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Salamence (#373) It is covered in a bony, armored shell. Its cells are in constant change to prepare for its evolution. The shell peels down right before it evolves. Salamence Bōmanda (ボーマンダ) [49] Dragon / Flying Shelgon (#372) Mega Evolution: Finally able to fly, it expresses its happiness by blasting fire around and burning fields.
Mega Salamence Mega Bōmanda (メガボーマンダ) [106] Dragon / Flying Salamence (#373) — Mega Salamence can cut straight through most things with just its wings. It may even cut its own trainer in half and will not even notice or care. The Paradox Pokémon Roaring Moon heavily resembles Mega Salamence. Mega Metagross
It dives into flocks of bird Pokémon, swallowing the entire flock whole, and it will never let its prey escape. It can bring down prey and return to its den before its body has chilled from being outside. It has mid-air battles with Salamence to compete for food. It can even run at high speeds and the wind it produces can knock over trees.
Gardevoir is a species of fictional creatures called Pokémon created for the Pokémon media franchise. Developed by Game Freak and published by Nintendo, the Japanese franchise began in 1996 with the video games Pokémon Red and Green for the Game Boy, which were later released in North America as Pokémon Red and Blue in 1998. [4]
The first 150 Pokémon as they appear in Pokémon Stadium, starting with Bulbasaur in the top left corner and ending with Mewtwo in the bottom right corner. The Pokémon franchise revolves around 1,025 fictional species of collectable monsters, each having unique designs, skills, and powers.
Roaring Moon is an ancient Paradox Pokémon resembling the Pokémon Salamence, a draconic Pokémon. It notably appears similar to Salamence's Mega Evolved form. [164] Iron Valiant is a futuristic Paradox Pokémon resembling the Pokémon Gallade and Gardevoir, a pair of humanoid Pokémon. [165] Iron Valiant Tetsunobujin (テツノブジン)
The eighth generation (Generation VIII) of the Pokémon franchise features 96 fictional species of creatures introduced to the core video game series, including 89 in the 2019 Nintendo Switch games Pokémon Sword and Shield as of version 1.3.0 and 7 further species introduced in the 2022 Nintendo Switch game Pokémon Legends: Arceus.
The first generation (generation I) of the Pokémon franchise features the original 151 fictional species of monsters introduced to the core video game series in the 1996 Game Boy games Pocket Monsters Red and Green (known as Pokémon Red and Blue outside of Japan).