Steel (type)

Revision as of 07:20, 12 March 2011 by Galladeon (talk | contribs) (→‎Trivia: faulty trivia with the english versions now out)
This article is about the in-game type. For the TCG type, see Metal (TCG).

Template:ElementalTypes The Steel type (Japanese: はがねタイプ Steel type) is one of the seventeen elemental types. Notable Trainers that specialize in the Steel type include Jasmine of Olivine City, Steven Stone, former Champion of Hoenn, and Byron, Gym Leader of Canalave City. Prior to Generation IV, where moves are designated physical or special based on the move itself rather than its type, all Steel-type moves were physical.

The Steel type was introduced in Generation II. As well as introducing new Pokémon with the Steel type, Magnemite and Magneton were retconned to be a dual-typed Electric/Steel Pokémon.

Statistical averages

Overall

Stat
HP: 63
Attack: 85
Defense: 121
Sp.Atk: 66
Sp.Def: 72
Speed: 53
Total: 0


Fully evolved

Stat
HP: 73.72
Attack: 90.61
Defense: 124.89
Sp.Atk: 83.39
Sp.Def: 94.22
Speed: 57.83
Total: 0


Battle properties

Offensive   Defensive
Power Types   Power Types
 
 
½×  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
½×  
 
 
 
 
 
 
None  


Characteristics

Defensively, Steel-types are considered to be the best type of Pokémon to use. They have resistances to 11 of the 17 types, which can make for a good physical and special tank in battle. They are immune to Template:Type2 attacks and are very tricky to inflict the Poison condition on. They can hold up to many attacks, because of their high Defense, but all 3 of the type's weaknesses are to the very common Fire, Fighting and Ground types. Those defensive flaws are made up by the fact that only a small number of Steel-types are without another type. Their Special Defense is lower than their physical Defense, but is still reasonably high.

Offensively, it is not recommended to use Steel-type moves, because there are only two types weak to Steel: Ice and Rock, both of which are rarely used defensively. There are only five pure Steel-type Pokémon and thus most have a second type able to provide more effective moves that could offset this disadvantage. Steel-type Pokémon have average Attack and Special Attack, though there are some high-powered outliers in either the Physical field, such as Metagross and Excadrill, and the Special field, such as Lucario, Empoleon and Magnezone.

When used in contests, Steel-type moves typically become Cool moves, but can also be of the other four Contest types.

Pokémon

As of Generation V, there are 38 Steel-type Pokémon or 5.86% of all Pokémon, making it the fourteenth most common elemental type.

Pure Steel-type Pokémon

# Name
303   Mawile
379   Registeel
599   Klink
600   Klang
601   Klinklang

Half Steel-type Pokémon

Primary Steel-type Pokémon

# Name Type 1 Type 2
208   Steelix Steel Ground
227   Skarmory Steel Flying
304   Aron Steel Rock
305   Lairon Steel Rock
306   Aggron Steel Rock
374   Beldum Steel Psychic
375   Metang Steel Psychic
376   Metagross Steel Psychic
385   Jirachi Steel Psychic
436   Bronzor Steel Psychic
437   Bronzong Steel Psychic
483   Dialga Steel Dragon
638   Cobalion Steel Fighting

Secondary Steel-type Pokémon

# Name Type 1 Type 2
081   Magnemite Electric Steel
082   Magneton Electric Steel
205   Forretress Bug Steel
212   Scizor Bug Steel
395   Empoleon Water Steel
410   Shieldon Rock Steel
411   Bastiodon Rock Steel
413   Wormadam* Bug Steel
448   Lucario Fighting Steel
462   Magnezone Electric Steel
476   Probopass Rock Steel
485   Heatran Fire Steel
530   Excadrill Ground Steel
589   Escavalier Bug Steel
597   Ferroseed Grass Steel
598   Ferrothorn Grass Steel
624   Pawniard Dark Steel
625   Bisharp Dark Steel
632   Durant Bug Steel
649   Genesect Bug Steel

Moves

Damage-dealing moves

Name Category Contest Power Accuracy PP Target Notes
Bullet Punch Physical Smart 40 100% 30 One foe Always attacks first.
Doom Desire Special Cool 140* 100%* 5 One foe Hits two turns after this move is used.
Flash Cannon Special Smart 80 100% 10 One foe Has a 10% chance of lowering the target's Special Defense.
Gear Grind Physical ??? 50 85% 15 One foe Hits twice.
Gyro Ball Physical Beauty Varies 100% 5 One foe Deals more damage the slower the user is compared to the target.
Heavy Slam Physical ??? Varies 100% 10 One foe Deals more damage the heavier the user is compared to the target.
Iron Head Physical Tough 80 100% 15 One foe Has a 30% chance of making target flinch
Iron Tail Physical Cool 100 75% 15 One foe Has a 30% chance of lowering target's Defense.
Magnet Bomb Physical Cool 60 —% 20 One foe Never misses.
Metal Burst Physical Beauty 100% 10 One foe Returns 150% the damage dealt by the foe's last attack.
Metal Claw Physical Cool 50 95% 35 One foe Has a 10% chance of raising user's Attack.
Meteor Mash Physical Cool 100 85% 10 One foe Has a 10% chance of raising user's Attack.
Mirror Shot Special Cute 65 85% 10 One foe Has a 30% chance of lowering target's accuracy.
Steel Wing Physical Cool 70 90% 25 One foe Has a 10% chance of raising user's Defense.

Non-damaging moves

Name Category Contest Accuracy PP Target Notes
Autotomize Status ??? 15 Raises user's Speed two levels.
Iron Defense Status Tough 15 Raises user's Defense two levels.
Metal Sound Status Smart 85% 40 One foe Lowers target's Special Defense two levels.
Shift Gear Status ??? 10 Raises user's Attack one level, and the user's Speed two levels.

Trivia

  • Out of all the types, Steel has the most resistances and the highest average Defense.
  • There were no 100% accurate Steel-type attacks until Generation IV.
  • Up until Pokémon Platinum, Weedle was completely unable to damage Steel-type Pokémon because the only damaging move it could learn was Poison Sting, and Steel-types are immune to Template:Type2 moves. From Platinum onwards, Weedle is able to learn Bug Bite via level-up, allowing it to do at least some damage (though Bug is still not very effective on most Steel-type Pokémon).
  • Because of Magnemite and Magneton's addition of their secondary Steel type in Generation II, there has been at least one Steel-type Pokémon introduced in each generation. Despite this, there is not a Steel-type move from each generation; Steel is the only type not assigned to a move introduced in Generation I. This is the opposite situation to the other type introduced in Generation II, Dark.
  • Though Steel-type moves deal super-effective damage against both Ice- and Template:Type2 Pokémon, there has not yet been a Pokémon of that type combination, and therefore, Steel-type moves cannot currently deal 4× damage.
  • All Steel-type moves consist of two words except for Automatize.
  • All offensive Steel-type moves target one foe.
  • Steel is the only type that has a non-neutral type matchup with all seventeen types, considering both offense and defense.
  • Each of the 3 starter types have a different effectiveness when attacking a Steel type Pokémon. Grass does ½× damage, Water does 1× damage, and Fire does 2× damage.
  • Generation V introduced the most Steel-types of any generation, with 12.
  • Every Steel-type specialist has used Skarmory in their final team.

In other languages

Language Title
  Japanese はがね (鋼) hagane
Mandarin Chinese gāng
  Dutch Staal
  Finnish Teräs
French   Canada Acier
  Europe Acier
  German Stahl
  Greek Μέταλλο - Metallo / Ατσάλι - Atsali
  Hebrew ברזל barzel
  Italian Acciaio
  Korean 강철 gangcheol
  Norwegian Stål
  Polish Stalowy
  Brazilian Portuguese Aço Steel / Metal Metal / Metálico Metallic
  Russian Стальной stal'noy
Spanish   Latin America Acero
  Spain Acero