From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
- This article is about the character from Pokémon Scarlet and Violet. For other uses, see Rika (disambiguation).
Rika (Japanese: チリ Chili) is a member of the Elite Four of the Paldea region. She specializes in Ground-type Pokémon.
In the core series games
Rika is one of the Paldea Elite Four, working under Geeta, and has a laid-back, tomboyish personality. She calls the player "kiddo" as a nickname. Aside from her duties in the Elite Four, she also serves as the receptionist for the Pokémon League, interviewing the player during the first part of the Champion Assessment. She is the first of the Elite Four to be faced. Later, after the player becomes a Champion, she observes their battle against Nemona in Mesagoza.
The player must answer the interview questions correctly in the Champion Assessment in order to be able to challenge the Elite Four. Any incorrect answer results in the player being kicked out immediately, and the player must restart the interview from the beginning.
Pokémon
Champion Assessment
Rika will Terastallize her Clodsire at the first opportunity.
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Reward: $12,296
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Quotes
- Main article: Rika/Quotes
Gallery
Artwork
In the TCG
- Main article: Rika (Raging Surf 60)
Rika was introduced as a Supporter card in the Pokémon Trading Card Game during the English Scarlet & Violet Series (the Japanese Scarlet & Violet Era). It was first released in the Japanese Raging Surf subset, with artwork by GIDORA. An ultra rare version with artwork by the same illustrator, and a special illustration rare version of the card with artwork by kantaro were released in the same set. It allows players to look at the top 4 cards of their deck, put 2 of them into their hand, and then shuffle the other 2 and put them on the bottom of their deck.
Trivia
- Rika's Japanese name is the same as Chili's English name.
- Rika is the only member of the Paldea Elite Four who does not have at least one Pokémon with Flying-type characteristics.
- In Japanese, Rika speaks in the Kansai dialect, and refers to herself in third-person.
Names
Language
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Name
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Origin
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Japanese
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チリ Chili
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From chili and 地 chi (ground)
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English
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Rika
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From paprika
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German
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Cay
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From Cayenne
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Spanish
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Cayena
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From pimienta de Cayena (Cayenne pepper)
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French
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Cayenn
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From piment de Cayenne (Cayenne pepper)
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Italian
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Capsi
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From the genus Capsicum
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Korean
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칠리 Chilli
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From her Japanese name
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Chinese (Mandarin)
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辛俐 Xīnlì
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From 辛 xīn / sān (spicy) and the transcription of her Japanese name
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Chinese (Cantonese)
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辛俐 Sānleih
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Indonesian
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Muna
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From a partial backward spelling of Capsicum annuum (scientific name of chili pepper)
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See also
References