Gyarados (Pokémon)

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000 #{{{prevnum}}}: Magikarp
Pokémon
#{{{nextnum}}}: Lapras 000
Gyarados
ギャラドス Gyarados
#130
150
Artwork from FR/LG
Type
Water Flying
Category
Atrocious Pokémon
Ability
Intimidate
Exp. at Lv. 100
1,250,000
Regional Pokédex numbers
Kanto
#130
Johto
#077
Hoenn
#053
Sinnoh
#024
Regional Browser numbers
Height
21′04″
Imperial
6.5 m
Metric
Weight
518.1 lbs.
Imperial
235.0 kg
Metric
Dex color
Blue
Catch rate
45 (5.9%)
Body style
Body02.png BodyUnknown.png
Blue-Striped
Footprint
 F130.png   F487O.png
Blue-Striped
Gender ratio
Gender unknown
Breeding
Water 2 and
Dragon groups
1 cycles
(255 minimum steps)
EV yield
HP
0
Atk
0
Def
0
Sp.Atk
0
Sp.Def
0
Speed
0
Base Exp.: 214 Battle Exp.: 2141*

Gyarados (Japanese: ギャラドス Gyarados) is a Water/Flying-type Pokémon. It is fairly easily obtained (through evolution) in every Pokémon RPG except Pokémon Colosseum and Pokémon XD: Gale of Darkness.

Gyarados comes with the ability Intimidate, which lowers opponents' physical attack rating one level when it enters battle.

Gyarados evolves from Magikarp starting at Level 20.

Biology

Physiology

Gyarados is a large dragon Pokémon most similar in appearance to those seen in Chinese mythology. Its serpentine body is largely blue, but its underbelly is yellow and its fins are white. It has four such white fins down its back. Its mouth is very large and gaping, but bares some resemblance to that of its pre-evolution Magikarp. Like Magikarp, it has barbels on the its face. Its pectoral and dorsal fins also resemble Magikarp's.

Gender differences

A female has white barbels.

Special abilities

Gyarados, like most dragon-like Pokémon, has a high attack stat, relying mostly on attacks than specials. Dragon Dance appears to be its signature move, increasing its already-high attack, and its speed. Dragon Rage also seems to be one of its older signature moves.

Behavior

This Pokémon bares little resemblance to its docile pre-evolution. Gyarados is infamously known for its fierce temper and wanton destructive tendencies. Once it has worked itself into a frenzy it will not calm until everything around it is destroyed, this is attributed to the dramatic structural changes its brain undergoes during evolution. It seems attracted to violence, although this Pokémon is vary rarely seen in the wild. During times of human conflict Gyarados are said to appear, burning entire cities down to the ground.

Habitat

Gyarados are extremely rare, and usually not seen in the wild. They usually live in large bodies of water, such as lakes and ponds. The Lake of Rage is a known nesting area for a red Gyarados.

Diet

Main article: Pokémon food

In the anime

Gyarados had a cameo appearance in Pokémon, I Choose You! It was then seen in Pokémon Shipwreck. James was frustrated with his Magikarp and kicked it into the water. That Magikarp evolved into a Gyarados.

Groups of Gyarados were seen from within a submarine disguised as or styled after a Gyarados by Jesse, James and Meowth in The Pi-Kahuna shortly before the onset of a massive, annual tidal wave celebrated by local surfers who were apparently not aware of the annual migration. According to James, the Gyarados gathered each year in this location to lay their eggs.

A Gyarados was one of the Pokémon that were captured and cloned by Mewtwo in Mewtwo Strikes Back.

Nurse Joy had befriended a giant Magikarp that later evolved into Gyarados in The Joy of Pokémon. Despite Magikarp being giant, it was regular sized as a Gyarados.

The Magikarp that Dr. Quackenpoker had been observing evolved into Gyarados in The Wacky Watcher.

Trinity used a Gyarados in her battle against Misty in the Whirl Cup in The Perfect Match.

Talkin' 'Bout an Evolution and Rage Of Innocence focused on a red Gyarados. It was on a destructive rampage until Lance captured it. This Gyarados appeared again in Gaining Groudon and The Scuffle of Legends to stop the feuding of Groudon and Kyogre.

Misty obtained a Gyarados after passing the PIA test in Cerulean Blues.

A Gyarados appears in Sandshrew's Locker!.

A Gyarados was used in DP083 under the ownership of Crasher Wake.

In the manga

Pokémon Special

Gyarados debuts in the Red, Green & Blue chapter in its own round, Gyarados Splashes In!. Here, an enraged one attacks its own trainer, Misty, but is recaught by Red and supposedly gave it back to her. The drastic change of attitude of the Pokémon was the result of a Team Rocket experiment as is shown in Raging Rhydon.

Later on, Misty traded this Gyarados to Red in exchange for Red's Krabby.

Gyarados is later seen with Lance, using its BubbleBeam to shield him from the lava of Mt. Cerise.

A Red Gyarados was seen in the Lake of Rage 3 years later, but it was caught by Silver. It had the ability to control the other Gyarados in the lake.

When Red borrows Green's Charizard to travel to Mt. Silver, he temporarily trades his Gyarados to Green. It later appears as one of Green's Pokémon in Template:PSV, used against Entei and later, part of his revealed team during the Gym Leader faceoff. Prior to the FireRed and LeafGreen saga, Green returns Gyarados to Red.

Both Gyarados have remained on their Trainer's teams to this day.

In the TCG

Main article: Gyarados (TCG)

Game data

Pokédex entries

This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation I.
Generation I
Red Rarely seen in the wild. Huge and vicious, it is capable of destroying entire cities in a Template:M2.
Blue
Yellow Brutally vicious and enormously destructive. Known for totally destroying cities in ancient times.
Stadium Extremely vicious and horribly brutal. Has enough destructive power to totally annihilate even a major city.
Generation II
Gold They say that during past wars, Gyarados would appear and leave blazing ruins in its wake.
Silver Once it appears, it goes on a rampage. It remains enraged until it demolishes everything around it.
Crystal It appears whenever there is world conflict, burning down any place it travels through.
Stadium 2 They say that during the past wars, Gyarados would appear and leave blazing ruins in its wake.
Generation III
Ruby When Magikarp evolves into Gyarados, its brain cells undergo a structural transformation. It is said that this transformation is to blame for this Pokémon's wildly violent nature.
Sapphire Once Gyarados goes on a rampage, its ferociously violent blood doesn't calm until it has burned everything down. There are records of this Pokémon's rampages lasting a whole month.
Emerald It is an extremely vicious and violent Pokémon. When humans begin to fight, it will appear and burn everything to the ground with intensely hot flames.
FireRed It has an extremely aggressive nature. The Hyper Beam it shoots from its mouth totally incinerates all targets.
LeafGreen Rarely seen in the wild. Huge and vicious, it is capable of destroying entire cities in a rage.
Generation IV
Diamond Once it appears, its rage never settles until it has razed the fields and mountains around it.
Pearl In ancient literature, there is a record of a Gyarados that razed a village when violence flared.
Platinum {{{platinumdex}}}
HeartGold {{{heartgolddex}}}
SoulSilver {{{soulsilverdex}}}
Generation V
Black {{{blackdex}}}
White {{{whitedex}}}
Black 2 {{{black2dex}}}
White 2 {{{white2dex}}}
Generation VI
X Unknown
Y Unknown


Game locations

This Pokémon was unavailable prior to Generation I.
Generation I
Red Blue
None Evolve Magikarp
Blue (Japan)
None Trade
Yellow
Rare Fishing in Fuchsia City
Generation II
Gold Silver
Uncommon
One
Fishing at the Lake of Rage, Fuchsia City
Red Gyarados
Crystal
Uncommon
One
Fishing at the Lake of Rage, Fuchsia City
Red Gyarados
Generation III
Ruby Sapphire
Rare Fishing in Sootopolis City
Emerald
Rare Fishing in Sootopolis City
FireRed LeafGreen
Rare Fishing
Colosseum
None Trade
XD
None Trade
Generation IV
Diamond Pearl
Common Fishing (Super Rod)
Platinum
None Trade
HeartGold SoulSilver
None Trade
Pal Park
Pond
Pokéwalker
None
Generation V
Black White
None Trade
Black 2 White 2
None Trade
Dream World
None
Generation VI
X Y
None Trade



In side games

Game Location
Pokémon Snap Valley
Pokémon Pinball: Ruby & Sapphire Evolve from Magikarp
Pokémon Trozei! Phobos Submarine
Trozei Battle
Mr. Who's Den
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon Evolve from Magikarp
Pokémon Ranger Olive Jungle (during mission)
Pokémon Mystery Dungeon
(Time and Darkness)
Miracle Sea (Boss)

Base stats

Stat Range
At Lv. 50 At Lv. 100
95
155 - 202 300 - 394
125
117 - 194 229 - 383
79
75 - 144 146 - 282
60
58 - 123 112 - 240
100
94 - 167 184 - 328
81
77 - 146 150 - 287
Total:
540
Other Pokémon with this total
  • Minimum stats are calculated with 0 EVs, IVs of 0, and (if applicable) a hindering nature.
  • Maximum stats are calculated with 252 EVs, IVs of 31, and (if applicable) a helpful nature.
  • This Pokémon's Special base stat in Generation I was 100.

Type effectiveness

Under normal battle conditions in Generation V, this Pokémon is:
Damaged
normally by:
Normal
Fighting ½×
Flying
Poison
Ground
Rock
Bug ½×
Ghost
Steel ½×
Fire ½×
Water ½×
Grass
Electric
Psychic
Ice
Dragon
Dark
None
Weak to:
Normal
Fighting ½×
Flying
Poison
Ground
Rock
Bug ½×
Ghost
Steel ½×
Fire ½×
Water ½×
Grass
Electric
Psychic
Ice
Dragon
Dark
None
Immune to:
Normal
Fighting ½×
Flying
Poison
Ground
Rock
Bug ½×
Ghost
Steel ½×
Fire ½×
Water ½×
Grass
Electric
Psychic
Ice
Dragon
Dark
None
Resistant to:
Normal
Fighting ½×
Flying
Poison
Ground
Rock
Bug ½×
Ghost
Steel ½×
Fire ½×
Water ½×
Grass
Electric
Psychic
Ice
Dragon
Dark
None

Learnset

Template:Evolved learnset intro

By leveling up

Generation I
Level Move Type
20 Bite  
25 Dragon Rage  
32 Leer  
41 Hydro Pump  
52 Hyper Beam  
Generation II
Level Move Type
20 Bite  
25 Dragon Rage  
30 Leer  
35 Twister  
40 Hydro Pump  
45 Rain Dance  
50 Hyper Beam  
Generation III
Level Move Type
Start Thrash  
20 Bite  
25 Dragon Rage  
30 Leer  
35 Twister  
40 Hydro Pump  
45 Rain Dance  
50 Dragon Dance  
55 Hyper Beam  
Generation IV
Level Move Type Cat.
Start Thrash    
20 Bite    
23 Dragon Rage    
26 Leer    
29 Twister    
32 Ice Fang    
35 Aqua Tail    
38 Rain Dance    
41 Hydro Pump    
44 Dragon Dance    
47 Hyper Beam    

By TM/HM

Generation I
# Move Type
TM06 Toxic  
TM08 Body Slam  
TM09 Take Down  
TM10 Double-Edge  
TM11 BubbleBeam  
TM12 Water Gun  
TM13 Ice Beam  
TM14 Blizzard  
TM15 Hyper Beam  
TM20 Rage  
TM23 Dragon Rage  
TM24 Thunderbolt  
TM25 Thunder  
TM31 Mimic  
TM32 Double Team  
TM33 Reflect  
TM34 Bide  
TM38 Fire Blast  
TM40 Skull Bash  
TM44 Rest  
TM50 Substitute  
HM03 Surf  
HM04 Strength  
Generation II
# Move Type
TM02 Headbutt  
TM03 Curse Unknown
TM05 Roar  
TM06 Toxic  
TM07 Zap Cannon  
TM08 Rock Smash  
TM10 Hidden Power  
TM13 Snore  
TM14 Blizzard  
TM15 Hyper Beam  
TM16 Icy Wind  
TM17 Protect  
TM18 Rain Dance  
TM20 Endure  
TM21 Frustration  
TM24 DragonBreath  
TM25 Thunder  
TM27 Return  
TM32 Double Team  
TM34 Swagger  
TM35 Sleep Talk  
TM37 Sandstorm  
TM38 Fire Blast  
TM40 Defense Curl  
TM44 Rest  
TM45 Attract  
HM03 Surf  
HM04 Strength  
HM06 Whirlpool  
HM07 Waterfall  
Generation III
# Move Type
TM03 Water Pulse  
TM05 Roar  
TM06 Toxic  
TM07 Hail  
TM10 Hidden Power  
TM12 Taunt  
TM13 Ice Beam  
TM14 Blizzard  
TM15 Hyper Beam  
TM17 Protect  
TM18 Rain Dance  
TM21 Frustration  
TM24 Thunderbolt  
TM25 Thunder  
TM26 Earthquake  
TM27 Return  
TM32 Double Team  
TM35 Flamethrower  
TM37 Sandstorm  
TM38 Fire Blast  
TM41 Torment  
TM42 Facade  
TM43 Secret Power  
TM44 Rest  
TM45 Attract  
HM03 Surf  
HM04 Strength  
HM06 Rock Smash  
HM07 Waterfall  
HM08 Dive  
Generation IV
# Move Type Cat.
TM03 Water Pulse    
TM05 Roar    
TM06 Toxic    
TM07 Hail    
TM10 Hidden Power    
TM12 Taunt    
TM13 Ice Beam    
TM14 Blizzard    
TM15 Hyper Beam    
TM17 Protect    
TM18 Rain Dance    
TM21 Frustration    
TM24 Thunderbolt    
TM25 Thunder    
TM26 Earthquake    
TM27 Return    
TM32 Double Team    
TM35 Flamethrower    
TM37 Sandstorm    
TM38 Fire Blast    
TM41 Torment    
TM42 Facade    
TM43 Secret Power    
TM44 Rest    
TM45 Attract    
TM55 Brine    
TM58 Endure    
TM59 Dragon Pulse    
TM66 Payback    
TM68 Giga Impact    
TM71 Stone Edge    
TM72 Avalanche    
TM73 Thunder Wave    
TM78 Captivate    
TM79 Dark Pulse    
TM82 Sleep Talk    
TM83 Natural Gift    
TM87 Swagger    
TM90 Substitute    
HM03 Surf    
HM04 Strength    
HM06 Rock Smash    
HM07 Waterfall    

By breeding

By tutoring

In Pokémon FireRed and LeafGreen Versions and Emerald Versions:

In Emerald Version only:

TCG-only Moves

Side game data

Template:Side game

Evolution

Template:EvoChart Box

Template:EvoChart Box

Sprites

Gen Game
I Red Blue Yellow Red (Ja) Green Back
       
II Gold Silver Crystal   Back
       
       
III Ruby Sapphire Emerald FireRed LeafGreen Back
       
       
IV Diamond Pearl Platinum HeartGold SoulSilver Back
       
       
       
       
V Black White Black 2 White 2 Back
     
     
     
     
  For other sprites and images, please see Gyarados images on Bulbagarden Archives.

Trivia

  • According to some Nintendo of America artwork, Gyarados was originally slated to have the English name Skullkraken, a combination of the words "skull" and "kraken" (a mythological sea monster).
  • Oddly, despite being part Template:Type2, it isn't able to learn Flying-type moves. However it can learn certain Template:Type2 moves, such as Dragon Rage, Twister, and DragonBreath. Due to this, many theorize that it was originally intended to be Water/Dragon, and only ended up being Water/Flying because the only Dragon-type move was Dragon Rage, which always deals 40 HP of damage. Being Water/Flying also balances its incredible power with a double weakness to Electric.
  • In Generation II, it became the first and only shiny Pokémon to be integrated into a game's plot, along with being the only 100% certain shiny encounter.
  • It is said in Pokémon Shipwreck that Gyarados's skin is harder than steel, yet in Talking A Good Game!, Gyarados was angry because it has a twig/stick through its skin.
  • Gyarados has minor differences between all of its shiny sprites, making it slightly unique to each game. In Gold and Silver, Gyarados' shiny sprite is gold and red, in Ruby and Sapphire, its sprites have a pink hue to them. In FireRed and LeafGreen, its sprites return to being gold and red, but its back sprite remains pink (due to FRLG not having unique back sprites). Lastly, in Diamond and Pearl, the sprite loses most of its gold and becomes a standard red color. Why there have been so many changes is unknown.
  • In the Pokémon anime, Gyarados's eyes are violet instead of the red that appears its sprites and official artwork.
  • Gyarados is one of eight non-Bug, Template:Type2 Pokémon that cannot learn Fly.

Origin

It appears to be based on a sea dragon or sea serpent. Gyarados is partially based on a legend about how carp that leapt over the Dragon Gate would become dragons. Several waterfalls and cataracts in China are believed to be the location of the Dragon Gate. This legend is an allegory of the drive and efforts needed to overcome obstacles.

Name origin

Gyarados's name may be derived from a combination of 虐殺 gyakusatsu massacre/slaughter, and 逆境 gyakkyō, hardship/adversity. Both words relate to the creature's violent nature and the hardship it experienced before evolving. The dos may just indicate that it's the second in its evolutionary line.

In other languages

Related articles

External links

  #{{{prevnum}}}: Magikarp
Pokémon
#{{{nextnum}}}: Lapras  
  This Pokémon article is part of Project Pokédex, a Bulbapedia project that aims to write comprehensive articles on each Pokémon as a species.