Fuchsia Gym
Fuchsia Gym セキチクジム Sekichiku Gym | |
Location | Fuchsia City |
Gym Leader | KogaRGBYFRLG JanineGSCHGSS |
Badge | Soul Badge |
Dominant Type | Poison |
Region | Kanto |
Battlefield |
The Fuchsia Gym (Japanese: セキチクジム Sekichiku Gym) is the official Gym of Fuchsia City. It is based on Poison-type Pokémon. In Generations I and III, the Gym Leader is Koga. However, by Generations II and IV, the Gym Leader's duties had been taken up by Koga's daughter, Janine, as he had advanced to the Elite Four. Trainers who are victorious over this Gym will receive the Soul Badge.
In the games
Fuchsia City
Pokémon Gym
Leader: Koga
The Poisonous
Ninja Master!
Fuchsia City
Pokémon Gym
Leader: Janine
The Poisonous
Ninja Master
The Fuchsia Gym can be difficult to navigate, as it features invisible walls that were installed by Ninja Master Koga. Janine kept these in place when she took over. In addition, she added another layer of difficulty: all the other Trainers in the Gym look exactly like her.
A field based on the Gym also appears in Pokémon Stadium's Gym Leader Castle and Stadium 2's Kanto Gym Leader Castle.
Appearance
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Trainers
Core series
Pokémon Red, Blue, and Yellow
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Pokémon Red and Blue
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Pokémon Yellow
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Pokémon Gold, Silver, and Crystal
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Trainers with a telephone symbol by their names will give their Pokégear number to the player, and may call or be called for a rematch with higher-level Pokémon. |
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Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen
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Trainers with a Vs. Seeker by their names, when alerted for a rematch using the item, may use higher-level Pokémon. |
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Pokémon HeartGold and SoulSilver
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Trainers with a telephone symbol by their names will give their Pokégear number to the player, and may call or be called for a rematch with higher-level Pokémon. |
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Side series
Pokémon Stadium
Round 1
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Round 2
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Pokémon Stadium 2
Round 1
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Round 2
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Items
Item | Location | Games | |
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TM06 (Toxic) | Reward for defeating Koga | R B Y FR LG | |
TM06 (Toxic) | Reward for defeating Janine | G S C | |
TM84 (Poison Jab) | Reward for defeating Janine | HG SS | |
In the anime
In the main series
Fuchsia Gym appeared in only one episode of the anime. Its appearance is based on an old-fashioned Japanese mansion. Located in a forest outside of the main city, the Gym is filled with booby traps, including invisible walls and a horde of explosive Voltorb. Battles take place either inside the mansion or in the courtyard outside.
In The Ninja Poké-Showdown, Ash sought out the Fuchsia Gym in order to defeat Koga for his sixth Badge. Before he could find Koga, he found what appeared to be a stray Venonat. After following it into the Gym and finding several Voltorb, Ash and his friends encountered Aya, who revealed the Venonat to be hers. After defeating her, Koga, Aya's brother, appeared and accepted Ash's challenge. The battle was interrupted by Team Rocket, who wanted to steal all of the Gym's Pokémon. Thanks to Psyduck, and Koga's use of a slanted room, the trio was sent blasting off. Ash and Koga continued their battle outside. With the help of Charmander, Ash defeated Koga and earned his Soul Badge.
Pokémon used in Gym
Debut | The Ninja Poké-Showdown |
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Voice actors | |
Japanese | |
English | Eric Stuart |
When Ash challenged Koga, Koga sent out his Venonat, which Ash originally underestimated since he had previously defeated his sister's Venonat quite easily but then it instantly evolved into a Venomoth, and proceeded to get the upper hand in its Gym battle with Pidgeotto. The battle was interrupted by Team Rocket, and afterwards, Koga offered to trade Venomoth to Misty for her Psyduck, but she declined.
Venomoth's known moves are Stun Spore and Sleep Powder.
Debut | The Ninja Poké-Showdown |
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Voice actors | |
Japanese | Shin'ichirō Miki |
English | Eric Stuart |
- Main article: Koga's Golbat
During Koga's and Ash's rematch, Koga used his Golbat against Ash's Charmander. Golbat eventually lost to Charmander's strong Fire-type moves, winning Ash the Soul Badge.
Debut | Bad to the Bone |
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Koga's Scyther only appeared in a flashback in Bad to the Bone. Otoshi's flashback revealed that he defeated Scyther with his Marowak and obtained the Soul Badge.
None of Scyther's moves are known.
In Pokémon Origins
The Fuchsia Gym was briefly seen in the Pokémon Origins episode File 3 - Giovanni. Red battled Koga off-screen and won, forcing the Gym Leader to concede his defeat and hand the young Trainer the Soul Badge.
In the manga
In the Pokémon Pocket Monsters manga
Fuchsia Gym appeared in Save the Chansey!!.
In the TCG
The Fuchsia Gym was featured in the TCG. The following is a list of cards named Fuchsia City Gym.
Related cards Cards listed with a blue background are only legal to use in the current Expanded format. Cards listed with a green background are legal to use in both the current Standard and Expanded formats. | |||||||
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Card | Type | English Expansion |
Rarity | # | Japanese Expansion |
Rarity | # |
Fuchsia City Gym | T [St] | Gym Challenge | 114/132 | Challenge from the Darkness | |||
Trivia
- If playing Pokémon Red, Blue, and Yellow on a normal Game Boy, the walls are invisible. However, when using a multicolored palette on the Game Boy Color or Game Boy Advance, these walls are exposed. The same is true for Pokémon Gold and Silver.
- In Generation I, II, and III, the invisible walls have 4 white spots at its corner, making it somewhat visible.
- In Generations I and III, despite specializing in Poison-types, only two of the six Trainers in the Gym use Poison-type Pokémon. The four Jugglers are all Psychic-type Trainers, and the two Tamers each have a Ground-type, which are ironically two of the types that are strong against Poison types in Generation I. However, Drowzee and Hypno both learn Poison Gas by level up, and Sandslash learns Poison Sting by level up.
This article is part of Project Locations, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on every location in the Pokémon world. |