Fighting (type): Difference between revisions

no edit summary
m (→‎Defense: lots of rewording to make the whole thing sound less awkward, hope I did an ok job.)
No edit summary
Line 478: Line 478:
* Color representations for the Fighting type have generally been inconsistent in various Pokémon media. While the Fighting type has been associated with the color red in the main Pokémon games since [[Generation III]], it is associated with the color orange in the [[Pokémon Stadium series]] and [[Pokémon Mystery Dungeon]], and with the color brown in the [[Pokémon Trading Card Game]].
* Color representations for the Fighting type have generally been inconsistent in various Pokémon media. While the Fighting type has been associated with the color red in the main Pokémon games since [[Generation III]], it is associated with the color orange in the [[Pokémon Stadium series]] and [[Pokémon Mystery Dungeon]], and with the color brown in the [[Pokémon Trading Card Game]].
* Fighting is the only former physical type to have all damaging moves retain their physical category. All special category moves were introduced in [[Generation IV]] or later, after the split had occurred.
* Fighting is the only former physical type to have all damaging moves retain their physical category. All special category moves were introduced in [[Generation IV]] or later, after the split had occurred.
** However, a Fighting-type {{m|Hidden Power}} would be a physical move prior to Generation IV, and a special move from Generation IV onwards.
* Fighting is the most common secondary type for evolutions of [[starter Pokémon]], with four starter lines being paired with it, three of them being {{t|Fire}} type.
* Fighting is the most common secondary type for evolutions of [[starter Pokémon]], with four starter lines being paired with it, three of them being {{t|Fire}} type.
*  The Fighting type could be considered a physical counterpart to the {{t|Psychic}} type:
*  The Fighting type could be considered a physical counterpart to the {{t|Psychic}} type: