Pokémon Red and Blue/Celadon City: Difference between revisions

From StrategyWiki, the video game walkthrough and strategy guide wiki
Line 328: Line 328:
|-
|-
| [[Image:Pokemon 135Jolteon.png|left]]The Thunderstone creates Jolteon, one of the game's fastest Pokemon. Jolteon's impressive Special and awesome critical hit rate (thanks to its Speed) make its Electric-attacks truly terrifying. Make sure you saved the Thunderbolt TM if you plan on using it. It has a few interesting coverage moves like Double-Kick and Pin Missle, but its Attack is so pitiful... just stick to blasting things with Thunderbolt.
| [[Image:Pokemon 135Jolteon.png|left]]The Thunderstone creates Jolteon, one of the game's fastest Pokemon. Jolteon's impressive Special and awesome critical hit rate (thanks to its Speed) make its Electric-attacks truly terrifying. Make sure you saved the Thunderbolt TM if you plan on using it. It has a few interesting coverage moves like Double-Kick and Pin Missle, but its Attack is so pitiful... just stick to blasting things with Thunderbolt.
| [[Image:Pokemon 136Flareon.png|right]]Flareon is the red-headed step child of the Eevee evolutions, ever disowned by Gamefreak. Flareon comes with an incredible Attack stat, but all it can use it with are Normal-type attacks, and without STAB it only hits about as hard as Raticate or Pidgeot. Meanwhile, on the special side, it only gets the very weak Ember, and no better Fire-type moves until much later in the game. Defensively, poor overall bulk and low Speed gives it real problems both against strong opponents and over long routes. By the time it learns Fire Blast or Flamethrower, there is almost opponents Fire is good against. Unless you need the Pokedex entry or just feel sorry for it, you're best off passing up on Flareon.
| [[Image:Pokemon 136Flareon.png|right]]Flareon is the red-headed step child of the Eevee evolutions, ever disowned by Gamefreak. Flareon comes with an incredible Attack stat, but all it can use it with are Normal-type attacks, and without STAB it only hits about as hard as Raticate or Pidgeot. Meanwhile, on the special side, it only gets the very weak Ember, and no better Fire-type moves until much later in the game. Defensively, poor overall bulk and low Speed gives it real problems both against strong opponents and over long routes. By the time it learns Fire Blast or Flamethrower, there are almost no opponents Fire is good against. Unless you need the Pokedex entry or just feel sorry for it, you're best off passing up on Flareon.
|-
|-
! style="background-color:#c080ff;color:#ffffff;" | #137 Porygon
! style="background-color:#c080ff;color:#ffffff;" | #137 Porygon
Anonymous user