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Artwork from FR/LG
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Height
21'04" Imperial
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6.5 m Metric
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21'04"/6.5 m Red-Striped
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0'0"/0.0 m Blue-Striped
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0'0"/0.0 m
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Weight
518.1 lbs. Imperial
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235.0 kg Metric
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518.1 lbs./235.0 kg Red-Striped
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0.0 lbs./0.0 kg Blue-Striped
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0.0 lbs./0.0 kg
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EV yield
HP 0
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Atk 2
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Def 0
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Sp.Atk 0
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Sp.Def 0
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Speed 0
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Base Exp.: 214
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Battle Exp.: 2141*
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Gyarados (Japanese: ギャラドス Gyarados) is a dual-type Water/Flying Pokémon.
It evolves from Magikarp starting at level 20.
Biology
Physiology
Gyarados is a large dragon Pokémon most similar in appearance to those seen in Chinese mythology. Its serpentine body is largely blue, but its underbelly is yellow. It has four white fins down its back. Its mouth is very large and gaping, but bears some resemblance to that of its pre-evolution Magikarp. Like Magikarp, it has barbels on its face. Its pectoral and dorsal fins also resemble Magikarp's. Gyarados is only rarely shown with its mouth closed.
Gender differences
A female has white barbels.
Special abilities
Gyarados, like most dragon-like Pokémon, has a high Attack stat, causing it to rely more on physical attacks than special ones. It is one of the few Template:Type2s able to wield both fire and electric attacks.
Behavior
This Pokémon bears little resemblance to its docile pre-evolution. Gyarados is infamously known for its fierce temper and wanton destructive tendencies. Once it has worked itself into a frenzy, it will not calm until everything around it is destroyed—this tendency is attributed to the dramatic structural changes its brain undergoes during evolution. It seems attracted to violence, although this Pokémon is very rarely seen in the wild. During times of human conflict Gyarados are said to appear, burning entire cities down to the ground.
Habitat
Gyarados usually live in large bodies of water, such as lakes and ponds or even seas and oceans. The Lake of Rage is a known nesting area for a red Gyarados.
Diet
- Main article: Pokémon food
In the anime
Gyarados had a cameo appearance in Pokémon - I Choose You! It was then seen in Pokémon Shipwreck. James was frustrated with his Magikarp and kicked it into the water. That Magikarp evolved into a Gyarados.
Groups of Gyarados were seen from within a submarine disguised as or styled after a Gyarados by Jessie, James and Meowth in The Pi-Kahuna shortly before the onset of a massive, annual tidal wave celebrated by local surfers who were apparently not aware of the annual migration. According to James, the Gyarados gathered each year in this location to lay their eggs.
In Mewtwo Strikes Back, a Gyarados owned by Fergus was one of the Pokémon that were captured and cloned by Mewtwo. Fergus attacked Mewtwo with Gyarados' Hyper Beam but Mewtwo turned the attack back on itself, knocking the Gyarados out. The Gyarados clone is seen again in Mewtwo Returns.
A Gyarados appeared in Poké Ball Peril.
Nurse Joy had befriended a giant Magikarp that later evolved into Gyarados in The Joy of Pokémon. Despite Magikarp being giant, it was regular sized as a Gyarados.
The Magikarp that Dr. Quackenpoker had been observing evolved into Gyarados in The Wacky Watcher!.
Trinity used a Gyarados in her battle against Misty in the Whirl Cup in The Perfect Match!.
Talkin' 'Bout an Evolution and Rage Of Innocence focused on a red Gyarados. It was on a destructive rampage until Lance captured it. This Gyarados appeared again in Gaining Groudon and The Scuffle of Legends to stop the feuding of Groudon and Kyogre.
Misty obtained a Gyarados after passing the PIA test in Cerulean Blues.
A Gyarados appeared in Sandshrew's Locker!.
A Gyarados was used in A Crasher Course in Power!, under the ownership of Crasher Wake.
A Gyarados is used by one of the students of Pokémon Summer Academy in the second leg of the Pokémon Triathlon in One Team, Two Team, Red Team, Blue Team!.
Pokédex entries
Episode
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Pokémon
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Source
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Entry
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EP016
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Gyarados
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Ash's Pokédex
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Gyarados. This Pokémon has a vicious temperment, so use extreme caution. Its fangs can crush stones and its scales are harder than steel.
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In the manga
Pokémon Special
Gyarados debuts in the Red, Green & Blue chapter in its own round, Gyarados Splashes In!. Here, an enraged one attacks its own trainer, Misty, but is recaught by Red, who supposedly returns it to her. The drastic change in attitude of the Pokémon was the result of a Team Rocket experiment as is shown in Raging Rhydon.
Later on, Misty traded this Gyarados to Red in exchange for Red's Krabby.
Gyarados is later seen with Lance, using its BubbleBeam to shield him from the lava of Mt. Cerise.
A Red Gyarados was seen in the Lake of Rage 3 years later, but it was caught by Silver. It had the ability to control the other Gyarados in the lake.
When Red borrows Green's Charizard to travel to Mt. Silver, he temporarily trades his Gyarados to Green. It later appears as one of Green's Pokémon in Template:PSV, used against Entei, and later part of his revealed team during the Gym Leader faceoff. Prior to the FireRed and LeafGreen saga, Green returns Gyarados to Red.
Both Gyarados have remained on their Trainer's teams to this day.
In the TCG
- Main article: Gyarados (TCG)
Game data
In Pokémon Diamond, Pearl, and Platinum, a red Gyarados is featured on the TV on a program called "Search for the Red Gyarados". It is this that inspires Lucas or Dawn and their rival to go to Lake Verity, to see if there is a rare Pokémon dwelling in it.
NPC appearances
Pokédex entries
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation I.
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Generation I
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Red
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Rarely seen in the wild. Huge and vicious, it is capable of destroying entire cities in a rage.
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Blue
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Yellow
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Brutally vicious and enormously destructive. Known for totally destroying cities in ancient times.
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Stadium
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Extremely vicious and horribly brutal. Has enough destructive power to totally annihilate even a major city.
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Generation II
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Gold
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They say that during past wars, Gyarados would appear and leave blazing ruins in its wake.
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Silver
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Once it appears, it goes on a rampage. It remains enraged until it demolishes everything around it.
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Crystal
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It appears whenever there is world conflict, burning down any place it travels through.
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Stadium 2
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They say that during the past wars, Gyarados would appear and leave blazing ruins in its wake.
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Generation III
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Ruby
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When Magikarp evolves into Gyarados, its brain cells undergo a structural transformation. It is said that this transformation is to blame for this Pokémon's wildly violent nature.
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Sapphire
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Once Gyarados goes on a rampage, its ferociously violent blood doesn't calm until it has burned everything down. There are records of this Pokémon's rampages lasting a whole month.
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Emerald
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It is an extremely vicious and violent Pokémon. When humans begin to fight, it will appear and burn everything to the ground with intensely hot flames.
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FireRed
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It has an extremely aggressive nature. The Hyper Beam it shoots from its mouth totally incinerates all targets.
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LeafGreen
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Rarely seen in the wild. Huge and vicious, it is capable of destroying entire cities in a rage.
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Generation IV
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Diamond
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Once it appears, its rage never settles until it has razed the fields and mountains around it.
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Pearl
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In ancient literature, there is a record of a Gyarados that razed a village when violence flared.
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Platinum
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Once it begins to rampage, a Gyarados will burn everything down, even in a harsh storm.
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HeartGold
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{{{heartgolddex}}}
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SoulSilver
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{{{soulsilverdex}}}
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Game locations
This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation I.
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In side games
Base stats
Stat
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Range
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At Lv. 50
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At Lv. 100
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95
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155 - 202
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300 - 394
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125
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117 - 194
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229 - 383
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79
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75 - 144
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146 - 282
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60
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58 - 123
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112 - 240
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100
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94 - 167
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184 - 328
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81
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77 - 146
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150 - 287
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Total: 540
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Other Pokémon with this total
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- 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.
- This Pokémon's Special base stat in Generation I was 100.
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Type effectiveness
Under normal battle conditions in Generation V, this Pokémon is:
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Learnset
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| style="text-align:left" | water
| style="background:#81B9EF" | flying
| style=" background:#FFF" | 4
| style=" background:#FFF" | 1
| style=" background:#FFF" | Gyarados
| style="display:none; background:#FFF" | {{{6}}}
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By breeding
None.
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|- style="background:#74ACF5"
| colspan="13" | Bold indicates a move that gets STAB
Italic indicates a move that gets STAB only from an Evolution of this Pokémon
A colored initial indicates that the move is not available to be tutored in this game,
while a colored background indicates that the move is available.
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TCG-only Moves
Side game data
Template:Side game
Evolution
Template:Evobox/1
Sprites
Trivia
- According to some Nintendo of America artwork, Gyarados was originally slated to have the English name Skullkraken, a combination of the words "skull" and "kraken" (a mythological sea monster). This wouldn't have worked in the games though because the game only allows a maximum of 10 letters in a Pokémon's name.
- Oddly, despite being part Template:Type2, it does not have wings and the only Flying-type move it can learn is Bounce, which it can only learn from a move tutor in Pokémon Platinum. However, it has been seen flying in the anime.
- In Generation II, it became the only 100%-certain Template:Shiny2 encounter and the first of only two Template:Shiny2 Pokémon to be integrated into a game's plot (the second was Celebi in Pokémon Mystery Dungeon 2).
- It is said in Pokémon Shipwreck that Gyarados's skin is harder than steel, yet in Talking A Good Game!, Gyarados was angry because it had a twig penetrating through its skin.
- Gyarados has minor differences between all of its Template:Shiny2 sprites, making it slightly unique to each game. In Gold and Silver, Gyarados's shiny sprite is gold and red, in Ruby and Sapphire, its sprites have a pink hue to them. In FireRed and LeafGreen, its sprites appear more orange. Lastly, in Diamond and Pearl, the sprite loses most of its gold and becomes a standard red color. Why there have been so many changes is unknown.
- On a side note, Gyarados's normal colors during Gold and Silver showed it being darker hue of blue than previously displayed. This was corrected in Pokémon Crystal.
- In the Pokémon anime, Gyarados's eyes are violet instead of the red that appears in its sprites and official artwork.
- Gyarados is one of ten non-Bug, Template:Type2 Pokémon that cannot learn Fly.
- In Pokémon Mystery Dungeon 2, Gyarados is the only non-legendary boss Pokémon to speak entirely in capital letters.
- In the anime episode Sandshrew's Locker!, Gyarados has the same cry as Dialga.
- None of its in-game sprites shows it with its mouth closed. It shares this trait with Magikarp, its pre-evolution, up until Platinum.
Origin
It appears to be based on a sea dragon or sea serpent. Gyarados is partially based on a legend about how carp that leapt over the Dragon Gate would become dragons. Several waterfalls and cataracts in China are believed to be the location of the Dragon Gate. This legend is an allegory of the drive and efforts needed to overcome obstacles (which can be tied to the fact that Gyarados' pre-evolution, Magikarp, could possibly take a lot of drive and effort to legitimately evolve into Gyarados). Alternatively it's size and power may be based on the Norse world serpentJormungundr, which was supposedly the same size as magikarp when it was born, but quickly grew large enough to wrap itself around the world with it's tail in it's mouth.
Name origin
Gyarados's name may be derived from a combination of 虐殺 gyakusatsu massacre/slaughter, and 逆境 gyakkyō, hardship/adversity. Both words relate to the creature's violent nature and the hardship it experienced before evolving. The dos may just indicate that it's the second in its evolutionary line. Alternatively, the end of Gyarados' name, ドス dosu, is a Japanese onomatopeic word representing the piercing of flesh, once again owing to Gyarados' violent nature.
In other languages
Related articles
External links
Notes
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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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