List of Pokémon by evolution family: Difference between revisions

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Undo revision 2456475 by Slimey01 (talk)Gen I only "introduced" 19 *whole* three-stage families. The wording /is/ important, but the other way
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m (Undo revision 2456475 by Slimey01 (talk)Gen I only "introduced" 19 *whole* three-stage families. The wording /is/ important, but the other way)
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** 77 (42 normal, 35 Legendary) Pokémon did not evolve in Generation IV, with percentages of 84% including and 91% excluding Legendary Pokémon.
** 77 (42 normal, 35 Legendary) Pokémon did not evolve in Generation IV, with percentages of 84% including and 91% excluding Legendary Pokémon.
** 104 (56 normal, 48 Legendary) Pokémon did not evolve in Generation V, with percentages of 84% including and 91% excluding Legendary Pokémon.
** 104 (56 normal, 48 Legendary) Pokémon did not evolve in Generation V, with percentages of 84% including and 91% excluding Legendary Pokémon.
* By far, Generation I introduced the most three-stage evolution families, with 27 such families having their roots there (though not necessarily their most unevolved or most evolved forms). Because of branch evolution, 29 of the second-evolution Pokémon can count themselves as members of a Generation I evolution family. Generation V has the second most, with 19 three-stage families (none due to branching). Generation III has the next most, with 16 three-stage families that end in 18 Pokémon (again due to branching), while Generation II, Generation IV and Generation VI have the least, with only nine, six and eight families, respectively, that end in a third member.
* By far, most three-stage evolution families were introduced in Generation I, with 27 such families having their roots there (though not necessarily their most unevolved or most evolved forms). Because of branch evolution, 29 of the second-evolution Pokémon can count themselves as members of a Generation I evolution family. Generation V has the second most, with 19 three-stage families (none due to branching). Generation III has the next most, with 16 three-stage families that end in 18 Pokémon (again due to branching), while Generation II, Generation IV and Generation VI have the least, with only nine, six and eight families, respectively, that end in a third member.
** Generation V, however, has introduced the most original three-stage evolutions, as many of the three stage-evolutions stemming from Generation I include Pokémon not introduced in the same generation as their evolutionary relatives.
** Generation V, however, has introduced the most original three-stage evolutions, as many of the three stage-evolutions stemming from Generation I include Pokémon not introduced in the same generation as their evolutionary relatives.
* Generation V is the only generation not to introduce cross-generational evolutionary relatives.
* Generation V is the only generation not to introduce cross-generational evolutionary relatives.