Talk:Terastal phenomenon: Difference between revisions

→‎Wild Terastal Pokémon: original research, again
(Undo revision 3610227 by BigDocFan (talk) signing right after the comment should be okay (though signing with the comment is arguably to be preferred... sorry about that))
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(→‎Wild Terastal Pokémon: original research, again)
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I believe the latter always have a non-level-up move of their Tera Type, e.g. I have a {{p|Grafaiai}} with {{m|X-Scissor}}, a {{p|Growlithe}} with {{m|Dig}}, a {{p|Jigglypuff}} with {{m|Water Pulse}}, and a {{p|Tauros}} with {{m|Wild Charge}} (all of which are TM moves). [[User:Nescientist|Nescientist]] ([[User talk:Nescientist|talk]]) 16:41, 23 November 2022 (UTC)
I believe the latter always have a non-level-up move of their Tera Type, e.g. I have a {{p|Grafaiai}} with {{m|X-Scissor}}, a {{p|Growlithe}} with {{m|Dig}}, a {{p|Jigglypuff}} with {{m|Water Pulse}}, and a {{p|Tauros}} with {{m|Wild Charge}} (all of which are TM moves). [[User:Nescientist|Nescientist]] ([[User talk:Nescientist|talk]]) 16:41, 23 November 2022 (UTC)
:I can confirm that Tera Raid Pokémon do not necessarily have a move of their Tera Type, at least at low levels; I caught a Finneon at Lv. 12 in a Tera Raid Battle and it very much did not have a move of its Tera Type (Ice), although it could learn one via TM. On that note, is it confirmed that Pokémon will never naturally have a Tera Type that they cannot learn at least one STAB move from (Tera Blast notwithstanding)?
:As an aside, one important distinction between the two is that Wild Tera Pokémon (and only Wild Tera Pokémon) will have their Terastallization shatter when reduced to 20%{{fact}} health by an attack, and cannot be reduced below that while Terastallized - although damage from Status Effects ignores this limitation, allowing a Wild Tera Pokémon to faint while still Terastallized. [[User:TM06|TM06]] ([[User talk:TM06|talk]]) 10:41, 28 November 2022 (UTC)
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