Poison (type): Difference between revisions

From Bulbapedia, the community-driven Pokémon encyclopedia.
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 650: Line 650:


==Trivia==
==Trivia==
*All damage dealing Poison-type moves have a secondary effect; for all except {{m|Acid}}, {{m|Venom Shock}}, {{m|Acid Bomb}} and {{m|Clear Smog}}, this side effect is to poison the opponent.
*All damage dealing Poison-type moves have a secondary effect; the side effect for all except {{m|Acid}}, {{m|Venom Shock}}, {{m|Acid Bomb}} and {{m|Clear Smog}} is to poison the opponent.
*With the exception of {{p|Arceus}} holding a {{DL|Plate|Toxic Plate}}, there has yet to be a Poison-type [[legendary Pokémon]].  As of Generation V, The Poison type is the only type that remains to have a Legendary Pokémon of its type in existence.
*With the exception of {{p|Arceus}} holding a {{DL|Plate|Toxic Plate}}, there has yet to be a Poison-type [[legendary Pokémon]].  As of Generation V, The Poison type is the only type that remains to have a Legendary Pokémon of its type in existence.
*Poison is one of three types that can never be doubly [[Damage modification#Super effective|super effective]] against any Pokémon because it is only super effective against one type, the {{type2|Grass}}. It shares this trait with the {{type2|Dragon}}, which is only effective against itself, and the {{type2|Normal}}, which isn't super effective against anything.
*Poison is one of three types that can never be doubly [[Damage modification#Super effective|super effective]] against any Pokémon because it is only super effective against one type, the {{type2|Grass}}. It shares this trait with the {{type2|Dragon}}, which is only effective against itself, and the {{type2|Normal}}, which isn't super effective against anything.

Revision as of 17:30, 7 October 2010

Template:ElementalTypes Template:TypeNotice Notable Trainers that specialize in Poison-type Pokémon include Koga, Aya and Janine of Fuchsia City, It should be noted that all of these trainers are related. Some villainous teams, such as Team Rocket, also frequently use Poison-type Pokémon.

Statistical averages

Overall

Stat
HP: 62
Attack: 68
Defense: 60
Sp.Atk: 68
Sp.Def: 65
Speed: 62
Total: 0


Fully evolved

Stat
HP: 76
Attack: 84
Defense: 74
Sp.Atk: 80
Sp.Def: 79
Speed: 78
Total: 0


Battle properties

Generation I

Offensive Poison Defensive
Power Types   Power Types
Bug
Grass
½× Fighting
Grass
Poison
½× Ghost
Ground
Poison
Rock
Bug
Ground
Psychic
None None


Generation II-onward

Offensive Poison Defensive
Power Types   Power Types
Grass ½× Bug
Fighting
Poison
Grass
½× Ghost
Ground
Poison
Rock
Ground
Psychic
Steel None


Characteristics

When used defensively, the Poison type is considered one of the best in the game. This is because of its ability to block or cause status ailments and resist common moves. Its obvious weakness, Earthquake, can be mitigated by the variety of dual-typed Grass and Bug/Poison Pokémon, as well as the Zubat family's Flying type and the Gastly and Koffing families' Levitate. Additionally, the Poison type resists itself, Bug, Fighting, and Grass, giving it resistances to common moves such as Grass Knot, X-Scissor, and Close Combat. Moreover, Poison-types tend to hold potent status and support moves, such as Haze, Toxic Spikes, and Toxic. Immune to Poison and Toxic Spikes themselves, they have an opportunity to absorb status effects as well. Koga's words of "confusion, sleep, poison" describe the Poison type very well.

Offensively, Poison moves are only suggested for inflicting the Poison condition, STAB or using support moves. Its only strength, which is against the Grass-type is largely mitigated by the variety of Grass/Poison Pokémon as well as Torterra's Ground and the Lileep and Cradily's Rock. Ice, Fire and Flying are much more useful in countering the Grass-type. Also, Poison moves are not very effective on Poison, Rock, Ghost, Ground, and completely ineffective against Steel. Hence, resistances to Poison are far more common than weaknesses to it. Poison moves are better off used for longer battles than they are for attempting to defeat an opponent with one blow.

When used in contests, Poison-type moves typically become Smart moves, but can also be of the other four Contest types, excluding Cute.

Pokémon

In total, there are 57 Pokémon within the Poison type.

Pure Poison-type Pokémon

# Name
023 Ekans Ekans
024 Arbok Arbok
029 Nidoran♀ Nidoran♀
030 Nidorina Nidorina
032 Nidoran♂ Nidoran♂
033 Nidorino Nidorino
088 Grimer Grimer
089 Muk Muk
109 Koffing Koffing
110 Weezing Weezing
316 Gulpin Gulpin
317 Swalot Swalot
336 Seviper Seviper
568 Yabukuron Yabukuron
569 Dasutodasu Dasutodasu

Half Poison-type Pokémon

Primary Poison-type Pokémon

# Name Type 1 Type 2
031 Nidoqueen Nidoqueen Poison Ground
034 Nidoking Nidoking Poison Ground
041 Zubat Zubat Poison Flying
042 Golbat Golbat Poison Flying
169 Crobat Crobat Poison Flying
434 Stunky Stunky Poison Dark
435 Skuntank Skuntank Poison Dark
451 Skorupi Skorupi Poison Bug
452 Drapion Drapion Poison Dark
453 Croagunk Croagunk Poison Fighting
454 Toxicroak Toxicroak Poison Fighting

Secondary Poison-type Pokémon

# Name Type 1 Type 2
001 Bulbasaur Bulbasaur Grass Poison
002 Ivysaur Ivysaur Grass Poison
003 Venusaur Venusaur Grass Poison
013 Weedle Weedle Bug Poison
014 Kakuna Kakuna Bug Poison
015 Beedrill Beedrill Bug Poison
043 Oddish Oddish Grass Poison
044 Gloom Gloom Grass Poison
045 Vileplume Vileplume Grass Poison
048 Venonat Venonat Bug Poison
049 Venomoth Venomoth Bug Poison
069 Bellsprout Bellsprout Grass Poison
070 Weepinbell Weepinbell Grass Poison
071 Victreebel Victreebel Grass Poison
072 Tentacool Tentacool Water Poison
073 Tentacruel Tentacruel Water Poison
092 Gastly Gastly Ghost Poison
093 Haunter Haunter Ghost Poison
094 Gengar Gengar Ghost Poison
167 Spinarak Spinarak Bug Poison
168 Ariados Ariados Bug Poison
211 Qwilfish Qwilfish Water Poison
269 Dustox Dustox Bug Poison
315 Roselia Roselia Grass Poison
406 Budew Budew Grass Poison
407 Roserade Roserade Grass Poison
543 Fushide Fushide Bug Poison
544 Hoiiga Hoiiga Bug Poison
545 Pendora Pendora Bug Poison
590 Tamagetake Tamagetake Grass Poison
591 Morobareru Morobareru Grass Poison

Moves

Damage-dealing moves

Name Category Contest Power Accuracy PP Target Notes
Acid Special Smart 40 100% 30 Both foes Has a 10% chance of lowering opponents' Special Defense.
Acid Bomb Special ??? 40 100% 20 One foe Lowers the target's Special Defense.
Clear Smog Special ??? 50 —% 15 One foe Resets stat changes on target Pokémon.
Cross Poison Physical Cool 70 100% 20 One target Has a high critical hit ratio and a 10% chance of poisoning the target.
Gunk Shot Physical Cool 120 70% 5 One target Has a 30% chance of poisoning the target.
Poison Fang Physical Smart 50 100% 15 One target Has a 30% chance of badly poisoning the target.
Poison Jab Physical Smart 80 100% 20 One target Has a 30% chance of poisoning the target.
Poison Sting Physical Smart 15 100% 35 One target Has a 20% chance of poisoning the target.
Poison Tail Physical Smart 50 100% 25 One target Has a high critical hit ratio and a 10% chance of poisoning the target.
Slime Wave Special ??? 95 100% 10 One target Has a 10% chance of poisoning the target.
Sludge Special Tough 65 100% 20 One target Has a 30% chance of poisoning the target.
Sludge Bomb Special Tough 90 100% 10 One target Has a 30% chance of poisoning the target.
Smog Special Tough 20 70% 20 One target Has a 40% chance of poisoning the target.
Venom Shock Special ??? 65 100% 10 One target Deals double damage if the target is poisoned.

Non-damaging moves

Name Category Contest Power Accuracy PP Target Notes
Acid Armor Status Tough —% 40 User Increases the user's Defense by 2 stages.
Gastro Acid Status Beauty 100% 10 One target Cancels the foe's ability.
Poison Gas Status Smart 85% * 40 One target Poisons the target.
PoisonPowder Status Smart 75% 35 One target Poisons the target.
Coil Around Status ??? —% 20 User Raises the user's Attack, Defense, and Accuracy one level each.
Toxic Status Smart 90% * 10 One target Badly poisons the target. Its poison damage worsens every turn.
Toxic Spikes Status Smart —% 20 Both foes Lays poisonous spikes that poison opponents who switch into battle. If used twice, a switched-in foe will become badly poisoned.

Trivia

  • All damage dealing Poison-type moves have a secondary effect; the side effect for all except Acid, Venom Shock, Acid Bomb and Clear Smog is to poison the opponent.
  • With the exception of Arceus holding a Toxic Plate, there has yet to be a Poison-type legendary Pokémon. As of Generation V, The Poison type is the only type that remains to have a Legendary Pokémon of its type in existence.
  • Poison is one of three types that can never be doubly super effective against any Pokémon because it is only super effective against one type, the Template:Type2. It shares this trait with the Template:Type2, which is only effective against itself, and the Template:Type2, which isn't super effective against anything.
    • However, back in the first generation, where Poison was also super effective against Bug, Poison was doubly super effective against the Bug/Grass combination of Paras and Parasect.
  • Poison was the most common type in Generation I; even as of Generation V, almost two thirds of the Poison-type Pokémon currently known were introduced in the first generation.
  • In Generation I Poison was super effective against the Template:Type2, while the Bug-type was super effective against Poison. This trait has never been shared with any other type match-up, and is likewise no longer true.
  • Seviper and Qwilfish are currently the only Poison-type Pokémon without evolutionary relatives.
  • Croagunk and Toxicroak are currently the only Poison-types to have any double weakness (to Psychic).
  • The Poison type is the only one of the original 15 types not mentioned in the song 2.B.A. Master. Instead, the "Flame-type" (which doesn't exist) is mentioned.
  • There has yet to be a pure Poison-type Pokémon which is the final stage in a three-stage evolutionary line.
  • A Pokémon of every type except Poison was added to the Sinnoh Pokédex in Pokémon Platinum.
  • Generation I is currently the only generation to have introduced more than ten Poison-types.
  • Pure Poison-types are only introduced every other generation.
    • Every generation that introduces pure Poison-types has a two stage family of blob-like shaped Poison-types. Kanto's was Grimer and Muk, Hoenn's was Gulpin and Swalot, and Isshu's was Yabukuron and Dasutodasu.

In other languages

  • Chinese:
  • Dutch: Gif
  • Finnish: Myrkky
  • French: Poison
  • German: Gift
  • Greek: Διλητήριο - Dilitirio
  • Hebrew: רעל ra'al
  • Italian: Veleno
  • Japanese: どく (毒) doku
  • Korean: dok
  • Polish: Trujący
  • Portuguese (Brazilian): Veneno Poison / Venenoso Poisonous
  • Russian: Ядовитый yadovityi
  • Spanish: Veneno