Treecko (EX Ruby & Sapphire 76)

Treecko  
キモリ Kimori
Grass
TreeckoEXRubySapphire76.jpg
EX Ruby & Sapphire print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Evolution stage Basic Pokémon
Card name Treecko
Type Grass
HP 40
weakness
Fire×2
resistance
Water-30
retreat cost
 
Expansion EX Ruby & Sapphire
Rarity Common
English card no. 76/109
Japanese Half Deck Treecko Constructed Starter Deck
Japanese card no. 003/019
English expansion Nintendo Black Star Promos
English card no. 003
Japanese expansion ADV-P Promotional cards
Japanese card no. 003/ADV-P
Expansion Nintendo Black Star Promos
English card no. 007
For more information on this Pokémon's species, see Treecko.

Treecko (Japanese: キモリ Kimori) is a Grass-type Basic Pokémon card. It was first released as part of the EX Ruby & Sapphire expansion.

Card text

  Tail Slap
しっぽでたたく
10
   Razor Leaf
はっぱカッター
20


e-Reader data

The EX Ruby & Sapphire print has the card ID G-03-#. The Dot Code strip contains Pokédex information, a TCG glossary snippet, and a brief area summary for Pokémon Ruby and Sapphire.

Pokédex data

Treecko - Wood Gecko Pokémon
No. Height Weight
001 1'08" (0.5 m) 11.0 lbs. (5.0 kg)
Pokédex entry
Treecko is cool, calm, and collected - it never panics under any situation. If a bigger foe were to glare at this Pokémon, it would glare right back without conceding an inch of ground.


Release information

This card was first released in Japan through a McDonald's promotional campaign running from January 17 to February 6, 2003, with artwork by Atsuko Nishida. This card was then reprinted in the Japanese Treecko Constructed Starter Deck, with new artwork by Ken Sugimori and included in the EX Ruby & Sapphire expansion in English. The card with artwork by Atsuko Nishida was then released as one of the Nintendo Black Star Promos in English through Pokemon League events in October 2003. The Holofoil version found in the Treecko Constructed Starter Deck with artwork by Ken Sugimori was reprinted in English as another one of the Nintendo Black Star Promos and was awarded at sanctioned European POP tournaments in June and July 2004, and then at U.S. POP tournaments in August 2004. This print features an embossed Pokémon Organized Play logo (Poké Ball) in the bottom right of the illustration.

German, Italian and French localized language versions exist for both of the Nintendo Black Star Promos. The #007 card with artwork by Ken Sugimori was awarded to winners of sanctioned POP tournaments in France, Belgium, Germany, and Italy in the summer of 2004. These cards lacked the large e-Series border and had a 2004 copyright date.

During the Sword & Shield Series, a Jumbo version of the EX Ruby & Sapphire print was one of three cards available in copies of the Hoenn First Partner Pack, released on August 6, 2021 to commemorate the 25th Anniversary of the Pokémon franchise. This print features a foil Pokémon 25th Anniversary logo in the bottom right corner of the illustration window.

Gallery

EX Ruby & Sapphire print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Nintendo Black Star Promo print
Illus. Atsuko Nishida
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori
Diamond & Pearl print
Illus. Ken Sugimori


Trivia

Origin

Tail Slap is a move later introduced in the Generation V Pokémon games that Treecko cannot learn; however, the Japanese names are not the same, making this attack and the move unrelated. Razor Leaf is a move in the Pokémon games, though Treecko cannot learn it. This card's e-Reader Pokédex entry comes from Pokémon Sapphire.


  This article is part of Project TCG, a Bulbapedia project that aims to report on every aspect of the Pokémon Trading Card Game.