicknamed regardless of the language of the game they are in.

When a Pokémon is migrated from a Generation III game to a Generation IV game via Pal Park, if the migrated Pokémon's current name exactly matches its species name in the Generation IV game's language, it is flagged as being unnicknamed; otherwise, its current name is permanently treated as a nickname. This can result in a Pokémon's species name being permanently treated as a nickname, if it is migrated to a game in a language in which its species name differs from its current name. Since there are no Korean Generation III games (and it is not possible to enter Hangul in any Generation III game), using Pal Park in a Korean Generation IV game will always cause the transferred Pokémon to be treated as having nicknames. Pal Park otherwise requires that both games be the same language, so this is otherwise only a problem for Pokémon traded between languages in Generation III. Pokémon that are Japanese in origin always have Latin letters in their names converted to fullwidth characters, which are considered distinct from regular Latin letters, so cannot be treated as unnicknamed when migrated to a Western language Generation IV game.

When a Pokémon is migrated from a Generation I or II Virtual Console game to a Pokémon Bank via Poké Transporter, if the migrated Pokémon's current name exactly matches its species name in the language of the game it was transferred from, it is flagged as being unnicknamed; otherwise, its current name is permanently treated as a nickname. Due to bugs in how Poké Transporter detects unnicknamed Pokémon, some unnicknamed Pokémon can have their names turned into nicknames upon transfer. Unnicknamed Mr. Mime (in English, French, Italian, and Spanish) becomes nicknamed "MR.MIME" instead; prior to Version 1.3, it became nicknamed "MR-MIME". Prior to Version 1.3, English unnicknamed Farfetch'd became nicknamed "FARFETCH D" upon transfer. Due to Poké Transporter not accounting for the fact that French Generation I and II games do not use diacritics or ligatures in Pokémon species names, unnicknamed French Pokémon whose names include those characters are also treated as being nicknamed.

Transferring nicknamed Pokémon

Different Pokémon games have different character encodings, so some nicknames may be slightly altered during the transfer process.

Pal Park

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: How quotation marks (which differ between European languages) are handled when transferred after trading to a different language

In the Spanish Generation III games, some characters that normally cannot be entered by the player appear in some preset player names, and in the nicknames and Original Trainers of some in-game trade Pokémon. When migrated via Pal Park, if a Pokémon has a nickname or Original Trainer that has one of these characters, it will be turned into a kana character instead.

Poké Transporter

Main article: Poké Transporter → Character transcoding

The Generation I and II games use substantially different character encodings to Pokémon Bank, so nicknames from these games need to be transcoded. Some characters that can be entered in nicknames in these games cannot be in later games, so are converted to approximate equivalents; for example, the multiplication sign (×) is converted to a lowercase x, and PK is converted to capital P.

If a Pokémon is transferred to Pokémon Bank via Poké Transporter, a profanity filter is applied to its nickname, with its nickname being deleted if the filter deems the name unacceptable. If a Pokémon is transferred from a Generation V game, the Generation V filter is used; if transferred from a Generation I or II Virtual Console game, the Nintendo 3DS filter is used. No filter is applied when transferring from Pokémon Bank to Pokémon HOME, however.

Pokémon HOME

The face characters, arrows, and sleeping symbol that have been present since Pokémon Diamond and Pearl are no longer supported in Nintendo Switch games. If they appear in a Pokémon's nickname, they are replaced with spaces.

Pokémon GO

Any Pokémon transferred from Pokémon GO (either via GO Park or GO Transporter) has its nickname erased. However, its original nickname can be viewed in GO Park before catching it.

Outcomes of nicknaming

Nicknaming Pokémon rarely has any effect on gameplay, and is simply an element of customization that players are free to use or ignore. However, there are some cases where nicknames have some small effect on the game.

In Pokémon Ruby, Sapphire, and Emerald, if the player has changed the nickname of a Pokémon at the Name Rater, the Hoenn TV network will sometimes report the nickname chosen. The host will always commend the player on his or her choice of name, even if the player decides to leave the Pokémon's name as it was. If the player mixes records with another player, the television network may report on the other player's choice of nicknames as well.

In Pokémon Black 2 and White 2, there is a Medal awarded for having nicknamed Pokémon 10 times.

In Pokémon Omega Ruby and Alpha Sapphire, a BuzzNav program called The Name Rater Show tells a Pokémon's fortune based upon the first letter of its nickname. Additionally, one of the requirements for encountering Regigigas at Island Cave is having a nicknamed Regice that was caught in these games in the party.

In Pokémon Legends: Arceus, Ingo will use the nickname of a Pokémon on its respective Path of Solitude. This is purely cosmetic, and he will still grant a special mark on the Pokémon's Pokédex page.

Nicknames used by NPCs

Nicknamed Pokémon are very rarely used by NPCs in battles in the core series games. However, NPCs are often shown to have nicknamed Pokémon in other contexts.

In Pokémon Black, White, Black 2, and White 2, for some in-game trade NPCs, after trading with them the player can battle these Trainers, who use the Pokémon that the player traded them, now fully evolved. If this Pokémon was given a nickname by the player before being traded, it will keep that nickname for the battle with the player.

In Pokémon Platinum, HeartGold and SoulSilver, in the Battle Arcade, one of the special events swaps the player's Pokémon with the opponent's Pokémon. In Black 2 and White 2, the PWT's Mix Tournament swaps the player's Pokémon with the NPC's Pokémon. In both cases, if the player's Pokémon have nicknames, they continue to use these nicknames while controlled by an NPC, making it possible to fight an NPC using nicknamed Pokémon.

In Pokémon Sun, Moon, Ultra Sun and Ultra Moon, Lillie carries around a Cosmog that she calls "Nebby". However, when the player battles it, after it has evolved into SolgaleoSUS or LunalaMUM, it does not have a nickname, although the player can give it one upon catching it.

In Pokémon Legends: Arceus, Beauregard of the Galaxy Team Security Corps, who is posted outside of Galaxy Hall, asks for a Wurmple as part of Request 1: "Wurmple Can Evolve". After receiving a Wurmple, he asks the player to nickname it for him, prompting them three options to choose from: "Beauticia", "Beautifred", or "Beaugene". Beauregard will continue to refer to the Wurmple using the nickname the player chose, even when it evolves.

Nicknames for the player

050Diglett.png This article is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this article to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: Needs info from USUM

In Pokémon X and Y, the player is referred to by a nickname by Calem/Serena, Shauna, Tierno, and Trevor. The player can choose from three suggestions (based on the first two characters of the player's name if playing in Japanese or the first character if playing in other languages) or enter a nickname of their own choice. For example, in English a male player named "Calem" could choose from "Li'l C", "C-Meister", "Big C", or entering their own nickname.

In the table below, <char> represents the first character of the player's name (<chars> represents the first two characters).

Language Male Female
Japanese <chars>タロ <chars>-taro
<chars>やん <chars>-yan
<chars>P <chars>-P
<chars>っち <chars>-tchi
<chars>ーな <chars>-na
<chars>りん <chars>-rin
English Li'l <char>
<char>-Meister
Big <char>
Li'l <char>
Lady <char>
<char>-kins
French P'tit <char>
Mister <char>
Sieur <char>
P'tite <char>
Miss <char>
Dame <char>
German Mini-<char>
Monsieur <char>
Lord <char>
Mini-<char>
Madame <char>
Lady <char>
Italian Super <char>
Mr. <char>
Magico <char>
Super <char>
Lady <char>
Magica <char>
Spanish Peque <char>
Super-<char>
Mr. <char>
Peque <char>
Super-<char>
Lady <char>
Korean <char>군 <char>-gun
<char>돌이 <char>-dori
미스터 <char> Mister <char>
<char>양 <char>-yang
<char>순이 <char>-suni
스위트 <char> Sweet <char>

In the side series games

Pokémon Stadium series

In Pokémon Stadium and Pokémon Stadium 2, nicknamed Pokémon are sometimes colored differently to non-nicknamed Pokémon. This coloration is not the same as being a Shiny Pokémon. This feature has not been included in any later games.

In Pokémon Stadium, most NPC Trainers' Pokémon have nicknames. This may be to emphasize the color change effect in that game. Team Rocket's nicknamed Pokémon have numbers in their nicknames, despite it not being possible for the player to enter digits in nicknames in this generation.

In the spin-off games

Pokémon Channel

In Pokémon Channel, the player has the option to nickname his or her companion, Pikachu, once they become familiar enough with each other.

Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series

The exclusive nickname option for Shedinja

In the Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series, the player has the option to name the player and their partner at the beginning of the games, the latter of which defaults to their Pokémon. Later in-game the player and partner form a team which they name; this name cannot be changed in Red Rescue Team and Blue Rescue Team, but starting from Explorers of Time and Darkness can be changed at any time from the main menu.

Prior to Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon, the player can name any Pokémon that joins their team upon recruitment. In Explorers of Time, Darkness, and Sky and Gates to Infinity, they can also name a Pokémon when it evolves; this includes the player character and partner, but only if their name is exactly the same as their species name. In Red Rescue Team and Blue Rescue Team, the player and partner's names will automatically update upon evolution if their previous name was exactly the same as their species name. In both generations, Shedinja can be nicknamed at any time if its current name is "Shedinja", a property unique to it.

In Pokémon Super Mystery Dungeon, only the player and partner can be named. Their names can be changed at any time, along with their team name, from the main menu.

Other than the cases specifically mentioned, there is no way to change nicknames.

Pokémon GO

050Diglett.png This section is incomplete.
Please feel free to edit this section to add missing information and complete it.
Reason: are there any characters that Pokémon GO does not support?

Caught Pokémon can have a nickname assigned or changed on the Pokémon's summary screen by tapping its name. Nicknames can be up to twelve characters long. Nicknames are not visible to other players. Pokémon GO uses rich text entry, which allows bold tags (<b></b>) and italic tags (<i></i>) to be used; other tags supported by Unity's rich text system are too long to enclose any text.

All text entry uses the keyboard of the device the game is played on.

In the anime

Lillie's Vulpix, who is nicknamed Snowy

Main series

As in the games, nicknaming Pokémon is optional. It is very seldom that main characters have nicknamed their Pokémon, leaving nicknaming largely unique to characters of the day. Often, these characters possess more than one of a species of Pokémon, and nicknaming is to provide distinction, such as in Get Along, Little Pokémon. At other times, the nicknames help to drive the plot, like in Wherefore Art Thou, Pokémon.

The only main characters to possess a nicknamed Pokémon are Ash, Misty, James, Lillie, and Lana, who have a Mr. Mime called Mimey, a Luvdisc called Caserin, a Growlithe called Growlie, an Alolan Vulpix called Snowy, and an Eevee called Sandy, respectively. Ritchie, Marina, and Mairin also nickname their Pokémon.

Nicknamed Pokémon still say their species name as their cry in the anime instead of their nickname. For example, Sparky still says "Pikachu" and variants of it.

Ash's mother Delia was the one who gave Mimey its nickname. She also gave several of Ash's Alola Pokémon nicknames in Alolan Open House! and A Full Battle Bounty!.

A surfing Pikachu called Puka appeared in The Pi-Kahuna.

Liza, a recurring character, nicknamed her personal Charizard Charla.

In the Japanese version of The Joy of Water Pokémon, Nurse Joy's three Chansey are nicknamed Matsuko, Takeko and Umeko.

A baby Lugia nicknamed Silver was featured from The Mystery is History to A Promise is a Promise.

In Delcatty Got Your Tongue, Dr. Abby referred to her Delcatty as Johnny.

In Showdown At Linoone, Kimmy Shoney owned a Linoone that he nicknamed Tokin.

In Cooking Up a Sweet Story, Abigail had a Pikachu named Sugar who ran away, and returned as a Raichu.

In Cream of the Croagunk Crop!, two nicknamed Croagunk were featured, with Nurse Joy owning one named Chrissy, while a Trainer named Hamilton owned one named Craig.

In Enter Elesa, Electrifying Gym Leader!, Bianca's father had a Darmanitan named Red Flash Darmanitan.

Mairin, a recurring character who traveled with Alain in Pokémon the Series: XY Mega Evolution Specials, has a Chespin nicknamed Chespie. She has also nicknamed her Flabébé Bébé.

Bonnie, a travelling companion of Ash, nicknamed the Zygarde Core who traveled with the group for a while Squishy.

In Unlocking Some Respect!, Ed and Locke own the right and left part of a Binacle, which they called Righty and Lefty.

An Alolan Persian nicknamed Pershie appeared in ‪That's Why the Litten is a Scamp! and All They Want to Do is Dance Dance!, belonging to a Madame.

In Getting the Band Back Together!, DJ Leo has an Alolan Dugtrio, whose heads are nicknamed Jessica, Ashley, and Michael, respectively. However, the Pokémon itself is referred to as just Dugtrio.

In Rising from the Ruins!, Gladion was revealed to own a Type: Null, which was nicknamed Silvally.

In A Dream Encounter!, Lillie nicknamed the young Cosmog found by Ash Nebby.

In Why Not Give Me a Z-Ring Sometime?, Acerola has a Shiny Mimikyu nicknamed Mimikins. The same episode also featured a Gengar nicknamed the Greedy Rapooh. It befriended Acerola at the end of the episode and later joined her team.

In the original version of All They Want to Do is Dance Dance!, Anela has an Oricorio nicknamed Dori-chan (ドリちゃん). In the English dub, it is simply referred to as Oricorio.

In We Know Where You're Going, Eevee!, Lana nicknamed the Eevee she caught Sandy.

In Best Friend...Worst Nightmare!, Ren was revealed to have a Magnemite nicknamed Francois.

In Dreams Are Made of These!, Oliver owns a Meganium nicknamed Stanium.

In Sword and Shield, Slumbering Weald!, Doug owns a Centiskorch nicknamed Centy.

In Breaking the Ice!, Regina owns a Glaceon nicknamed Mirche.

In Out of Their Elements!, Harmony and Billy each own an Eevee, nicknamed Bernice and Toril, respectively. Harmony intended to evolve Bernice into Flareon, while Billy intended to evolve Toril into Jolteon, to match their respective type preferences. However, they ended up accidentally dropping their Evolution stones on each other's Pokémon, resulting in them evolving into different forms than their respective Trainers had planned.

In The Homecoming Crown!, Lillie's family caught a Shiny Nihilego nicknamed Lillie, which Gladion took under his care.

In Getting to the Heart of it All!, a Banette nicknamed Bay-Bay was trying to reunite with its owner from its time as a doll. Said owner eventually turned out to be Nurse Joy, and it became her assistant following their reunion.

In HZ002, Friede was revealed to own a Pikachu nicknamed Captain Pikachu.

Pokémon Origins

In File 1: Red, after Red chose Charmander as his starter Pokémon, Professor Oak told him he could nickname it if he wanted to. However, Red chose to leave Charmander without a nickname, although he did consider giving it the nickname Sepultura in the Japanese version.

In the novels

Pocket Monsters: The Animation

In Pocket Monsters: The Animation, it is implied at first that individual Pokémon are expected to have nicknames instead of being called by their own species, as Professor Oak says that humans are not called "Human". However, there are no known nicknamed Pokémon in the novels. Ash's Pikachu rejects all the nicknames suggested by Ash and prefers to be referred to as simply "Pikachu", and all other known Trainers such as Jessie, James, Bug Catcher, Misty, and Brock also refer to their Pokémon by their species names.

In the manga

Some Pokémon manga series use nicknames as a way to differentiate and individualize Pokémon characters.

Pokémon Adventures

At least two Pokédex holders in each region name their Pokémon. Quite often, the Trainer will nickname his or her Pokémon with a particular pattern, such as how Crystal ends most of her Pokémon's nicknames with the "ee" sound, and Gold ends most of his Pokémon's names with "bo". Several other characters nickname their Pokémon as well; for example, Brock's six Geodude are each named after a number, from "Geoone" to "Geosix".

Unlike in the games, nicknames of owned Pokémon can be changed when the owner of the Pokémon is changed. Examples of this include Mr. Stone's Castform being named Fofo by Ruby, Gurkinn's Gengar being named Garma by X, and Grace's Rhyhorn being named Rhyrhy by Y. Also, nicknames may be removed by the new Trainer, as Silver's Kingdra was nicknamed Tat-chan when she was under Green's ownership.

In other languages

Language Title
Chinese Cantonese 暱稱 Nīkchīng
Mandarin 暱稱/昵称 Nìchēng
Denmark Flag.png Danish Kælenavn
The Netherlands Flag.png Dutch Bijnaam
Finland Flag.png Finnish Lempinimi
France Flag.png French Surnom
Germany Flag.png German Spitzname
Italy Flag.png Italian Soprannome
South Korea Flag.png Korean 닉네임 Nickname
Poland Flag.png Polish Przezwisko
Portuguese Brazil Flag.png Brazil Apelido
Portugal Flag.png Portugal Alcunha
Spain Flag.png Spanish Mote
Sweden Flag.png Swedish Smeknamn
Vietnam Flag.png Vietnamese Biệt danh

See also


Pokémon training
CatchingNicknamingBattlingEvolvingTradingBreedingReleasing