Outrage (move)
Outrage げきりん Imperial Rage | ||||||||||||
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Availability
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Outrage (Japanese: げきりん Imperial Rage) is a damage-dealing Dragon-type move introduced in Generation II. Prior to Generation III, it was the signature move of the Dratini evolutionary line.
Effect
Generation II
Outrage inflicts damage for 2-3 turns, has a base power of 90, and 20 PP. PP is deducted only on the turn Outrage is first called. While the user is using Outrage, it cannot use any other move. After Outrage is finished, the user becomes confused.
If the Outrage duration is disrupted (such as by full paralysis or hurting itself due to confusion), it will immediately end. The user will only become confused if Outrage is fully executed, without its duration being disrupted. Sleep, freeze, partial trapping, and flinching will pause but not disrupt the duration of Outrage.
Generation III
A message is now displayed when the user becomes confused due to fatigue.
In battles with multiple opponents, the user selects itself as the target, but hits an adjacent opponent that is selected at random upon each use of the move.
Generation IV
The base power of Outrage has been increased to 120.
Generation V
Outrage's PP was reduced to 10 and it is disrupted if it is not successful due to missing, sleeping, paralysis, freeze, flinching, a Protecting target, or Wonder Guard immunity. If a disruption occurs on what would have been the final, confusion-inducing turn of Outrage, the user will always become confused.
Generation VI
Outrage will now also be disrupted if used on Fairy-type Pokémon, which are immune to it.
Description
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Learnset
By leveling up
# | Pokémon | Type | Level | |||||||||||
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II | III | IV | V | VI | ||||||||||
058 | Growlithe | Fire | 43 | 43 | ||||||||||
115 | Kangaskhan | Normal | 37 | 46 | 46 | |||||||||
147 | Dratini | Dragon | 50 | 50 | 51 | 55 | 55 | |||||||
148 | Dragonair | Dragon | 56 | 56 | 61 | 67 | 67 | |||||||
149 | Dragonite | Dragon | Flying | 61 | 61 | 64 | 67 | 67 | ||||||
210 | Granbull | Fairy | 67 | 1, 67 | ||||||||||
384 | Rayquaza | Dragon | Flying | 65 | 80 | 50 | 50 | 50 80 | ||||||
553 | Krookodile | Ground | Dark | 60 | 1, 60 | |||||||||
610 | Axew | Dragon | 56 | 56 | ||||||||||
611 | Fraxure | Dragon | 60 | 60 | ||||||||||
612 | Haxorus | Dragon | 66 | 1, 66 | ||||||||||
621 | Druddigon | Dragon | 62 | 62 | ||||||||||
633 | Deino | Dark | Dragon | 62 | 62 | |||||||||
634 | Zweilous | Dark | Dragon | 71 | 71 | |||||||||
635 | Hydreigon | Dark | Dragon | 79 | 1, 79 | |||||||||
643 | Reshiram | Dragon | Fire | 85 | 85 | |||||||||
644 | Zekrom | Dragon | Electric | 85 | 85 | |||||||||
645 | Landorus | Ground | Flying | 85 | 1, 85 | |||||||||
646 | Kyurem | Dragon | Ice | 85 | 85 | |||||||||
706 | Goodra | Dragon | 1, 63 | |||||||||||
716 | Xerneas | Fairy | 93 | |||||||||||
718 | Zygarde | Dragon | Ground | 93 | ||||||||||
Bold indicates a Pokémon gains STAB from this move. Italics indicates a Pokémon whose evolution or alternate form receives STAB from this move. A dash (−) indicates a Pokémon cannot learn the move by the designated method. An empty cell indicates a Pokémon that is unavailable in that game/generation. |
By breeding
# | Pokémon | Type | Father | |||||||||||
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II | III | IV | V | VI | ||||||||||
004 | Charmander | Fire | ||||||||||||
116 | Horsea | Water | ||||||||||||
246 | Larvitar* | Rock | Ground | |||||||||||
443 | Gible | Dragon | Ground | |||||||||||
714 | Noibat* | Flying | Dragon | |||||||||||
Bold indicates a Pokémon gains STAB from this move. Italics indicates a Pokémon whose evolution or alternate form receives STAB from this move. A dash (−) indicates a Pokémon cannot learn the move by the designated method. An empty cell indicates a Pokémon that is unavailable in that game/generation. |
By Move Tutor
Special move
Generation V
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By event
Generation IV
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Generation V
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In other games
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon series
The user will attack randomly one tile ratio away, the user will then become confused after pulling off the move.
Pokémon Conquest
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Stars: ★★★★
Power: 41
Accuracy: 100%
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Effect: Attacks each target two to three times. The user's Range drops to an unimprovable 0 for the next turn. This effect does not apply if the move rank is +S or if the move misses all targets. If the move misses any target, the multi-strike move will cease. |
Users: |
Orange squares indicate spaces that are hit.
Red squares indicate the knockback on hit Pokémon.
A blue square indicates the user's position after performing the move.
Description
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In the anime
The user rampages and attacks endlessly, then becomes confused. | |||
Pokémon | Method | ||
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User | First Used In | Notes | |
Dragonite becomes extremely enraged and goes on a rampage, or Dragonite's body becomes outlined in a red aura and goes on a rampage. The aura wears off when Dragonite is calmed. | |||
Gym Leader's Dragonite | Great Bowls of Fire! | Debut | |
Axew's eyes glow red and its body becomes outlined in a red aura as well. It then jumps up and continuously punches and kicks the opponent. After the attack is over, the aura disappears, but Axew's eyes continue to glow red, showing that it is confused. | |||
Iris's Axew | Club Battle Finale: A Heroes Outcome! | None | |
Druddigon's eyes glow red and its body is outlined in a red aura. It then goes on a rampage and once it is calmed down, the red outline and glow disappear. | |||
Clair's Druddigon | A Pokémon of a Different Color! | None | |
Gyarados's eyes glow red and its body is outlined in a red aura. It then goes on a rampage and once it is calmed down, the red outline and glow disappear. | |||
A wild Gyarados | SS027 | None |
In the manga
In the Ash & Pikachu manga
The user goes on a rampage. | |||
Pokémon | Method | ||
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User | First Chapter Used In | Notes | |
Dragonite goes on an uncontrollable rampage, attacking everything in sight. | |||
A wild Dragonite | The Dragonite's Imperial Wrath | Debut |
In the Pokémon Adventures manga
This article is incomplete. Please feel free to edit this article to add missing information and complete it. Reason: Description and image of X's Kangaskhan using this move |
The user fires a powerful blast of energy at the opponent. | |||
Pokémon | Method | ||
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User | First Chapter Used In | Notes | |
Dragonair fires a blast of energy from its head at the opponent. | |||
Clair's Dragonair | The Last Battle II | Debut | |
X's Kanga and Li'l Kanga | X & Y chapter | None |
In the Pokémon Diamond and Pearl Adventure! manga
The user rams at the opponent. The user is then confused. | |||
Pokémon | Method | ||
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User | First Chapter Used In | Notes | |
Kangaskhan glows with rage and slams at the opponent. Kangaskhan then goes berserk and doesn't stop until later. | |||
Mars's Kangaskhan | Deoxys, The Phantom Pokémon (Part 1) | Debut |
In other generations
Trivia
- The Japanese name of Outrage, げきりん (逆鱗) Gekirin, can be translated to mean imperial wrath or the wrath of one's superior, and appears in the idiom 逆鱗に触れる gekirin ni fureru, which means to infuriate one's superior. The move's Dragon type is derived from the etymology of 逆鱗 gekirin (lit. reverse scale), as it usually refers to a dragon scale growing in the opposite direction, which will infuriate the dragon if touched.
In other languages
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Variations of the move Thrash | ||||
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This article is part of Project Moves and Abilities, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on two related aspects of the Pokémon games. |